
MLB Power Rankings: AL, NL wild-card teams on the move ahead of October
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adminWe have our first official playoff teams! The Brewers clinched the season’s first postseason spot on Wednesday with a Cubs loss, and the Yankees followed suit later that night by beating the Mariners in extra innings to secure their trip to October. Now, with 11 days left in the regular season, we wait to see who’s next.
It’s just a matter of time before additional clubs lock up berths — such as the Phillies, Dodgers and Guardians — but others still have a lot to play for. In the past week, we’ve seen the Tigers go on a run that has brought them to just 1.5 games back of the final American League wild card. And in the National League, the Mets have continued their late-season surge, bumping the Braves out of the current playoff picture.
Some of these races will go down to the final days of the season — so, get ready for some exciting baseball!
Meanwhile, our expert panel has combined to rank every team based on a combination of what we’ve seen so far and what we already knew going into the 162-game marathon that is a full baseball season. We also asked ESPN MLB experts David Schoenfield, Bradford Doolittle, Jesse Rogers, Alden Gonzalez and Jorge Castillo to weigh in with an observation for all 30 teams.
Week 24 | Second-half preview | Preseason rankings
Record: 91-61
Previous ranking: 1
With the postseason around the corner, Zack Wheeler looks primed for another big October as he’s pitching his best baseball of the season. He has a 1.98 ERA over his past eight starts with a .181 average and .518 OPS allowed. He has allowed more than two runs in a game just once since June 16. Wheeler leads all pitchers in WAR since 2020, but he appears destined to finish second in the Cy Young voting to Atlanta’s Chris Sale. And who starts the second game of the playoffs? Aaron Nola has been hammered in his past two outings and Ranger Suarez has been a little shaky as well. That could line up Cristopher Sanchez as the No. 2 starter for the postseason. — Schoenfield
Record: 90-62
Previous ranking: 2
This last week and a half is all about which starting pitchers will step up for a Dodgers team that lost Tyler Glasnow (sprained elbow) for the rest of the season and is still unsure about who will make up its October rotation. Yoshinobu Yamamoto needs to continue to sharpen his command, Walker Buehler needs to get his delivery in sync, Clayton Kershaw needs to relieve the pain in his left big toe, Bobby Miller needs to find something to get him back on track and Gavin Stone, who’s nursing shoulder inflammation and still hasn’t restarted his throwing program, seemingly needs a miracle. Beyond Jack Flaherty, the picture still looks very uncertain. — Gonzalez
Record: 89-63
Previous ranking: 3
All summer, as Anthony Volpe continued slumping at the plate, Yankees manager Aaron Boone insisted that the shortstop’s defense and baserunning were more than valuable enough to warrant a spot in the lineup every day. And so Volpe played shortstop every day. That sentiment has seemingly changed.
Volpe was recently out of the lineup twice in an eight-game span after starting 139 consecutive games, with his starts going to the switch-hitting Oswaldo Cabrera. Volpe has batted .212 with the lowest OPS (.554) and second-lowest wRC+ (54) among qualified hitters since June 6, the day after a three-hit performance increased his batting average to .288 and OPS to .803. This could just be the Yankees giving Volpe breathers in hopes that rest could revitalize him at the plate — or they could be signaling that he will play less when the games matter most. — Castillo
Record: 88-64
Previous ranking: 4
The injury report will be a focus for the Brewers over the final days of the regular season. Righty Joel Payamps is a concern after leaving Sunday’s game with forearm tightness, but the team is expected to get starter/reliever Bryse Wilson and righty Nick Mears back before October. Milwaukee could give those players extra time to return if it earns a first-round bye. The Brewers are still within striking distance of the Dodgers and Phillies in the standings but have a tough schedule to finish the season against the wild-card-contending Diamondbacks and Mets. — Rogers
Record: 87-66
Previous ranking: 7
With six scoreless innings against the Astros on Monday, Yu Darvish made a strong case for inclusion in the Padres’ rotation in a potential wild-card series. And that should tell you all you need to know about the state of their pitching — Darvish, a five-time All-Star who has looked good since coming back from a three-month absence, might not be a lock to crack the Padres’ initial October rotation. It says little about Darvish and a lot more about the trio of Dylan Cease, Joe Musgrove and Michael King — not to mention Martin Perez, an under-the-radar pickup before the trade deadline who has been nothing short of dominant in San Diego. — Gonzalez
Record: 88-65
Previous ranking: 5
With their lead expanding in the AL Central, the Guardians now have another goal in mind: the No. 1 seed in the AL. They had some important roster shuffling this week, with Steven Kwan landing on the 10-day injured list with a back issue, retroactive to Sept. 14. That would give him time to make it back before the end of the regular season. After hitting .352 in the first half and starting the All-Star Game, Kwan has struggled with a .201 average in the second half. Carlos Carrasco, on the IL anyway, was designated for assignment. The Guardians are also still hoping to get Alex Cobb, who has made just three starts, back from a blister issue. He could certainly factor into the postseason pitching plans if he’s healthy. — Schoenfield
Record: 84-68
Previous ranking: 9
