
2026/6/29 · 9:22
McKenna goes No. 1: NHL digest, June 22-29
Toronto selected Gavin McKenna No. 1, San Jose drew the strongest post-draft reviews, and Washington reshaped its top six with Alex Tuch and Jordan Kyrou. The digest also covers Bill Guerin winning GM of the Year, Mike Babcock returning with Edmonton, the RFA and buyout deadlines, and Seth Jarvis’ shoulder surgery as the clearest early fantasy downgrade.
The NHL's first post-Cup week belonged to the draft floor, not the scoreboard. Toronto used the No. 1 pick on Gavin McKenna, San Jose came out of Buffalo with the most widely praised prospect haul, Washington kept remaking its top six, and Carolina's first injury disclosure after the parade immediately changed the fantasy board. 1 2 3 4
Draft week: McKenna lands in Toronto, San Jose wins the reviews
Toronto Maple Leafs general manager John Chayka used the No. 1 pick on Gavin McKenna, an 18-year-old left wing from Penn State who had 51 points in 35 NCAA games and finished as a Hobey Baker top-10 finalist. 1 Pop star Justin Bieber announced the pick on stage at KeyBank Center with the line, "Mr. McKenna, we would like to draft you to the Toronto Maple Leafs." 5 Toronto had not picked first overall since Auston Matthews in 2016, and McKenna became the franchise's third No. 1 pick after Matthews and Wendel Clark. 5
The top of the board settled quickly. San Jose took Ivar Stenberg at No. 2, Vancouver took Caleb Malhotra at No. 3, Buffalo used the No. 4 pick acquired from Chicago on Daxon Rudolph, and the Rangers took Alberts Smits at No. 5. 1 The first round also produced two clean record markers: seven Sweden-born players went in Round 1, and Smits became the highest Latvia-born player ever drafted into the NHL. 1
The analyst consensus after Day 2 was unusually clear. San Jose received top marks from Bleacher Report, ESPN, Daily Faceoff, The Hockey News/Yahoo, and Sportsnet after adding Stenberg at No. 2, Keaton Verhoeff at No. 9, and Ryan Lin at No. 21. 2 6 Rachel Kryshak of ESPN called the Sharks' class "100%, aced the test, 10/10 no notes." 6 Toronto also graded well after adding McKenna and then turning the Brandon Carlo trade into Day 2 selections. 6 Tampa Bay landed near the bottom of several draft reviews, with Bleacher Report giving the Lightning a D and Daily Faceoff giving them a C-. 2 7
The draft floor was also a trade market. Boston acquired JJ Peterka from Utah for the No. 23 pick and a protected 2028 first, then signed him to a seven-year, $77M extension. 8 The Rangers acquired Pavel Dorofeyev from Vegas for the No. 26 pick, the No. 92 pick, and a protected 2028 first, then signed him to a seven-year, $77M extension. 8 St. Louis acquired Mason McTavish from Anaheim for the No. 15 and No. 29 picks, while Utah acquired goalie Sebastian Cossa from Detroit for the No. 23 pick. 8
Two draft-side notes matter for fantasy and dynasty formats. The Penguins reunited the Ruck twins by taking Liam at No. 22 and Markus at No. 39, the first twins drafted by the same team in 16 years. 9 San Jose selected 7-foot-1 defenseman Alexander Karmanov at No. 201, making him the tallest player ever selected in the NHL Draft. 2 Neither is a redraft-league item now, but both belong on deep dynasty watch lists.
The roster market: Washington buys, Dallas waits, Toronto cuts bait
Washington made the week's most aggressive win-now moves. The Capitals acquired Alex Tuch from Buffalo in a sign-and-trade after he agreed to an eight-year, $84M contract with a $10.5M AAV. 3 Buffalo received David Kampf and a 2027 third-round pick. 3 Washington had already acquired Jordan Kyrou from St. Louis the previous day, sending Connor McMichael, Milton Gastrin, and the No. 16 pick to the Blues. 3
Tuch gives Washington a top-six winger who scored 33 goals and 66 points in 79 regular-season games for Buffalo in 2025-26. 3 Capitals GM Chris Patrick said Tuch was "a highly coveted player" and pointed to his size, versatility, leadership, and all-around game. 3 For fantasy, the bet is straightforward: if Alex Ovechkin returns, Washington can run a deeper top six; if he does not, Tuch and Kyrou become the immediate scoring insulation.
