Top prospects clash in a high-stakes scrimmage as Team Blue secures bragging rights, showcasing the speed and aggression of Seattle’s future stars at development camp.

The Fourth Annual Stucky Cup scrimmage took place Thursday morning to celebrate the conclusion of Kraken development camp.  The campers were divided into two teams—white and blue—to face off for the ultimate bragging rights.  The rosters pitted 2025 first-round pick Jake O’Brien (Team White) against 2026 first-rounder Chase Reid (Team Blue).  

The scrimmage is played in two 20-minute halves with an intermission between.  The teams engage in 4-on-4 play, and the plan was to have a 1-on-1 tiebreaker followed up a shootout if regulation ended in a tie.  The tiebreaker ended up being unnecessary.

Team White#Position
Jake O'Brien44C
Loke Krantz58W
Ollie Josephson72C
Ben MacDonald64C/W
Viktor Fedorov73C
Nathan Villeneuve90C/W
Brody Gillespie37C
Jakub Fibigr52LD
Blake Fiddler53RD
Maxim Agafonov42RD
Rylan Singh94RD
Ola Palme80LD
Visa Vedenpää33G
Lawton Zacher40G
Team Blue#Position
Clarke Caswell56C
Zeb Forsfjäll93C
Ryden Evers91 C
Zaccharya Wisdom76W
Casey Mutryn81W
William Tomko61C
Chase Reid25RD
Finn Kearns2LD
Alexis Bernier43RD
Will Reynolds71LD
Hawke Huff54RD
Kim Saarinen50G
Maks Corovic36G

William Tomko opened the scoring for Team Blue.  Shorty after, Ola Palme netted one for Team White, tying the score. They were the only goals in the first half, and the teams left the ice tied 1-1 with nearly even shots on goal.  In the second half, Team Blue took flight.  Will Reynolds scored the game winner (though it was credited to Zaccharya Wisdom) for Team Blue, and not long after Zeb Forsfjall put one up for insurance.  Team White pulled their goaltender (Lawton Zacher) in a last-ditch effort to tie it up, but William Tomko took advantage with an empty-netter to put the final nail in the coffin.

July 2nd: Players shake hands at the conclusion of the Stucky Cup, video by Candace Kludt | The Hockey NewsmoreVideos

Several players did not appear on the scoresheet, but really made their impact on the game. Hawke Huff, Clarke Caswell, Ollie Josephson, and Nathan Villeneuve were all standouts who brought speed and aggression every time they hit the ice.  Defenseman Rylan Singh also impressed with his agility and edge control.  

With this bright group of prospects in the pipeline, the future of Seattle hockey is bright. 

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