The feeder leagues for hockey are currently undergoing a seismic shift. The biggest ripple was felt earlier this week when presumed first overall 2026 pick Gavin McKenna left Western Canada and the WHL to join up with Penn State. McKenna, of course, was financially induced to do so based on the new rules and laws about collegiate players graying the lines well past any sense of amateurism and made junior players eligible to play at American colleges.

In the past, the CHL (composed of the WHL, OHL and QMJHL) have held a stranglehold on teenage Canadian talent. McKenna shattered that forever, but he was hardly the first or only one involved in the exodus. 2025 first rounder Jackson Smith will join McKenna at Penn State, as will OHL star Luke Misa. First rounders and high draft picks Cayden Lindstrom, Cole Reschny and Malcolm Spence are going south too.

It’s a brave new world. The CHL is further getting picked apart since the NHL had previously been hands off about taking junior-eligible players out of those ranks and turning them pro. By an NHL-CHL transfer agreement, currently CHL players not retained on the NHL roster must return to their junior team if they are under 20 years old (by December 31 of that season) or have not completed four seasons in junior hockey — which is why someone like Owen Pickering stayed in Swift Current through the spring 2024, despite being drafted in 2022.

That too is about to be a thing of the past with news that NHL teams will soon be able to designate one 19-year old to be AHL eligible.

This rule starting in 2026-27 closes the door on Harrison Brunicke being AHL eligible this fall as a 19-year old, but 2025 first round pick like Ben Kindel, Bill Zonnon, Peyton Kettles or Travis Hayes could be in Wilkes-Barre as a teenager.

That opens up new doors for the pros for younger players, and also shows what dire straits the Canadian juniors as we know them are really in. Previously in draft-1, whether it was Connor Bedard or Sidney Crosby or Mario Lemieux, Canadian proteges were always playing in the Canadian junior system during their draft year. McKenna’s decision, as plenty of more quality players flee (seriously just look at the list) shows how much of a sea change there is ongoing right this very moment.

Lots of change to keep up with and monitor, for now there won’t be anything immediate but it does appear that the CHL is weakening with their hold on 17-19 year olds, which will be to the benefit of the AHL and NCAA ranks as these developments continue.