SUNRISE, Fla. - The picks have been made, the trades have been completed (for now) and the 2015 NHL Draft is in the books.

Which teams and players made out best? And which teams and players made out worst?

You're about to find out ... in our Winners and Losers of the 2015 NHL Draft.

WINNERS: Connor McDavid and Jack Eichel

Obvious things are obvious: McDavid and Eichel finally became members of the Edmonton Oilers and Buffalo Sabres respectively, and can finally stop talking about their NHL careers in hypothetical terms and start discussing how they’re going to impact the League during their race to the Calder Trophy in 2015-16.

LOSERS: Teams Trading Up to No. 3

The Boston Bruins and Columbus Blue Jackets were among the teams seeking to trade with the Arizona Coyotes for the No. 3 overall pick. But they kept it and took Dylan Strome, which is a great addition to a franchise that needs to develop some significant talent down the middle.

WINNER: Buffalo Sabres

What a weekend for Tim Murray. He’ll leave South Florida with Jack Eichel, Robin Lehner, Jamie McGinn and Ryan O’Reilly. Pretty good haul for the Sabres to add to a roster featuring a healthy Evander Kane and Zach Bogosian, who were acquired in February. According to CapFriendly, the Sabres are about $16 million under the cap ceiling, meaning more opportunities for Murray to upgrade his lineup. The one year of pain was worth it for the what’s looking like a quick turnaround for the franchise.

LOSER: San Jose Sharks

The Sharks were in on Cam Talbot and missed out after he was dealt to Edmonton. They then dealt the negotiating rights to Antti Niemi to Dallas. “As we look at it, there are more goalies than teams,” said GM Doug Wilson. “And there are more people available in discussions than you guys hear about.” So what does he do now? He didn’t rule out bringing Niemi back should he fail to sign with the Stars. But with all the goalies on the move this weekend, San Jose failed to snag one. Maybe Wilson can give Bob Murray a call. He’s got three NHL-level ones in Anaheim now.

View photos SUNRISE, FL - JUNE 27: AnDong Song reacts after being selected 172nd overall by the New York Islanders during the 2015 NHL Draft at BB&T Center on June 27, 2015 in Sunrise, Florida. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) More

WINNER: Andong Song

The 18-year old defenseman became the first player born in China to be drafted when he was taken No. 172 by the New York Islanders. His entire draft weekend was documented by Chinese TV station CCTV. After moving to Canada at age 10, he then went to New Jersey at 15 to play at the Lawrenceville School. With the Asian market one the NHL is hoping to crack, Song’s success in professional hockey on this side of the Pacific Ocean could do wonders to help grow the sport there.

LOSER: Oliver Kylington

Projections for the blueliner had him anywhere from No. 15 to somewhere in the second round. He almost fell into the third round before the Calgary Flames took him 60th overall. He fell from No. 1 to No. 6 in NHL Central Scouting’s final draft rankings and plans to use the fall for motivation against the teams that passed him over.

WINNER: Devan Dubnyk

The Wild wanted security in net and Dubnyk wanted security after coming to Minnesota and being a huge part of the team’s turnaround after January. The Wild handed him a six-year, $25 million extension on Saturday, shoring up their goaltending and rewarding Dubnyk for helping to save their season. GM Chuck Fletcher called it a “market contract” and added he’s comfortable with the numbers. At 29, the goaltender is entering the prime of his career and the Wild are hoping his best years are ahead of him.

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