The D-backs activated catcher Gabriel Moreno after a six-week absence that was prompted by a groin injury. Before the end of this week, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. (calf) is also expected to come off the IL, making Arizona’s high-powered offense whole after being without a handful of regulars throughout the second half. Aside from winning enough games to secure a wild-card spot, getting the likes of Moreno, Gurriel, Christian Walker and Ketel Marte on track offensively will be critical down the stretch. So will a healthy Ryne Nelson, the 26-year-old starting pitcher who recently went on the IL with shoulder inflammation but is expected back before the end of September. — Gonzalez
Record: 82-70
Previous ranking: 8
The Astros aren’t quite locked into the AL’s 3-seed, but things are moving rapidly in that direction. Before long, general manager Dana Brown & Co. will face some tough decisions about the postseason rotation. Justin Verlander has mostly struggled since coming off the IL in August, but that’s only the start of Brown’s dilemma. You only need four starters in the playoffs and, in some circumstances, three will do. Houston currently has five starters outperforming Verlander. Picking a rotation among that quintet would be tough enough, but what about Verlander? Can you really leave the future Hall of Famer out of the mix? It’s one of the more intriguing elements of all the playoff roster decisions that lie ahead. — Doolittle
Record: 84-68
Previous ranking: 6
The Orioles’ decision to designate Craig Kimbrel for assignment Wednesday was simultaneously shocking and expected. Shocking because Kimbrel is a potential future Hall of Famer who, in his age-36 season, was dominant for long stretches this season. Expected because the other stretches were that ugly. Kimbrel lost his closer job for good after the trade deadline. By the end of his time in Baltimore, he was a mop-up man. His final outing was a nightmare: a career-high six runs allowed in two-thirds of an inning in a 10-0 blowout loss Tuesday. Kimbrel was supposed to replace the injured Felix Bautista as the closer. Now the Orioles must rely on Yennier Cano and their two deadline acquisitions — Seranthony Dominguez and Gregory Soto — for outs in the final innings as they tumble into the postseason. — Castillo
Record: 84-68
Previous ranking: 11
After playing every game on the season, Francisco Lindor missed his first Saturday after jamming his back on a play at second base Friday. He tried to play Sunday but left after one at-bat and then sat out the Nationals series. Luisangel Acuna, Ronald Acuna Jr.’s younger brother and the prospect acquired in last year’s Max Scherzer trade, filled in to make his MLB debut and went 3-for-4 with his first home run in Tuesday’s win. The Mets are hopeful that Lindor returns this weekend. They’re also planning for Kodai Senga to return the final week. He’s eligible to come off the IL on Sept. 25, the second game of the series in Atlanta. Senga wouldn’t be stretched, but he could serve as an opener or relief option. — Schoenfield
Record: 82-71
Previous ranking: 10
The bullpen must be the area of focus for Kansas City going forward. That’s true for the regular season and, presumably, the postseason, if the Royals can eke out a few more wins. Lucas Erceg has emerged as the top high-leverage option, and manager Matt Quatraro has used him accordingly, even if that means using him before the ninth inning. Erceg has been terrific but the Royals need John Schreiber, Kris Bubic and at least a couple of others to hold steady if they are going to be more than a feel-good regular season story. — Doolittle
Record: 82-70
Previous ranking: 12
After two big wins to begin their series against the Dodgers, including Chris Sale allowing one run in six innings to improve to 17-3 with a 2.35 ERA, the Braves dropped the final two of the four-game set. On Sunday night, tied 2-2 in the ninth, Raisel Iglesias had a rare meltdown, as an intentional walk to Shohei Ohtani helped lead to a seven-run Dodgers outburst. Monday was a 9-0 loss as Braves pitchers allowed just four hits but walked seven batters. Tuesday’s loss to the Reds then dropped Atlanta two games back of the Mets and Diamondbacks (for two spots), the first time all season the Braves had been more than one game out of the wild-card race. — Schoenfield
Record: 80-73
Previous ranking: 15
The Tigers have made things very interesting in the AL wild-card standings, sitting just a half-game back of the division-rival Twins with nine to go. In case you’re wondering, there isn’t much discrepancy between the two teams’ remaining schedules. Each of their last three series will come against the Orioles, plus one really bad team (Marlins for the Twins, White Sox for the Tigers) and one fringe contender (Red Sox for the Twins, Rays for the Tigers). The Tigers have been carried by their pitching. If they hope to do what hardly anyone considered possible just a few weeks ago, they’ll probably have to hit a bit more; their .685 second-half OPS is the eighth lowest in the majors. — Gonzalez
Record: 80-72
Previous ranking: 13
For months, Minnesota comfortably held on to a playoff spot in an unexpectedly competitive AL Central. Then the injuries that have ravaged the most important players finally caught up to the team. The Twins are 10-18 since Aug. 18 and are now barely holding on to a wild card with the streaking Tigers on their heels. Their remaining schedule is favorable: After a four-game series in Cleveland this week, the Twins face the Red Sox, Marlins and Orioles over their final 11 games. And Carlos Correa and Byron Buxton, their two best players, returned from the IL over the weekend. But both players are clearly not 100% and the margin for error is dwindling. — Castillo
Record: 77-75
Previous ranking: 17
