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2026 NHL Draft - Day One
Justin Bieber and Gavin McKennaJeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images

Biggest Takeaways From 2026 NHL Draft

Joe YerdonJun 27, 2026

If there was a word to describe the feeling headed into the first round of the 2026 NHL Draft, it was "intrigue," and by the end of the night, we had a lot of answers for the questions that swirled around the event going into it. We also had our share of surprises as well.

The trades that went down leading into the weekend, the rumors surrounding numerous players around the league, and a setting like the draft set the table for a lot of action. Fortunately for all of us, the talk wasn't just empty words, and some of it even created more drama to play out in the future.

Trades, picks, and scuttlebutt dominate the draft every year, and this year's event in Buffalo has already rewarded us with a lot to chew on. Here's what stuck out to us after the first round of the draft.

The Maple Leafs Have Their Next Star in Gavin McKenna

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2026 NHL Draft - Portraits

When you have the top pick and get to take the consensus No. 1 player in the draft class, you're a winner even if you've been mired in losing. Gavin McKenna going to the Toronto Maple Leafs juices up the Leafs' offense in a big way. Putting McKenna on the wing with Auston Matthews potentially gives them the threat they lost when Mitch Marner went to Vegas a year ago.

McKenna's speed, skill and creativity with the puck made him a standout since he was 16 years old. Watching him at Penn State this season helped reaffirm what's made him a special player at his age. Now that he's off to Toronto to reinvigorate the Maple Leafs, his mettle will be tested by the bright lights and copious attention the franchise has heaped upon it.

Fortunately for McKenna, he'll have the most recent Maple Leafs player to be taken No. 1 as a mentor, alongside Matthews. Being able to lean on him for all the reasons young star players need is a huge bonus for Toronto. If they can bond, become a dynamic duo, and get the Leafs back to the playoffs, it'll make the miserable season they just suffered through worth it.

The Rangers Make the Biggest Trade Splash of the Night

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Stanley Cup Final: Vegas Golden Knights v Carolina Hurricanes - Game One
Pavel Dorofeyev

The New York Rangers have had trade speculation swirling around them, mostly because of rumored interest in Vincent Trocheck. Instead, the Rangers took things in a different direction and acquired a big-time scorer in Pavel Dorofeyev from the Vegas Golden Knights.

The Rangers traded two first-round picks (26th overall this year and a top-10 protected pick in 2028) and a third-round pick this year for Dorofeyev, a restricted free agent. Vegas was motivated to move Dorofeyev after back-to-back seasons with 35 and 37 goals and a hefty new contract on the way; they had no shot of getting under the cap.

New York came to the rescue, helping Vegas get more involved in the draft (they came into it with four picks) and making sure to lock up Dorofeyev to a reported seven-year, $77 million extension. After moving Artemi Panarin to Los Angeles last season, the Rangers reignited their attack with a new high-powered offensive threat from Russia to replace him.

Bruins Pay a Huge Premium on Peterka

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Boston Bruins v Utah Mammoth

The Utah Mammoth's big play a year ago to add offense was to bring in JJ Peterka from Buffalo. While he was able to help lead them to the playoffs, his stay in the Rockies was a short one, and the Boston Bruins came calling with a hefty offer to acquire him.

The Bruins gave up the 23rd pick in the draft and a conditional first-round pick in 2028 for the speedy German winger who had 25 goals and 22 assists for Utah. Boston showed in their first-round loss to Buffalo that they needed speed and skill, and, coincidentally, it's a former Sabres player who will attempt to provide them.

Peterka will play for a fellow German, Marco Sturm, and having someone with that kind of connection can certainly help bridge the gap with a new team. Then again, getting to play with David Pastrňák will make a lot better.

That said, the price Boston paid as a team in need of help to build up their prospect base was a high one. What doesn't help is that Utah used the pick they got in the deal to acquire Sebastian Cossa from Detroit later in the evening, thus giving the Red Wings, a division rival, their pick.