Dallas has the opposite problem: its biggest move did not happen. Jason Robertson reportedly turned down Seattle's eight-year offer worth about $15M per season after Dallas gave the Kraken permission to speak with him. 10 Sportsnet reported that the trade framework involved Seattle's No. 7 pick, while Robertson's qualifying offer is $9.3M and Dallas would prefer a deal closer to Mikko Rantanen's $12M AAV. 10 Robertson had 45 goals and 96 points in 2025-26, so any move would change first-round fantasy assumptions immediately. 10
| Move | Return | Immediate read |
|---|---|---|
| Brandon Carlo to St. Louis | Toronto received picks No. 73 and No. 76 in the 2026 draft. 11 | St. Louis adds a 6-foot-5 defenseman with one year left at a $4.1M cap hit; Toronto recoups mid-round picks 15 months after paying a much higher price for Carlo. 11 |
| John Carlson rights to Carolina | Anaheim received Kyle Masters and pick No. 162. 12 | Carolina gets an exclusive run at a UFA defenseman before July 1. 12 |
| Jack Drury signs with Nashville | Five years, $22.5M, $4.5M AAV. 13 | Nashville locks in a middle-six center before the market opens. 13 |
| Michael Kesselring signs with San Jose | Three years, $13.5M, $4.5M AAV. 14 | San Jose keeps the defenseman it acquired for the No. 20 pick. 14 |
| Beck Malenstyn signs with Buffalo | Six years, $18M, $3M AAV. 15 | Buffalo commits term to a depth winger after moving bigger pieces. 15 |
Two deadline clocks frame the next 48 hours. The RFA qualifying-offer deadline is June 29 at 5:00 PM ET, with Connor Bedard, Robertson, Leo Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, and Adam Fantilli among the important names still requiring decisions. 16 The buyout window closes June 30 at 5:00 PM ET; as of the morning of June 29, no NHL team had executed a buyout. 17 The cap ceiling rises to $104M for 2026-27, with a $76.9M floor, which helps explain why buyouts have been quiet so far. 17
Front offices and benches: Guerin gets the award, Edmonton takes the risk
Minnesota's Bill Guerin won the Jim Gregory General Manager of the Year Award, becoming the first Wild GM to win it since the award was introduced in 2009-10. 18 Guerin finished with 131 points in voting, ahead of Colorado's Chris MacFarland at 123 and Anaheim's Pat Verbeek at 29. 18 His case included the Quinn Hughes trade, Kirill Kaprizov's eight-year, $136M extension, Minnesota's 104-point season, and a first-round playoff win over Dallas. 18 Guerin said, "You don't achieve things like this on your own, ever. It does take a village. It takes a strong family." 19
Edmonton filled the last head-coaching vacancy by hiring Mike Babcock on June 23, with D.J. Smith joining as an assistant. 20 Babcock returns to NHL coaching nearly seven years after his previous full-time NHL job, and the NHL/NHLPA investigation into his conduct in Columbus had been completed before the Oilers hired him. 20 Edmonton fired Kris Knoblauch on May 14 after a 93-point season and a first-round loss to Anaheim, so the Babcock hire lands in a narrow win-now window tied to Connor McDavid's next contract phase. 20
Injury and fantasy board: Jarvis is the clearest downgrade
Carolina's Seth Jarvis had shoulder surgery on June 27 to repair a torn labrum and rotator cuff in the same right shoulder that bothered him during the 2023-24 season. 4 The Hurricanes put his recovery range at four to six months, which means he will miss the start of 2026-27 and could be out until late November or later. 4 Jarvis had 32 goals, 34 assists, and 66 points in 71 regular-season games, then added 11 points in 19 playoff games. 4

Hurricanes GM Eric Tulsky said the team hopes Jarvis lands on the shorter end of the timeline and named Bradly Nadeau as an internal candidate if Carolina needs an early-season call-up. 4 That is the cleanest fantasy takeaway of the week: Jarvis moves down draft boards because of missed games, while Nadeau becomes a watch-list name for managers in deeper leagues.