Thanks to a punchless offense, the entire Mariners pitching staff has been victimized by a lack of support. No one has suffered more than Logan Gilbert, who otherwise might be having what would be remembered as a great season. Pairing his 114 ERA+ with his 7-11 record gives you a glimpse of what he has dealt with. That meager win total has been compiled over 30 starts and counting. Gilbert still has a shot at surpassing 200 innings for the first time. He also leads the AL with a 0.89 WHIP, a figure that’s also the best for a qualifying Seattle pitcher. The No. 2 on that list is Felix Hernandez, who put up a 0.92 WHIP in 2014, the height of the King Felix days. Gilbert doesn’t have that record clinched, so that’s something to watch. — Doolittle
Record: 77-75
Previous ranking: 14
Kyle Hendricks could make his final start in a Cubs uniform next week as his contract is up following what was an up-and-down 2024 season. A fan favorite for his throwback style of pitching and laid back demeanor, Hendricks will go down in history as the pitcher that got the Cubs to the World Series in 2016, outdueling the Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw to win the NL pennant. Hendricks also started Game 7 of the Fall Classic, a game the Cubs won to break a 108-year championship drought. That all came after winning the ERA title that season. He was the consummate pro throughout his Cubs career and will be a good mentor for an up-and-coming pitching staff, as he wants to continue pitching despite his lofty 6.25 ERA this year. — Rogers
Record: 76-76
Previous ranking: 16
Boston’s postseason hopes, which were barely flickering in recent weeks, were finally extinguished over the weekend in the Bronx. The Red Sox are 23-33 since the All-Star break. They’re 6-10 in September. Now it’s about whether they will finish under .500 in three consecutive seasons for the first time since compiling losing records in 1992 to 1994. The Red Sox also have an outside chance of finishing last in the AL East for the third straight year — something they have never done since divisions were introduced in 1969. — Castillo
Record: 77-75
Previous ranking: 18
Avoiding a second consecutive losing season should be a priority in St. Louis as it hasn’t happened since 1958-59. That could be one of the better franchise stats in all of baseball, but it’s definitely in jeopardy down the stretch here. Ending the season on a West Coast swing won’t be easy, despite playing two non-playoff teams in Colorado and San Francisco. The Cardinals went 71-91 last year but have been flirting with .500 most of this season. It won’t be good enough for the postseason, but keeping their string alive should be motivation enough for a proud franchise that has fallen on hard times. — Rogers
Record: 74-78
Previous ranking: 20
Shane Baz‘s return to the mound after missing two years with injuries has been an encouraging sign for the Rays. The right-hander has a 3.21 ERA across 67⅓ innings since making his season debut on July 5. In his 12th start Tuesday, he held the Red Sox to two runs on two hits over seven innings, becoming the first player in franchise history to allow three or fewer hits and log at least five innings in five straight starts. It was the third time he’s pitched at least seven innings and the sixth time he’s pitched at least six. Baz is just 25 years old. He figures to play prominently in the Rays’ plans for 2025 and beyond. The past two months have been promising. He should have two more outings to finish 2024 strong. — Castillo
Record: 74-79
Previous ranking: 22
Can Rhett Lowder secure a rotation spot for 2025? The seventh overall pick from the 2023 draft has been extremely impressive so far, giving up 17 hits and just four runs in 20⅔ innings over four starts. His best pitch has been his changeup — he’s allowed just one hit off of it — and he’s yet to give up a home run off any pitch. Lowder is another good prospect who’s come up from the Reds’ farm system. The team has plenty of those but might still need a couple of top end players from outside the organization to take the next step and rebound from a poor 2024 season. — Rogers
Record: 74-78
Previous ranking: 19
The Giants followed an encouraging 7-2 start to August with 20 losses over a stretch of 33 games. It will be another wasted season in San Francisco, with the biggest storyline the rest of the way revolving around the job status of Farhan Zaidi, the head of baseball operations. The next biggest (a related one at that): whether the Giants can lock up Blake Snell to an extension similar to the one they agreed to with Matt Chapman, thus keeping another Scott Boras client from entering free agency. Snell has a 1.33 ERA over his last 13 starts, during which he has struck out 105 batters in 74⅓ innings. He is all but certain to opt out if given the chance. — Gonzalez
Record: 73-79
Previous ranking: 21
Texas’ title defense never really got out of the starting blocks. As we all mused about what a healthy Rangers rotation might look like at playoff time, the team dropped below .500 on May 21 and never got back to breakeven. The rotation never did get healthy, even as the roster of available arms iterated repeatedly, eventually resulting in a playing-out-the-string group that included the Jacob DeGrom-Max Scherzer pairing we dreamed about. There were just too many injuries and underperformances to overcome. The Rangers have manager Bruce Bochy under contract through next season and recently extended and promoted lead exec Chris Young. With that pair intact, an improving health outlook and a growing core of in-house talent, expectations for the 2025 Rangers might be high. — Doolittle
Record: 72-80
Previous ranking: 23
Bo Bichette went 2-for-5 in his return from the IL on Tuesday after missing nearly two months with a calf strain. The shortstop rejoined the club with a refreshed outlook, emphasizing to reporters that the time away allowed for some introspection and he emerged “grateful” to just play. On the field, it’s been a lost season for Bichette and the Blue Jays. The two-time All-Star is batting .225 with four home runs and a .598 OPS in 81 games as Toronto stumbled from the start and never clawed back into the playoff picture. There isn’t enough time to boost his numbers to his typical level or push the Blue Jays into the playoffs, but Bichette at least has an opportunity to end the disappointing season on a high note. — Castillo
