Leafs Prospects – #9 Tinus-Luc Koblar

The Toronto Maple Leafs organization has drafted and developed a number of youngsters currently playing in the NHL (Auston Matthews, William Nylander, Morgan Rielly, Matthew Knies), but the club under former GM Kyle Dubas and current GM Brad Treliving had different ideas of what kind of prospects they wanted to populate the organization with. There has been a slow weeding out process of the smaller Dubas prospects in favor of predominantly larger forwards and defenseman that fit the traits that Treliving is looking for

As we’ve done on a yearly basis, we are ranking the club’s top prospects over the upcoming weeks based on their progress in either the NCAA, CHL, Europe, ECHL, or AHL, and their potential to make the Leafs roster and make a contribution in the future.

Players are eligible for the list if they have not played more than 40 NHL games and are 25 years old or younger:

Prospect List

#40 – Matthew Hlacar – F (Kitchener – OHL)

#39 – Rylan Fellinger – D (Flint – OHL)

#38 – Blake Smith – D (Flint – OHL, Toronto – AHL)

#37 – Braeden Kressler – C (Cincinnati – ECHL, Toronto – AHL)

#36 – Harry Nansi – C (Owen Sound – OHL)

#35 – Landon Sim – RW (London – OHL)

#34 – John Prokop – D (Union College – NCAA, Toronto – AHL)

#33 – Seymon Kizimov – RW (Yekaterinburg Automobilist – KHL, Uchaly Gornyak – VHL)

#32 – Matthew Barbolini – F (Toronto – AHL)

#31 – John Fusco – D (Dartmouth – NCAA)

#30 – Semyon Der-Argushintsev  – C (Chelyabinsk Traktor – KHL)

#29 – Will Belle – RW (US Nat’l Development Program)

#28 – Nathan Mayes – D (Spokane – WHL)

#27 –  Borya Valis – RW (Prince George – WHL, Toronto – AHL)

#26 – Hudson Malinoski – C (Providence – NCAA)

#25 – Ryan Kirwan – F (Arizona State – NCAA, Toronto – AHL)

#24 – Joe Miller – C (Harvard – NCAA)

#23 – Matt Lahey – D (Fargo – USHL)  

#22 – Chas Sharpe – D (Cincinnati – ECHL, Toronto – AHL)

#21 – Sam McCue – LW (Owen Sound / Flint – OHL)

#20 – Alexander Plesovskikh – LW (Voskresensk – VHL / Kryiya Sovetov & Moscow Spartak – MHL)

#19 – Ryan Tverberg – C (Toronto – AHL)

#18 – Roni Hirvonen – C (Toronto – AHL)

#17 – Timofei Obvintsev – G (Krasnaya Armiya Moskva – MHL)

#16 – Vyacheslav Peksa – G (Cincinnati – ECHL, Toronto – AHL)

#15 – Cade Webber – D (Toronto – AHL)

#14 – Nick Moldenhauer – C (Michigan – NCAA)

#13 – Topi Niemela – D (Toronto – AHL)

#12 – Tyler Hopkins – C (Kingston – OHL) 

#11 – Luke Haymes – C (Dartmouth – NCAA, Toronto – AHL)

#10 – Artur Akhtyamov  – G (Toronto – AHL)

#9 – Tinus-Luc Koblar – C (Leksands IF Jr. – Sweden)

Because of Toronto’s penchant for trading future first-round picks under both Dubas and Treliving, the club will have to have to hope to make an impact in the lower rounds as they did in 2019 with second-rounder Nick Robertson or in 2022 with second-rounder Fraser Minten. 

Without a first-rounder because of the 2023 deal that brought Jake McCabe to Toronto, the Leafs, with the final pick in the second round of the 2025 NHL Draft, selected Norwegian center Tinus-Luc Koblar. After playing his minor hockey in his native country, the 6’3”, 190 lb center headed to Sweden in 2023 to play at the junior level with Leksands. 

In his draft year, the 18-year-old had 21 points (8 goals, 13 assists) in 43 games, and four goals in seven playoff games, played five games at the Under-18s and Division 1A Under-20s for Norway. Elite Prospects describes Koblar as a “big-bodied center with a rather projectable mechanical base. He employs a deep, steady skating stride and can be deceivingly fast, which he used to generate value both in transition as a puck carrier and through an imposing forechecking presence.”

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