Bystedt is also garnering plenty of attention as the first draft pick after the Sharks named Mike Grier general manager July 5. Two days later, San Jose traded the No. 11 pick in the 2022 draft to the Arizona Coyotes for the 27th, 34th and 45th selections.
Grier, a retired forward who played 14 seasons in the NHL from 1996-2011, including three for the Sharks, said he wants San Jose to be tougher to play against, and thinks Bystedt will be a good fit.
"We like his character, his makeup," Grier said. "He's a big centerman who can really skate and has good habits in his game already as a youngster. When you look at a lot of 17- and 18-year-old kids, you've got to teach them a lot of habits and he already has a lot of those habits in his game.
"He was one of the players we had identified as a possibility [to draft] and we are really excited he was there."
The Sharks have had trouble with depth scoring in recent seasons, so Bystedt could be a welcome addition to a team needing to strengthen its bottom six. They ranked 30th in the NHL last season with 211 goals and 22nd on the power play (19.0 percent).
San Jose will look for Bystedt to contribute a strong two-way game.
"I'm going to bring a compete level and bring skill and be reliable on the whole ice," Bystedt said at the draft. "Play defensively, and also get us points."