Record: 71-81
Previous ranking: 24
Paul Skenes won’t qualify for the ERA title — he doesn’t have enough innings — but that doesn’t mean he can’t boast the lowest ERA among all starters anyway. His 2.07 mark going into the final days of the season will put him squarely in the Rookie of the Year race, but will he win it with less than 25 starts? If he lowers his ERA to under 2.00 in the final days, he can probably lock it up. Either way, it will likely be a close vote with Jackson Merrill, his closest competitor. — Rogers
Record: 67-86
Previous ranking: 25
The time for heavy nostalgia is at hand with the A’s down to just six home games before they skip town for good. The finale is Sept. 26 with an afternoon game against Texas. That game will come 70 years to the day of the Athletics’ last game as the Philadelphia A’s. On Sept. 26, 1954, the A’s beat the Yankees 8-6 at Yankee Stadium behind the first career victory for Art Ditmer. Like many former A’s, Ditmer had his best days with the Yankees, winning 15 games for the 1960 AL pennant winners. — Doolittle
Record: 68-84
Previous ranking: 26
It will be interesting to see if center fielder Jacob Young can win the Gold Glove. The Rockies’ Brenton Doyle was the Gold Glove center fielder last year and is probably the favorite, but Young does have the edge in Statcast’s fielding run value metric (plus-16 runs to plus-15), doing it in less playing time. Young also leads in defensive runs saved (plus-12 to plus-9). The Cubs’ Pete Crow-Armstrong has also been a regular on the highlight reels. He’s at plus-14 in Statcast and plus-14 in DRS. Maybe they need to go back to just giving the trophy to three outfielders, regardless of position. — Schoenfield
Record: 62-90
Previous ranking: 27
As the Angels play out the streak, the main thing to pay attention to is the very reason they’ve been so hard to watch: historic losing. Barring a total collapse, the Angels aren’t going to lose 100 games for the first time, but the franchise record — 95 losses, set in 1968 and tied in 1980 — remains very much in play. The Halos have one more road trip, with four games at first-place Houston and three at Chicago against a White Sox team still trying to sidestep the modern era loss record. L.A. finishes at home with three against Texas. — Doolittle
Record: 59-94
Previous ranking: 29
The Rockies beat Arizona on Monday, and how they did it was notable: Ezequiel Tovar, the 23-year-old shortstop who they hope to build around, aided the effort with a fourth-inning home run. It was his 24th of the year, tying for the team lead, to go along with 43 doubles, a record for a Rockies shortstop. Tovar has always been considered a premium defender, but he has taken nice leaps offensively this year. His success, along with that of the other young Rockies position players, is all that matters the rest of the way. — Gonzalez
Record: 56-96
Previous ranking: 28
This isn’t the kind of record you want to set: The Marlins set a new mark for most players used during a single season with 70. That’s almost three full rosters of different players. Michael Petersen, a 30-year-old reliever who was born in England, became the 70th player, breaking a tie with the 2021 Cubs. Peterson had just been claimed on waivers from the Dodgers a few days before his Friday outing (he had made a few appearances for the Dodgers and had a 1.64 ERA in Triple-A, so he could factor into the 2025 bullpen).
That record number could get to 71, as reliever Jeff Lindgren is currently on the active roster as well. Lindgren had a 7.90 ERA in Triple-A with 18 home runs allowed in 75⅔ innings. For the 2024 Marlins, that’s apparently good enough to get called up. — Schoenfield
Record: 36-117
Previous ranking: 30
It’s here. The moment we’ve all been waiting for: The White Sox are on the verge of breaking the modern-day record for most losses in a single season. When they reach 120, they will tie the 1962 Mets. The one after that will set a new mark for futility. A three-game win streak that ended on Tuesday only delayed the agony. Chicago will likely set the mark at home next week against the Angels. The bigger headline would be if it could avoid setting the record somehow, but with a series against the Padres this weekend and another against the upstart Tigers to end the season, the White Sox will make history. — Rogers
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How Gavin McKenna’s Penn State commitment shifted the NHL prospect landscape
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3 hours agoon
July 17, 2025By
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Greg WyshynskiJul 17, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Greg Wyshynski is ESPN’s senior NHL writer.
When Gavin McKenna is selected first in the 2026 NHL draft, which is the consensus projection for the 17-year-old phenom, it’ll be significant on several levels.
He’s a ladder out of the abyss for some moribund team that’s lucky enough to win the NHL draft lottery. He’s another young offensive star for the NHL to market, having amassed 129 points in 56 games with the Medicine Hat Tigers of the Western Hockey League last season, while drawing comparisons to wingers like Patrick Kane and Nikita Kucherov.
He’s hope. He’s the future. But presently, Gavin McKenna represents something else entirely in hockey: He embodies the dramatic changes between the NCAA, Canadian Hockey League and the NHL that have altered the path for NHL prospects.
McKenna shocked the hockey world by opting to leave Canadian junior hockey for Penn State University’s men’s hockey program. He could have remained in the CHL for another dominant season. Instead, he’ll be an 18-year-old freshman battling in the Big Ten against bigger, stronger and more experienced players.
