Raty (6-foot-2, 185 pounds), who was chosen by the New York Islanders with the No. 52 pick on the second day of the draft Saturday, offered a glimpse of his potential hours after being selected by scoring four goals for Finland in a 5-2 exhibition win against Sweden at USA Hockey Arena during the first day of the World Junior Summer Showcase.
"I'm playing a more simple game now and focusing on the little things," Raty said. "I want to earn the coaches' trust. I think I'm better at face-offs, driving to the net."
Raty, a center who plays with Karpat in Liiga, Finland's top professional league, said he was ecstatic to learn he had been picked by the Islanders.
"When I got word it was the Islanders, I was super excited to be part of the organization and super grateful to have the honor to be their first pick (in the 2021 Draft)," Raty said. "They're a good team, they've had some deep playoff runs for the past few years and I like the way they play. ... Good defense. They might not have the superstar players, but they still play great hockey and have a good coaching staff."
Islanders general manager Lou Lamoriello said they were a bit shocked when Raty was still available.
"Yes, we were surprised that he was where he was at," Lamoriello said. "We're extremely pleased with that pick."
It wasn't long ago when Raty, a native of Oulunsalo, Finland, was considered by many to be a top-3 selection in the 2021 Draft. In fact, in June 2020, Goran Stubb, the NHL director of European Scouting, said Raty "at present, he's the No. 1 prospect in Europe."
Thirteen months later, Raty was the 18th International prospect selected.
The drop came after a difficult season; Raty scored six points (three goals, three assists) and had 80 shots on goal while averaging 11:38 of ice time in 35 games for Karpat.
He also wasn't invited to Finland's select camp for the 2021 IIHF World Junior Championship after scoring three points (two goals, one assists) in seven games as a 17-year-old at the 2020 WJC.
"It was a tough season for me on [Karpat], but I played for one of the best organizations in Finland," Raty said. "I think it's one of the most defensive leagues in the whole world, so we just had better centers than I, so I couldn't get any minutes. I don't know if (Edmonton Oilers center Connor) McDavid is going to score when he's playing eight minutes (per game)."