After taking Gracyn Sawchyn in the second round of the 2023 NHL Entry Draft in Nashville, Florida Panthers general manager Bill Zito selected mobile Swedish defenseman Albert Wikman in the fourth round (127th overall) of the event.
Wikman is a smooth-skating defender with decent size who excels in transition and projects to be a bottom-pairing guy at the NHL level unless he can add some offense to his game as he develops to lift his ceiling.
The 18-year-old suited up at two different levels for the Färjestad BK organization during the 2022-23 season, including 11 regular season in the top-level Swedish Hockey League. He finished those regular season games, which ranked ninth in the league among U18 players, with no points and a minus-three rating. Wikman also appeared in five games of Färjestad BK’s seven-game upset loss to Frolunda HC in the SHL quarterfinals. Those five postseason games were the most played by an U18 player in the league.
In 43 games among his peers with Färjestad’s J20 Nationell squad, Wikman produced two goals, ten assists, went plus-ten and finished second among the team’s defensemen in penalty minutes with 47.
Internationally, Wikman represented his country at the 2023 U18 World Junior Championships, appearing in two games and earning a silver medal, and at the World Junior A Challenge in Cornwall, Ontario, where he picked up three assists in six games for the third place Swedes.
EliteProspects had this to say about Wikman in its 2023 NHL Draft guide: The foundation of Wikman’s game is his skating. He moves his feet, reads plays, angles rush attempts wide, and is quick to draw a stick out to disrupt a play or block a lane. He gaps up early, guides plays towards the boards, pivots quickly and wins the body positioning by having superior leverage and driving through the opponent’s hands for an easy breakup. He generates a ton of defensive value by breaking up plays, both in transition and in the defensive zone.
Last season, Wikman spent most of his time at the junior level, suiting up in 45 games for Färjestad’s J20 team. His numbers against his age group increased slightly as he scored three times and assisted on 17 goals to finish with 20 points. He did make a pair of appearances in the SHL and was loaned to HockeyAllsvenskan outfit Södertälje SK and played two second-level games, collecting an assist.
Wikman just took part in his first development camp with the Panthers, one of ten defensemen invited to the event. He will be part of Team Sweden’s entry (along with fellow Panthers draftees Olof Glifford, Linus Eriksson and Simon Zether) at the World Junior Summer Showcase in Plymouth, MI, which runs from July 28 to August 3.
Like many of Florida’s current prospects group, he’s another long-range, meat-and-potatoes type, who some scouts describe as vanilla, Wikman shows proficiency in the basics of the position. His best attribute, his skating, and defensive ability make him a prospect to keep an eye on – one that will become even more intriguing if he can add more physicality and an offensive element to his game. He is expected to return to Södertälje SK for the upcoming season.