“It was a super tough decision. There are a lot of really great options out there. But me, my family and everyone in my circle decided that the best spot for me next year is Penn State,” he said, announcing his decision on “SportsCenter.”
McKenna’s big move comes at a time of radical changes for NHL prospects. Last November, the NCAA ruled that Canadian junior players were now eligible to play on Division I teams, ending a decades-old policy that made young athletes choose between the CHL and college hockey. The new rules go into effect in August, making McKenna one of the first Canadian junior players to make the jump to the NCAA — and easily the most significant one.
“Gavin’s elite. He’s dominated junior hockey like very few have in the past,” TSN prospects analyst Craig Button said.
That historic decision by the NCAA arrived just as college hockey programs were now flush with name, image and likeness (NIL) financial enticements for players. McKenna’s NIL money for attending Penn State is “in the ballpark” of $700,000, a source tells ESPN. Michigan State, the runner-up for McKenna’s commitment, had an NIL offer of around $200,000 to $300,000, according to College Hockey Insider.
The Nittany Lions men’s hockey program joined Division I in 2012, playing for one season as an independent until construction was completed on its new arena, funded primarily by Penn State alum Terry Pegula, owner of the Buffalo Sabres and Buffalo Bills. Penn State joined the Big Ten in 2013-14 when that conference began sponsoring hockey.
The progress has been steady for Penn State hockey. In 2015, its first alum made his NHL debut, as Casey Bailey suited up for the Toronto Maple Leafs. Penn State won the Big Ten tournament in 2017 and the regular-season title in 2020. The Nittany Lions made the Frozen Four for the first time this past season, losing to Boston University in the semifinals. All the while, they had a state-of-the-art new building and a boisterous home-ice advantage thanks to their raucous student section.
“It’s a good program. Penn State’s got a nice setup,” said Tony Granato, who coached Wisconsin in the Big Ten from 2016 to 2023. “They’re starting to carve out a little niche for themselves that differentiates them from Michigan or Michigan State or Wisconsin.”
Now it has a star whose name could become synonymous with Penn State hockey.
The Nittany Lions have had eight players drafted by NHL teams. Last month, defenseman Jackson Smith technically became the first Penn State player taken in the first round, the No. 14 pick by the Columbus Blue Jackets, although he’s an incoming freshman.
But the idea that the program could produce a No. 1 pick in the NHL draft was outlandish, even in the NIL era. Not anymore. Penn State coach Guy Gadowsky gives all the credit to McKenna for taking that leap of faith with his program.
“I think when you talk about Penn State specifically, I think he has a bit of a pioneering mindset. He wants to be the first, and I think he’s very comfortable with that pressure,” Gadowsky said.
Agent Pat Brisson has worked with other NHL draft phenoms who were selected first overall: Sidney Crosby (2005, Pittsburgh Penguins), John Tavares (2009, New York Islanders) and Nathan MacKinnon (2013, Colorado Avalanche). Now he’s working with McKenna, along with Matt Williams, a rising star at CAA.
“From the get-go, [Penn State] is where he wanted to go. It was something in his mind that he wanted,” Brisson told ESPN. “I’ve learned one thing about some of these young, special ones: They have that special chip in them. They have these goals in mind that they are special for a reason. I sit with Gavin and I can see in his eyes how the brain is working. It’s just unique. It’s hard to explain.”
Even harder to explain: what the path McKenna and other Canadian junior hockey stars are taking will mean for the sport in the years to come.
THE SUPREME COURT’S 2021 decision in NCAA v. Alston allowed for non-scholarship earned income across every division. That’s what helped create NIL allowances in college sports, in which athletes were no longer prohibited from making deals to profit off their name, image and likeness while competing in the NCAA.
Last month, the NIL landscape shifted dramatically when three separate federal antitrust lawsuits were ended through a $2.8 billion settlement that allowed colleges, going forward, to directly pay student-athletes up to a certain limit. The annual cap is expected to start at roughly $20.5 million per school in 2025-26.
Brisson said the NIL money didn’t fuel the decision by McKenna and his family. “The NIL obviously comes into play, but it’s not the primary decision of why he decided to go to college,” he said. “It’s all about the next step. We viewed this, along with the family, as an opportunity to continue to grow as a player more than anything else.”
Granato also believed the NIL money was part of McKenna’s decision but not the driving force. The former Wisconsin coach played 13 seasons in the NHL. Granato knows what’s awaiting McKenna after next year’s draft, and hence doesn’t believe NIL money could have been the determining factor here.
“Gavin McKenna is going to make more money than he could ever need in a real short period of time. So I don’t think it was down to the dollars and cents,” he said. “I think it was down to the respect and to the approach that Penn State laid out for him. Obviously, the money was to say how badly they wanted him, but I think that they made a big commitment to try to get their program to be a top team in the country.”
Granato said the benefits for Penn State go beyond what happens on the ice next season.
“If Gavin McKenna’s going to be on TV and in the Stanley Cup playoffs for the next 20 years, and he’s going to have a Penn State logo next to him through all the things he’s going to accomplish? The value he would bring to the university? I’d say that $700,000 or whatever is probably a pretty cheap investment,” he said.
