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There’s NHL draft hype, and then there’s what heralds the arrival of Connor Bedard. He’s been called “magical” and “otherworldly,” a player that can “change the fortunes of a franchise” by himself.
While NHL commissioner Gary Bettman has proclaimed that his teams don’t tank, there are a handful this season that seem OK with a slight downtick in success in the hopes of drafting the 17-year-old center from the WHL’s Regina Pats next summer. Fans of those potential lottery teams have adopted some variation of “Fail/Tank/Lose Hard for Bedard” as a 2022-23 battle cry.
Any challenge to Bedard’s status as the presumptive first overall pick would be noteworthy. The fact that it appeared to come from the mouth of the presumptive second overall pick, 18-year-old center Adam Fantilli of the University of Michigan, made that challenge pretty interesting.
In an interview with TSN last summer, Fantilli was asked if he could “challenge” Bedard’s status as the 2023 NHL draft’s top prospect
“Yeah, absolutely. I feel like I can be a contender for anybody in this draft,” was his response.
The ensuing headline? “Fantilli ‘absolutely’ feels he can challenge Bedard for top pick in 2023 draft.”
Several months and several draft rankings later, Fantilli doesn’t believe his comments were framed correctly after that interview.
“That’s not what was said. They asked me if I felt like I could compete with anybody in a draft and I said ‘absolutely,'” he told ESPN recently (and revising history a bit). “I do my best to push [Bedard]. I know he pushes me. So it’s a good relationship.”
They’re teammates now, too. North Vancouver, British Columbia native Bedard and Fantilli, from Nobleton in Ontario, both made the roster for the Canadian world junior team seeking a second straight gold medal at the IIHF under-20 world junior championship tournament set to begin in Halifax and Moncton next week.
“Obviously Connor’s an amazing player. He is an amazing guy,” Fantilli said. “Like, we’re buddies. We’re hanging out and stuff like that.”