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The 2022 Upper Deck NHL Draft will be held July 7-8 at Bell Centre in Montreal. The first round will be July 7 (7 p.m. ET; ESPN, ESPN+, SN, TVAS) and rounds 2-7 are July 8 (11 a.m. ET; NHLN, ESPN+, SN, TVAS). NHL.com is counting down to the draft with in-depth profiles on top prospects, podcasts and other features. Today, a look at defenseman Tristan Luneau of Gatineau of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. NHL.com's full draft coverage can be found here .

Tristan Luneau
got off to a great start prior to his inaugural season in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League when given an opportunity to learn and share the ice with Ottawa Senators defenseman Thomas Chabot.
Luneau (6-foot-2, 189 pounds), a right-shot defenseman with Gatineau, did just that in the summer of 2020 at Laval University in Quebec City, in a setup arranged by his agency that also included Montreal Canadiens defenseman David Savard and former NHL defenseman Yannick Tremblay.
"It's great to work out and be around pros like that," Luneau said. "You get a feel to how they treat their body, how professional they are and what they do on and off the ice to be ready for a long season. I try and model my habits off Chabot's off-ice and on-ice training in the summer."
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Tremblay worked as the skating and skills instructor and the players worked out twice a week off-ice.
The plan has worked wonderfully for Luneau, ranked No. 24 in
NHL Central Scouting's final ranking of North American skaters
eligible for the 2022 Upper Deck NHL Draft.
"It's really impressive to see how much fun he has on the ice," Luneau said of Chabot. "Even though he does it every day, he doesn't get tired of it. He's always the one showing up early, having some fun, always with a smile. I think that's the mentality to have. Have fun with it, work really hard and enjoy it."
Luneau was No. 10 in Central Scouting's midterm ranking in January. The adjustment in the rankings may have been a result of offseason surgery following a lower-body injury, but Central Scouting remains bullish on the 18-year-old's future with the proper development.
"He's super smart ... his hockey sense is elite," Jean-Francois Damphousse of NHL Central Scouting said. "His passing game is excellent. He'll find his options, he'll retrieve pucks. He's just got to keep working on his skating since, like so many prospects, he just needs to get a little stronger. He lacked some training due to the injury he needed to take care of.

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"I think he'll come back next year and really evolve on the skating side, but I don't think it's really a concern to me. It'll improve in the next couple of years with more training and a more physically mature body, but his mind is A-1."
Among QMJHL defensemen, Luneau was tied for 11th with 12 goals and was 15th with 43 points in 63 games. He also had 20 power-play points (three goals, 17 assists) and two shorthanded points (one goal, one assist).
"I like to think of myself as a two-way defenseman and my biggest strength is really my hockey IQ," he said. "I generate offense with it and am creative in the offensive zone; I generate a lot of my offense through rushes and transitions, making it easy for the forwards and players.
"I'm working on my physicality; it's something I want to bring more into my game in becoming harder to play against."
Luneau said he was grateful to share the ice with Chabot, but said he watches a lot of video of Boston Bruins defenseman Charlie McAvoy and New York Rangers defenseman Jacob Trouba.
"I think they're two defensemen I like watching because I think I have the potential to play like them," Luneau said. "They're both good two-way defensemen, really hard to play against, have good size and they know how to use it. They can generate a lot of offense in the offensive end and they're really creative."
Luneau credits his mother, Nadia, who is a figure-skating coach, for his mobility on his skates.
"My mother was my first skating coach and my dad was my first hockey coach," he said. "I grew up in an environment where hockey was really dominant and my three brothers all played hockey growing up, but two of them decided to do some something else. Our lives are all about hockey, playing in the backyard, on our outside rink. There's a lot of fun memories."

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He did get a chance to play competitive hockey alongside his three older brothers when he was 14 with Trois-Rivieres of the Quebec Midget AAA League in 2018-19.
"It was really special and the only time I got to play with them," Luneau said. "If I wanted to play with them, I had to get that exceptional status and I was really happy to get it. I improved my defensive side of the game a lot that season."
He also had 24 points (four goals, 20 assists) in 42 games.
Luneau said it's going to take a lot of hard work and repetition to one day play in the NHL, but he has a good idea what League scouts look for in a defenseman.
"I think the two most important aspects are competitiveness and hockey IQ, because that's something that you either have or don't," he said. "Other than that, speed, strength, shot, skills; areas you can really improve. If you have compete and smarts, I think you can figure out a way to have success in the NHL."
Photos: Dominic Charette, Gatineau (QMJHL)
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