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Gavin McKenna scores sensational solo goal in the WHL
Top 2026 NHL draft-eligible prospect Gavin McKenna scores a goal-of-the-year candidate in Game 2 of the second-round series between the Medicine Hat Tigers and Prince Albert Raiders.
McKenna’s decision to go to the NCAA would have been a much more complicated one in the past. The NCAA had deemed anyone who played in the CHL ineligible because there are players who have signed professional contracts with NHL teams playing in those leagues that comprise it: the Ontario Hockey League, Western Hockey League and Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League. CHL players are also paid a monthly stipend that is capped at $250.
But in November 2024, the NCAA Division I council voted to make CHL players eligible for NCAA Division I hockey beginning in 2025. The council ruled that players can compete in the CHL without jeopardizing their NCAA Division I hockey eligibility, provided they aren’t “paid more than actual and necessary expenses as part of that participation.”
At the time, Western Hockey League commissioner Dan Near put out a statement supporting the NCAA rules changes as a way to “relieve the tension” for young players and their families who had to decide between junior hockey and NCAA eligibility.
“We stand by that. Just because we’re disappointed that Gavin won’t play in our league next year doesn’t mean that we have this whole different point of view on it,” Near told ESPN. “We wish Gavin the best. They had an incredible team in Medicine Hat. He did a lot for the community and the league. I hope he’s hugely successful.”
Near cautioned against drawing conclusions based on McKenna’s chosen path to the NHL.
“Gavin McKenna moving on early from the WHL or the CHL is not the same as all of the other changes going on,” he said. “It’s a notable cog in the wheel for sure. But this is such a giant, complicated environment that we live in right now that’s so rapidly changing. I think almost everybody would acknowledge that it’s going to take some time to see what happens.”
But McKenna’s decision has codified what many believe could be a new prospect pipeline in hockey: players starting in the CHL and then moving to the NCAA right before they’re drafted in the NHL — or immediately afterward.
BUTTON BELIEVES THAT McKenna’s path is the new pipeline. He played 16 games with Medicine Hat in 2022-23, followed by 61 games in 2023-24 — scoring 97 points — and then 56 games last season before packing up for Penn State.
“Now you can go, ‘What’s best for my development at 15? Or 16? Or 17?’ There’s going to be a lot of players who play in the CHL because the level of play and the coaching is good. But now they don’t have to forgo that opportunity to play in the NCAA,” he said.
There are differences between the two paths. The CHL has players competing in significantly more games in preparation for an NHL-like grind. The NCAA plays fewer games, leaving players more time to develop and train between them. The CHL offers players a chance to compete against those around their own development curve, while the NCAA has 18-year-olds battling against 23-year-olds. The CHL is billet life. The NCAA is college life.
Button is an optimist about the changing landscape. “I really, really love the idea that more doors open and present options for the players to look at their development in a different way,” he said.
He also doesn’t see this as a serious blow to the CHL. He points to NHL stars like Kane and Matthew Tkachuk that selected Canadian juniors over the NCAA. He notes that the current top prospects that do end up in the NCAA will likely do so after spending significant time in Canadian juniors. McKenna played 2½ seasons at Medicine Hat before making the leap to Penn State, leading the team to a conference championship and a Memorial Cup appearance last season.
“I know the CHL doesn’t want to lose 19-year-old kids to the NCAA, but they’re also going to get players that they weren’t going to get at 16 and 17,” Button said.
But Near doesn’t believe this is necessarily a new talent pipeline for NHL prospects.
“I have no problem with people experimenting or trying things out. I have no problem with other leagues that might be envious of the success that we’ve had — or wish to be declared as our equal — trying to suggest that we should be a development league for the NCAA, which in turn would be a development league for the NHL,” Near said.
“But that’s not what we are.”
The WHL commissioner notes the CHL has the better track record for player development, one that stretches back 50 years. He points to the 2025 NHL draft, in which 21 of the first round’s 32 picks came from Canadian junior hockey, while five picks were credited to U.S. college programs.
“The idea of someone going to the NCAA before their draft year will be occasional,” Near said. “This isn’t just about money. It’s also about what environment is going to put a player in the best situation to further his hockey development.”
He points to the billet environment. “Having a mother figure and a father figure around you to support you, help you with meals and help teach you how to do laundry and be independent,” he said.
He points to the CHL schedule and the number of games in which players will appear during a typical season, noting that the former junior players who get their professional start in the American Hockey League have said the CHL best prepared them for that grind.
Near isn’t looking to have the WHL rest on its reputation. He has a survey out to players this offseason to hear about what works and what doesn’t for them. “We’re not crossing our arms and saying we do it better. We’re spending a lot of time assessing what we can do better, how we can enhance the player experience and environment,” he said.
That includes thinking about CHL players that might find their way back to junior hockey after moving over to the NCAA. It’s a trend several sources anticipated happening in the new paradigm.
Factors behind that reversal could range from a lack of ice time to the realization that they’re not ready to face older competition to the fact that not every 18-year-old “walking onto a college campus, jumping onto the first power play and making the most NIL money” will be welcomed with open arms by older teammates with their own NHL aspirations, as one NHL source framed it.
“NCAA hockey is hard for a lot of 18- and 19-year-olds,” said Button, who sees the option to go back to juniors like a part of the transfer portal.
