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Down on the Farm – Blake Fiddler brings intriguing tools
Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2025/11/21/down-on-the-farm-blake-fiddler-brings-intriguing-tools/
“Down on the Farm” is your weekly Seattle Kraken prospects update. This week we’ll highlight Blake Fiddler’s early-season performance in the WHL before handicapping his chances at playing in the 2026 World Junior Championship. After that, we’ll have notes, video, and data from all corners of the Kraken organization, plus a preview of the schedule ahead, as always.
If you have a Kraken prospect-related question you’d like to see featured in a future column, drop us a note below or on X or BlueSky @deepseahockey or @sound_hockey. Let’s dive in.
Blake Fiddler continues to flash difference-making skill
Blake Fiddler offers a rare collection of tools. On defense, he flashes an active and skilled stick that can disrupt opponents at the blue line and net front. He engages any offensive player who gets close to the blue paint, often pushing them entirely clear of his goaltender. For goalies, clear eyes and clean feet can’t lose. Fiddler is a big help in this regard.
Offensively, he starts the play with pinpoint breakout passes and finds teammates moving through the neutral zone for clean entries. He also shows the ability to transport the puck with strong speed and puck-protection skill. Once he has speed moving forward, he is a freight train. Junior players are often afraid to challenge him for fear that he will physically defeat the check and have a clear line to the goal. This creates space for him to operate and find his teammates on the rush.
Once established in the offensive zone, he is not content to deaden his feet at the points. He stays in motion, looking for soft spots where he can receive a pass and set up a shot on goal. He usually makes good reads in this part of the ice, vacating the blue line only when a forward is available to cycle up and cover for him. His movement generated several good chances, including a goal and a deflected-in primary assist, in his Nov. 15 game excerpted below.
On the flip side, his skating—particularly his four-way mobility defensively—needs a good deal of work. There are more awkward moments and possession giveaways than there should be, and his processing on breakout passes and other defensive reads can be frustratingly slow at times. It may be that the looser defensive structures at the junior level hurt his ability to anticipate, or he may just need more repetitions. He has the tools to dominate defensively, but he is often a step slow (or out of place entirely) right now.
Fiddler has been a stalwart for Team USA at U18 and U20 precursor tournaments to the World Junior Championship. There is little doubt in my mind that Fiddler is on track to play an important role for Team USA at the 2027 event, when he will be 19 years old. The question is: Does he have a place on Team USA’s blue line this year at 18 years old (a.k.a. an “underager”)?
Over the summer I had Fiddler on the outside looking in. I’m slightly more optimistic about his chances now because his offensive production has ticked up in the WHL. (Fiddler had 33 points in 64 WHL games last season, a .52 point-per-game pace. He’s at 18 points through just 23 games so far this year, a .78 point-per-game pace.) Team USA projects as a sound team, but one that may struggle to score compared with recent years after an exodus of high-end skill. Fiddler’s offensive traits may be too intriguing to leave at home.
Right now, I’d project Fiddler as the No. 7 defenseman for Team USA at the 2026 WJC.
Notes on three more Kraken prospects
Loke Krantz | F | Linköping HC (SHL)
Loke Krantz, an 18-year-old, 2025 seventh-round pick, continues to earn SHL playing time. His last three games have been with Linköping HC of the top-level Swedish professional league. On Thursday, Nov. 20, he scored his first SHL goal—a beautiful sequence where he handled the puck into the slot and finished with a pinpoint wrist shot into the top corner.
#SeaKraken prospect Loke Krantz scored his first SHL goal today and it was a beauty.pic.twitter.com/YX9cYTSm3N
— Deep Sea Hockey (@DeepSeaHockey) November 21, 2025Karl Annborn | D | Västerås IK (HockeyAllsvenskan)
Fellow Swede and 2025 draft pick Karl Annborn tallied his first goal in the second-tier Swedish professional league this past week as well. It came on a sequence where he carried the puck into the zone, took a wrist shot, collected his own rebound, and knocked it past the goaltender at the net front. It was an impressive offensive sequence from the 18-year-old blueliner.
Julius Miettinen | F | Everett Silvertips (WHL)
Miettinen missed the Everett Silvertips’ last three WHL games. Everett dropped two of three in that stretch. He is listed as day-to-day with an illness.