Dallas expects Radek Faksa to be ready for training camp after a second foot surgery, and Tyler Seguin continues to work back from an ACL tear suffered in early December. 21 Calgary winger Jonathan Huberdeau is back skating after hip resurfacing surgery and, according to Flames GM Craig Conroy, is pain-free for the first time in a long stretch. 21 Toronto's Max Domi remains indefinite after complications from back surgery, and ESPN described the Maple Leafs' bottom-six picture as uncertain entering free agency. 22
Vegas still has no new public recovery timelines for William Karlsson, Mark Stone, Noah Hanifin, or Brayden McNabb after the June 17 injury disclosures. 23 Karlsson had wrist surgery after getting hurt in Stanley Cup Final Game 5, Stone played through a torn adductor, Hanifin had an upper-body injury that would have cost him six to eight weeks in the regular season, and McNabb played through three separate injuries. 23 The Dorofeyev trade also removes a 35-goal winger from the Vegas forward group. 8
Ovechkin remains the biggest binary fantasy question. TSN's Pierre LeBrun reported that no decision on Alex Ovechkin's 2026-27 status is expected before July 1, and Ovechkin's previous five-year, $47.5M contract has expired. 24 Ovechkin said after the season, "I'm pretty sure it's not my last game," but he also said he needed to make a decision with his team and family. 24 Washington's Kyrou and Tuch additions make the answer more consequential: Ovechkin returning would give fantasy managers a deeper supporting cast to price into his draft slot.
The next checkpoint is compact: RFA decisions are due June 29, the buyout window closes June 30, and free agency opens July 1. 16 17 22 The games are gone, but roster value is moving every day.
Cover image: image from McKenna selected No. 1 by Maple Leafs in 2026 NHL Draft
参考来源
- 12026 NHL Draft 1st-round tracker, analysis
- 2NHL Draft 2026 team-by-team results, grades and analysis
- 3Tuch traded to Capitals by Sabres, signs 8-year, $84 million contract
- 4Jarvis expected to miss start of next season after shoulder surgery
- 5McKenna selected No. 1 by Maple Leafs in 2026 NHL Draft
- 62026 NHL draft grades: best, worst, most surprising picks
- 72026 NHL Draft: grading how all 32 teams did
- 82025-26 NHL trade tracker
- 9Top 10 moments from 2026 NHL Draft
- 10Sources: Jason Robertson turns down contract offer from Kraken
- 11Carlo traded to Blues by Maple Leafs for draft picks
- 12Hurricanes acquire rights to John Carlson
- 13Predators sign Jack Drury to five-year deal
- 14Sharks sign defenceman Michael Kesselring to three-year deal
- 15Sabres to re-sign winger Beck Malenstyn to six-year, $18M deal
- 16NHL's top 12 RFAs of 2026: latest rumours, reports
- 17Expect the unexpected: decisions loom for Dallas Stars
- 18Guerin of Wild named General Manager of the Year
- 19Guerin named NHL General Manager of Year for work with Wild
- 20Oilers hire Mike Babcock as head coach
- 21Snapshots: Larkin, Stars injuries, Flames, Carlile
- 22NHL free agency 2026: how all 32 teams can earn an A+
- 23Kelly McCrimmon reflects on whirlwind 2025-2026 season
- 24No news expected on Ovechkin's 2026-27 playing status ahead of July 1

围绕这条内容继续补充观点或上下文。