Fears over getting Matvei Michkov out of Russia, combined with a lack of reliable scouting, led the skilled winger to slip in the 2023 NHL draft. The rebuilding Philadelphia Flyers took him with the seventh pick, willing to be patient and wait for Michkov to play out the final three seasons of his KHL contract.
Two years ahead of schedule, the Flyers got Michkov to North America, and he could make his debut in the top hockey league in the world on Friday. He could be the best prospect to come out of Russia since Alex Ovechkin and Evgeni Malkin in 2005.
The 19-year-old is just part of the league's latest infusion of Russian talent, which is flowing despite the war in Ukraine and the longstanding lack of an international transfer agreement between the NHL and KHL.
''It's good that guys not be afraid to try here, a year of hockey, without any parents, your friends,'' Winnipeg Jets prospect Nikita Chibrikov, 21, said at the NHLPA rookie showcase last month. ''It's really hard. You come to another country, for us, it feels like another world. Some guys don't know the language. It feels like you try to live another life.''
Michkov was the second of 21 players selected out of a Russian league in ‘23, and NHL teams took 24 in the most recent draft last summer. Washington's Ivan Miroshnichenko was the first of 20 taken in '22, the first draft since Russia invaded Ukraine.
The International Ice Hockey Federation has since banned Russia and close ally Belarus from participating in its tournaments, including the world juniors for players under 20 and the under-18 world championship that serve as key scouting opportunities. The NHL has also cut business ties with Russia since the war began, and teams because of travel bans and safety and security concerns have fewer scouts looking at the KHL and the other leagues there.
Steven Warshaw, a marketing executive who worked in Moscow in the 1990s for the Pittsburgh Penguins when they invested in a hockey club there in the aftermath of the Soviet Union's collapse, estimates that there's 90% less scouting in Russia than before the war. That has clouded player evaluation, and he also said extra money is being spent to keep the best homegrown players in Russia.
''They're keeping a lot of players that would normally come here,'' Warshaw said. ''No one wants to end up in Allentown making (less than league minimum) money. They'd rather be in St. Petersburg getting hundreds of thousands of dollars and being stars, speaking their own language, eating their own food, feeling comfortable.''