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Sharks Continue to Stockpile Young Talent

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2026 NHL Draft - Portraits
Ivar Stenberg and Keaton Verhoeff

San Jose came into the draft already looking like big winners after landing the No. 2 pick in the draft. They made life even better for themselves when they acquired the No. 9 pick from Ottawa for William Eklund ahead of the draft and swapped spots with Buffalo late in the first and added Michael Kesselring. Even though they were oh so close to making the postseason, they reaped the bounty of lottery luck and continued to stockpile outstanding young talent.

The Sharks took Swedish forward Ivar Stenberg with the second pick to potentially give Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith yet another star to join them up front. With the No. 9 pick, they took hulking defenseman Keaton Verhoeff to help strengthen their blue line. But they weren't done cooking as they traded up to 21 from 27 to select puck-moving defenseman Ryan Lin.

If there was a weakness among all the prospects the Sharks have, it was on defense, where Sam Dickinson was carrying the weight of expectations. Now with Verhoeff and Lin, they've massively upgraded the position. Adding Stenberg to the forward group, a player who could jump to the NHL immediately, San Jose got that much scarier for the years to come.

Putting the "Blue" in Blue Jackets

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Pittsburgh Penguins v Columbus Blue Jackets
Kirill Marchenko and Zach Werenski

You'll forgive us if we're not usually discussing what's going on with the Columbus Blue Jackets all that often, but after what was reported on Friday, they'd probably rather have the silence than be heard from at all.

There were already rumblings about Norris Trophy-winning defenseman Zach Werenski's lack of happiness, and those were exacerbated by rumors of teams calling about his availability. Those matters were made infinitely worse by news that the team was fielding calls for the blue liner.

The problem with taking calls is that the calls don't stop, and now they've got a mess on their hands.

As if it wasn't bad enough about Werenski, ESPN's Kevin Weekes reported that star forward Kirill Marchenko, whose contract is up after next season, also wants out.

The Blue Jackets have to be reeling from all this and it's made worse by the fact that GM Don Waddell found out about Marchenko's demand via Twitter.

The specter of having to deal with their best player, Werenski, is magnified by the prospect of potentially moving their most explosive scorer, Marchenko, into a gutshot to a franchise that's done its best over the year to improve. To see it unfold like this must be a blindside for the organization, and even though they'd be able to clean up in both trades, it can't be taken as anything other than a massive setback.

Young Players Find New Homes

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Anaheim Ducks v Edmonton Oilers - Game Five
Mason McTavish

One of the stories we kept an eye on going into the offseason was whether we'd see a handful of young future stars find new homes for better opportunities. The Draft turned out to be just that moment for a few of them.

The Anaheim Ducks were busy on Friday, moving on from a pair of young players. Gritty forward Mason McTavish was sent to the St. Louis Blues in exchange for the No. 15 pick, which they used to take forward Nikita Klepov, and the No. 29 pick, which they used to trade up to 28th with Vegas to select forward Marcus Nordmark.

McTavish had been heavily rumored to be on the move, and the Blues stepped up with an offer that was hard to pass up, with two picks in the first round. The Ducks also sent defenseman Olen Zellweger to the Buffalo Sabres for the 45th pick in the draft and forward prospect Anton Wahlberg earlier in the day as well.

Detroit came into the draft without a first-round pick, but ended the night with the 23rd pick after trading goalie prospect Sebastian Cossa to Utah. The Wings selected highly skilled forward JP Hurlbert, who's headed to the University of Michigan, with the pick. While everyone waits to see where Dylan Larkin may go, moving on from Cossa makes sense, especially with Michigan State goalie Trey Augustine on the way in the future.

Sabres Play It Straight Instead of Dealing Picks

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2026 NHL Draft - Day One
Daxon Rudolph

Even though the Toronto Maple Leafs had the No. 1 pick, the hosts of the draft, the Buffalo Sabres, made their splash this week to get to the front of the draft and become a bit of a wild card with what they would do.

