No Minnesota-born hockey player was taken in the first round of last year's NHL draft for the first time in a decade.
That shouldn't be the case this year.
It's expected that Brady Skjei, a 6-3, 200-pound, puck-moving defenseman from Lakeville, will be called to the stage Friday night in Pittsburgh.
Skjei -- pronounced "Shay" -- is projected to be drafted a dozen selections or so after the Wild chooses at No. 7, but Wild assistant general manager Brent Flahr calls the incoming Gopher "maybe the best skater in the draft."
That shouldn't come as a shock.
One of Skjei's uncles is Barry Karn, one of the top power-skating instructors in the country. Karn has worked for five NHL teams, including the past six years for Calgary, and is a consultant for the Wild, having worked primarily with its prospects.
"Ever since Brady was a little kid and we were just pushing him around on a chair just trying to make sure he was having fun at the rink, skating has been his strong suit," said Karn, who owns Karn Skating Dynamics in St. Louis Park with his wife, Jodi. "Obviously, it's just progressed from there. He's worked really hard at his skating."
And it's the foundation of Skjei's game.