EDMONTON, AB - The Redwoods won't be the only towering tree trunks in California this season.
The Bakersfield Condors, and the Edmonton Oilers organization as a whole, stand to benefit from a breadth of size, range, and mobility within the club's developing defensive prospects that are beginning to knock on the door of the National Hockey League.
"Some tall trees on the back end," Condors Head Coach Jay Woodcroft said. "It's a uniquely-built back end."
Of the nine attendees patrolling the blueline at this week's Oilers Rookie Camp, eight clock in above the 6-foot-2 height line, with both defencemen Markus Niemelainen and Michael Kesselring standing at 6-foot-5.
Defenceman Yanni Kaldis, a camp invite and the lone prospect below the six-foot mark, suited up for 28 games and registered seven assists as part of Bakersfield's run to the Pacific Division championship last season.
"You mentioned their sizes, and that's something you can't teach as a coach," Woodcroft continued. "You can't teach someone to be 6-foot-4 or 6-foot-5. They either have it or they don't, and our job as a coaching staff and an organization is to try and maximize what each person brings to the table."
ROOKIE CAMP: A sizeable presence on defence
The overall stature of this crop of blueliners at Oilers Rookie Camp is a product of a recent organizational trend towards drafting big and mobile blueliners

RAW | Michael Kesselring 09.16.21
RAW | Jay Woodcroft 09.17.21

















