Kraken 2025 Draft Targets: Victor Eklund
This past season, Eklund posted 19 goals and 12 assists in 42 regular season games for Djurgårdens IF, a club in HockeyAllsvenskan, which is the second highest tier of professional hockey in Sweden after the SHL. Eklund and Djurgårdens IF won the HockeyAllsvenskan league championship and will be promoted to the top Sweden tier, SHL for the 2025-26 campaign. If Eklund doesn't crack the NHL roster immediately, he will most likely have a chance to develop further in the SHL.
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The NHL club that selects Eklund will hope that he can bring his intensity and skills to their team in working order and that the translation from his game in Sweden to the NHL will be swift.
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NHL Draft - What Could the Future Hold for the Kraken's 8th Overall Pick? - Community Post
NHL Draft - What Could the Future Hold for the Kraken's 8th Overall Pick? - Community Post With the 2025 NHL Draft only a week away, the Seattle Kraken currently hold the 8th overall pick. Let's take a look at how the past ten players who were picked 8th overall are doing.
Eklund featured photo by - via tv4.se
Eklund hero photo by - via hockey news.se

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Golf might be trying to tell Keegan Bradley something. Before Justin Rose and J.J. Spaun went to a sudden-death playoff Aug. 10 in an exciting finale to the 2025 FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind, Bradley had long since signed his scorecard. Bradley was never in the mix in Memphis. He opened 72-70 and finished at 2-under-par, which tied for 44nd. Not terrible, but in a field of the sport's 69 best players, he was average. He's been average since June 22, when he won a thrilling Travelers Championship on the final hole. The victory amplified speculation that Bradley, already confirmed as this year's U.S. Ryder Cup captain, might use one of the six captain's picks on himself when finalizing the 12-man team that'll face Team Europe at Bethpage Black on Sept. 26-28. It's a uniquely fascinating decision, and it's still out there for Bradley to soon make. As of an Aug. 3 update, he was No. 10 in the U.S. Ryder Cup standings, and he was No. 10 in the World Golf Rankings. He can easily claim to be one of the top 12 American golfers in the world. Were he not already on board to manage this Ryder Cup team, he'd likely get picked by someone else to play on it. Bradley could play anyway. He could also remain the captain. But he shouldn't be allowed to do both. Why would the U.S. team willingly put itself at a clear — and wholly avoidable — disadvantage by having one person take on both managerial and playing roles? Bradley may be confident that he could handle both, but there's no reason the PGA of America should want him, or anyone else, to try. Playing captains were a thing of Ryder Cups past, but there's good reason you haven't seen one since Arnold Palmer in 1963. The pressure of playing in a Ryder Cup in 2025 is more than enough without having to also pick teams and lineups and keep everyone happy in a locker room of tempestuous, millionaire golfers who are unaccustomed to team competition. Easy as it has been for older golfers on both sides to want to step up and play captain, it has proven very difficult to do this job well. One of Bradley's assistants, Jim Furyk, did it well in captaining the U.S. to a Presidents Cup victory last year in Canada. Furyk could seamlessly take over at Bethpage if Bradley wants to play. And if not Furyk, Nashville's Brandt Snedeker would be another convenient choice. Snedeker, an assistant for this Ryder Cup, is set to captain the 2026 Presidents Cup team. Either would be preferable to someone taking this on while playing. Doing both would court disaster for the U.S. team, and the Euros know it. In July, The Telegraph (England) reported that European captain Luke Donald gave a thumbs-up to a rule change, requested by Bradley, that would allow one of the U.S. team's assistants to act as captain on the golf course if Bradley is playing. Of course, Donald agreed. I'd imagine he did so joyfully. If I were leading the European team, I'd love the idea of Bradley foolishly embracing the burden of both roles. This is an enormous Ryder Cup for the U.S. team. The Americans went to Italy in 2023, and Donald's European team outplayed them thoroughly. In the past couple of years, the European side has grown stronger on paper. Welcoming Donald back as captain was a good idea, too, and there's reason to think the U.S. is about to have its hands full at Bethpage. Bradley was an unorthodox choice for U.S. captain because he's only 39 and still playing well. The decision probably had to do with paying him back for being famously snubbed by 2023 captain Zach Johnson, an emotional development that was documented by the Netflix golf series 'Full Swing.' Bradley told reporters at his introductory news conference accepting the captaincy that he would play only if he was an automatic top-six qualifier. He won't (quite) get to the top six, but he's close enough to where he has been encouraged to perhaps go back on that initial plan.w This recent dip in form could be enough to sway him and do what's best for everyone by serving as full-time U.S. captain and picking six other golfers. Here's hoping that's the case. OK. So who should Bradley pick for U.S. Ryder Cup team? Glad you asked. Justin Thomas and Collin Morikawa, major winners and Ryder Cup veterans, were No. 7 and No. 8 in the team standings as of Aug. 3. They are easy inclusions. Ben Griffin (No. 9) missed back-to-back cuts in July, but one of those was against cartoonishly low scores at the John Deere Classic and the other was overseas at The Open Championship. Prior to July, Griffin had finished T-14 or better in six consecutive tournaments, including the PGA (T-8) and U.S. Open (T-10). It's easy to pick a guy who has been playing that well. Patrick Cantlay has proven repeatedly that he's a stone-cold killer in the Ryder Cup. I don't care where he's ranked (No. 14). He'd be on my team. And I'll point out that Cameron Young (No. 15), who is making a strong late push, reached the finals of the defunct World Golf match-play event in 2023, beating Rory McIlroy in the semis to get there. Who beat Young 6 and 5 in that final? Sam Burns (No. 16). Burns and Young each rank among the PGA Tour's best in Strokes Gained: Putting. Nothing matters more in match play than putting. Those two would round out my six. Gentry Estes is the sports columnist for the Nashville Tennessean, part of the USA Today Network. He can be reached at gestes@ and hang out with him on Bluesky @