The Sabres traded Bowen Byram and Jordan Greenway to Chicago and landed the fourth overall pick in the draft in the deal. That came days after they traded Michael Kesselring and the 27th pick to San Jose for the 20th overall selection. With two picks in the top 20 and a team that just made a run to the second round of the playoffs and needs to address after moving Byram, as well as the sign-and-trade deal that sent Alex Tuch to Washington, the Sabres had a lot of ammunition to get aggressive with trades.

Instead, they held firm and surprised many by selecting defenseman Daxon Rudolph with the No. 4 pick and power forward Ilia Morozov with the 20th pick. Sabres GM Jarmo Kekäläinen said he didn't receive any significant offers for the fourth pick and decided to use it on a player they valued highly after first speaking with Rudolph on Friday morning.

Hey, maybe the Sabres really were a wild card all along.

Summer Trade Sagas Are Going to Linger

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Detroit Red Wings v Winnipeg Jets
Connor Hellebuyck and Dylan Larkin

Did you go into the draft hoping to see Dylan Larkin moved? Were you thinking about Jason Robertson in a new sweater? How about Connor Hellebuyck playing for a new team? Draft weekend kept you in suspense and now that feeling will have to carry over into the summer.

Of all the star players who may be looking for new homes, none of them found it during the NHL Draft. Yes, there were plenty of rumors, but no deals got pushed over the finish line. We even got to add Zach Werenski and Kirill Marchenko's names to this list and they didn't go elsewhere either.

There was talk that the Buffalo Sabres and Winnipeg Jets got far down the road regarding Hellebuyck but couldn't put the final pieces in place to make it happen. Larkin, meanwhile, might have to wait things out for a while dealing with a (probably) deeply frustrated GM Steve Yzerman.

Even though free agency lacks luster these days in the NHL, trade speculation will rule us all as the offseason truly takes over after the draft. Watching to see where Werenski, Robertson, Hellebuyck and company land will be what keeps us going through (or if you're a Red Wings fan, ruins) summer.

Jason Robertson and the Dallas Stars Are Headed for a Divorce

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Winnipeg Jets v Dallas Stars

You can't ask a regular person what they would do if they were offered $15 million a year to move to Seattle for eight years because the answer is an easy yes. Jason Robertson isn't a regular person, though, he's an elite hockey player and in charge of where he wants to play next and even $15 million a year isn't enough to get him to move.

It's a stunning refusal by any player, but for Robertson, a restricted free agent who's also a year away from being unrestricted, he pretty much gets to call the shots on his future unless Dallas GM Jim Nill really digs his heels in. To Nill's credit, he's steadfast in trying to keep Robertson in Dallas, but if it's going to cost $15 million per season, he's got a lot of work ahead of him to reshape the roster.

Obviously, Dallas doesn't regret acquiring and re-signing Mikko Rantanen for $12 million a year, but that set the bar for their homegrown 40-goal star winger in Robertson. The Stars would get a haul and a half for Robertson if they trade him, but after they parted ways with Logan Stankoven to land Rantanen, giving up a player like Robertson would not feel good for keeping the Stars in the Stanley Cup contender position unless a trade was an absolute home run.

Cup Champs Potentially Add Another Defensive Piece

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Toronto Maple Leafs v Anaheim Ducks

One of the potentially most impactful free agents to be this summer is defenseman John Carlson. His trade from Washington to Anaheim was a stunner at the deadline and the draft saw his rights moved from the Ducks to the Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes during Day 2 of the NHL Draft.

The trade doesn't lock Carlson into playing for Carolina, but it gives GM Eric Tulsky the opportunity to spend a few days trying to work out a new contract with him and work his magic. With Carlson expected to get somewhere at least $10 million a season for a new contract, that kind of addition would require the 'Canes to shift some players around, possibly on their own excellent blue line.

There's no doubt Carlson would make Carolina's blue line that much more formidable and give them another weapon on the power play, and in this case, someone who can quarterback it. If they can't get something done, though, swapping some late draft picks to at least get the chance to negotiate ahead of free agency was worth the shot.

Maple Leafs Pick Gets A

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