“There’s a transfer portal in the NCAA athletics right now. Maybe not as much ice time. Maybe there’s a depth chart where I don’t fit in. Maybe I’m not getting as much. So now you have the transfer portal in between schools, and there’s going to be a transfer portal back to the CHL. That’s going to be reality,” he said.
Another potential wrinkle for Canadians coming to the NCAA: rapidly changing immigration policies that could impact student visa statuses. It’s a topic Big Ten schools like Oregon have openly discussed since NIL started.
“I’m not rooting for anything to go poorly, but we are setting up our operations so that if a player has regrets that we’re going to welcome them back,” Near said.
“I think that there’s a possibility some guys swing back to our league. I think people will maybe develop a greater appreciation for all the things we do to create a player development experience. I wish it would come faster, because it’s a stressful time. But we’re watching closely and we’re acting where we think it makes sense.”
While times are stressful for Canadian junior hockey, Button doesn’t believe changes to the prospect pipeline are a net negative for the CHL.
“You have some people saying that everything is going to hell in a handbasket. No, it isn’t,” he said. “Doors are opening for the CHL teams with getting good younger players into their program. The NCAA is getting more talent from the players that have been drafted, who now see college hockey as an option. NHL teams have more options open to them with respect to being sure about who they’re signing. I think that’s great.”
AS IF THE PROSPECT LANDSCAPE hadn’t undergone enough change, the NHL and the NHLPA further shifted it themselves in their new collective bargaining agreement, which begins in the 2026-27 season.
One major change concerns 19-year-old players that were drafted by NHL teams from Canadian juniors. The NHL-CHL transfer agreement dictates that they either have to make an NHL roster or be returned to their junior team. Currently, CHL players can’t play in the American Hockey League until they turn 20 or complete four seasons in the CHL.
In the new CBA, the NHL will reopen its agreement with the CHL to seek to eliminate the mandatory return rule. “NHL will seek to limit NHL Clubs to Loaning no more than one (1) 19-year-old player per year to the AHL without the requirement of first offering such player to his junior club,” reads the new amendment.
Perhaps more importantly for the NHL draft, the new CBA states that players selected at age 18 will have their rights retained until “the fourth June 1 after they were drafted.” For 19-year-old draft picks, their rights will be retained “until the third June 1 after they were drafted.”
Button sees this as a significant new development window for teams and players that will impact juniors and the NCAA.
“The team has your rights for four years. It used to be in the CHL that you had to sign the player two years after you drafted him,” he said. “In the past, you might have to make a signing decision. Now, if a 20-year-old player might not be ready, a team can send him to the NCAA to get another year under his belt while retaining his rights.”
This practice could become one of the most significant developments in the post-NCAA eligibility world: that NHL teams could use the NCAA as a preparatory league for former Canadian junior players before bringing them to the pro level.
“I think that because of that fact, you are going to get more high-profile players in college hockey,” Gadowsky said. “NHL teams are going to support going to college hockey because of that. There are a lot of great players that have had a lot of success in junior hockey and are looking for the next step, but that may not be ready to reach the NHL. I think college hockey is an attractive option for many NHL teams.”
This trend is already happening. The Calgary Flames took center Cole Reschny from the WHL Victoria Royals at No. 18 in last month’s draft. Reschny is headed to North Dakota next season. (His Royals teammate Keaton Verhoeff, a highly touted defenseman, will join him at NoDak as the rare 17-year-old NCAA player.) The New York Rangers drafted winger Malcolm Spence from the OHL Erie Otters at No. 43. He’ll play at the University of Michigan next season.
“The CHL and the USHL teams have resources. They spend a lot of time on development, but it’s different at an NCAA school, especially a major power,” Button said. “It’s going to be really interesting for the kids at 18 who aren’t NHL-ready to go back to junior, and then at 19 you’re like ‘You’re either in the NHL or you’re back in junior.’ Well, now there’s the NCAA as the next step in terms of their development. You have to be a student-athlete and you have to commit to that. But I think the NHL benefits from this, too.”
MCKENNA WILL LIKELY head straight to the NHL after next summer’s draft, as almost every No. 1 pick has done for decades. He’ll do so after facing older, larger players for a season before joining the NHL, like Macklin Celebrini did with Boston University and Auston Matthews did with Zurich SC in the Swiss league.
“The guys that have confidence and are ready for that next challenge, that’s not going to scare them. They don’t care about dropping in the draft. They care about getting better,” Granato said. “If they’re going to get better by going to play against older and bigger and stronger players in a better league, they’re going to do it. That’s just their mentality.”
McKenna would be just the fourth winger in the past 15 drafts to be selected first overall, after Nail Yakupov (Edmonton Oilers, 2012), Alexis Lafreniere (New York Rangers, 2020) and Juraj Slafkovsky (Montreal Canadiens, 2022). None of these players had the early buzz that McKenna has generated, which is usually reserved for a franchise-level center among offensive players, like Connor McDavid or Matthews.
Button doesn’t see McKenna on McDavid’s level, and doesn’t see him as the goal scorer that Matthews has become. On the recent NHL first overall pick scale, he would slot McKenna in between Celebrini (San Jose, 2024) and Connor Bedard (Chicago, 2023).