Highlights of the Week
Jake O’Brien returns with another highlight this week, setting up Marek Vanacker on a sweet centering pass around a close defensive challenge.
The hot streak continues for Vanacker#BFD | #Blackhawks pic.twitter.com/i9sIiHyLTH
— Brantford Bulldogs (@BulldogsOHL) November 21, 2025
The good news from the Coachella Valley Firebirds’ Saturday, Nov. 15, game against the Bakersfield Condors was that Jagger Firkus had a hat trick. The bad news was that those were the Firebirds’ only goals in a 6-3 loss. Luckily, Firkus kept the scoring going the next day, adding another goal in a 5-2 win over the Abbotsford Canucks.
FIRKUS SCORES! Firebirds take the lead 2-1
Welcome BACK to the Firkus Circus!pic.twitter.com/AgpDcOVn0k
— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) November 17, 2025Kraken prospects data update
Jagger Firkus’s scoring binge contributed to him winning the AHL Player of the Week, announced on Monday, Nov. 17. Four goals in two games is enough to make Firkus your Sound Of Hockey Player of the Week too. That’s two in a row for Firkus. One more and we’ll call it a streak.
Despite being inactive since last Sunday, the 21-year-old Firkus remains tied for the AHL lead in total points. The only other AHL player with 18 points, Brett Seney, is 29 years old and has played three more games than Firkus.
At the other end of the spectrum, spark-plug defensive specialist Zeb Forsfjall still doesn’t have a point yet this season in 19 SHL games.
Visa Vedenpaa turned in perhaps his best Liiga start to date last week, turning away 30 of 32 shots on goal en route to a win.
We cautioned that the raw numbers for Nikke Kokko and Victor Ostman may look a bit weaker this season due to the inexperience on the blue line in front of them. That has been true so far, with both taking a step back in save percentage and goals-against average. I haven’t been too concerned by their play in the games I have watched, though. The numbers should get better as the season goes along and the Firebirds’ young defenders tighten things up.
Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week tracker
2: Kim Saarinen, Julius Miettinen, Jagger Firkus
1: Jake O’Brien, Semyon Vyazovoi, Nathan Villeneuve, Ollie Josephson
Previewing the week ahead
The Deep Sea Hockey Game of the Week is a Sunday 11:00 am PT matchup between Nathan Villeneuve’s Sudbury Wolves and Jakub Fibigr’s Brampton Steelheads. Warm up for the 2:00 pm PT Seattle Kraken game against the New York Islanders with some junior hockey.
Tracking 2026 NHL Draft prospects: Vladimír Dravecký
Each season I put together a preseason NHL Draft watchlist based on scoring data, and each year there are a handful of players who catapult themselves into early-round conversation by taking a large statistical leap in their draft seasons. Defenseman Vladimir Dravecky is one such example from this season. After averaging less than half a point per game in the Swedish U20 league in the 2024-25 season, Dravecky came over to the OHL and has taken over as a key defensive play-driving force for O’Brien’s Brantford Bulldogs. His 15 points in 22 games rank third among first-time eligible OHL defensemen. At this point, he figures to be a top-50 pick in the 2026 NHL Draft.
Recent prospect updates
November 15, 2025: Firkus steps forward for Firebirds
November 7, 2025: Caden Price looks the part in pro debut
October 31, 2025: College hockey seasons under way for Kraken prospects
October 25, 2005: Mølgaard is an all-situations contributor as an AHL rookie
October 17, 2025: Tyson Jugnauth earns important role with the Firebirds
October 10, 2025: Firebirds drop the puck on the 2025-26 season
October 3, 2025: Catton makes his case for the NHL Roster
September 26, 2025: Junior seasons begin, J.R. Avon settles in
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Curtis Isacke
Curtis is a Sound Of Hockey contributor and member of the Kraken press corps. Curtis is an attorney by day, and he has read the NHL collective bargaining agreement and bylaws so you don’t have to. He can be found analyzing the Kraken, NHL Draft, and other hockey topics on Twitter and Bluesky @deepseahockey.
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The post Down on the Farm – Blake Fiddler brings intriguing tools appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.
Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2025/11/21/down-on-the-farm-blake-fiddler-brings-intriguing-tools/