But Button said the NHL comparables for McKenna — should he reach the potential of his trajectory — are a pair of former Hart Trophy winners: Patrick Kane and Nikita Kucherov. Both players can score goals, as Kane is sixth (492) and Kucherov is 22nd (357) among active players. But it’s their playmaking ability on the wing that reminds Button of McKenna, who was a Kane fan (and a Blackhawks fan) growing up in Whitehorse, Yukon.
“The way he can control the game, take over games. I think we play similar styles. Smart hockey players that can slow down the game but speed it up when we want,” McKenna said.
Gadowsky said McKenna’s ability to slow things down and create at his pace is indicative of an elite player that thinks the game differently. Gadowsky grew up watching Wayne Gretzky. While he’s not about to make a direct comparison between “The Great One” and “The Nittany One,” the way they both process hockey is something no one can teach them. It’s inherent.
“There’s no way that I or anybody else on our staff thinks like Gavin does. He is a very, very special athlete,” he said. “By no means am I ever going to talk to him about how his mind creates. That’s all him, and it’s going to be really fun to watch.”
That Penn State fans will be the ones watching him is still a bit surreal for Gadowsky, the only coach the program has known as part of the Big Ten. The Nittany Lions have been a slow-building success. Getting McKenna to commit is one giant leap forward for the program — and for college hockey.
“There’s a ton of great Penn State supporters that are really, really excited to watch him play and see what he does in the future,” Gadowsky said. “I mean, they’re going to love him. They’re going to absolutely love him and we’re thrilled that someone of his stature is going to be attached to Penn State.”
Sports
Trump mulls EO on athletes’ employment status
Published
3 hours agoon
July 17, 2025By
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Dan Murphy
CloseDan Murphy
ESPN Staff Writer
- Covers the Big Ten
- Joined ESPN.com in 2014
- Graduate of the University of Notre Dame
Jul 17, 2025, 03:54 PM ET
President Donald Trump is considering an executive order that would require federal authorities to clarify whether college athletes can be considered employees of their schools, according to a draft copy of the order obtained this week by ESPN.
The draft calls on the Secretary of Labor and the National Labor Relations Board to “determine and implement the appropriate measures with respect to clarifying the status of collegiate athletes.” The draft states the employment status of college athletes should “maximize the educational benefits and opportunities” schools can provide through their athletic departments.
College sports leaders and several Republican lawmakers have been attempting for the past several years to block athletes from obtaining employee rights, because they say many athletic departments would not be able to afford the added costs that would come with employment.
While Trump’s potential order would not explicitly ban employment (the president does not have the authority to make that decision in an executive order), it does echo those concerns while demanding that the NLRB and Secretary of Labor clarify employee status for college athletes.
The news of a potential executive order was met with surprise around college sports earlier this week, after a CBS News story late Tuesday. Sources cautioned to ESPN that Trump might not go through with the executive order, which appears to be more supportive of college athletics rather than prescribing any specific transformational changes.
The White House press office did not respond to a request for comment.
The order, if signed in its current draft form, would also establish a commission to determine ways in which Trump’s office could support “the preservation of collegiate athletic opportunities,” a process that would include athletes, schools, conferences, lawmakers and other leaders with experience in the industry.
The draft also calls on other federal authorities — such as the Federal Trade Commission, Attorney General and Secretary of Education — to take less concrete steps toward creating policies that would support the future of college sports and the training those programs provide for future U.S. Olympians.
Trump’s office expressed interest months ago in an executive order that would help address some of the current turmoil in the college sports industry but has not yet acted.
Administrators have been asking Congress for several years to create a new federal law to help schools regain some of the power that has been eroded by antitrust lawsuits in the past decade. Those leaders have asked for a law that prevents athletes from becoming employees and provides the NCAA with an antitrust exemption that would allow them to make its own rules — many of which would limit players’ earning potential.
If the NLRB were to decide that college athletes should not be considered employees, athletes would not be able to form a union and collectively bargain for increased pay or other benefits.
Earlier this week, members of the House Commerce Committee voted to move forward with the legislative process on a bill that would grant the NCAA and college leaders the type of protection they are seeking. More than a dozen bills addressing the future of college sports have been introduced in the past five years, but none has yet to reach a full vote in either the House or Senate.
Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), who chairs the House Judiciary Committee, told ESPN on Thursday that an executive order would not change plans to continue pushing forward with a bill in Congress.
“Our staff has had discussions with the White House about it,” Jordan said. “If and when it comes, it will be in no way contradicting the goals and intents of our legislation.”
Athletes began receiving payments directly from their schools on July 1, a major change to the business of college sports that arrived as a result of a recent antitrust settlement. Each school is allowed to pay up to $20.5 million to its athletes in the coming academic year, according to the terms of the settlement.
The new limits for compensation and the mechanism for enforcing those limits is likely to invite more lawsuits in the future if Congress does not grant the NCAA an antitrust exemption. Trump does not have the authority to grant an antitrust exemption via executive order.
Several football coaches and athletic directors have recently said they believe it would make more sense — and provide more stability — if their players were considered employees and were able to collectively bargain.
“The best way to do it is to make it where players are employees and you have a salary cap,” Louisville coach Jeff Brohm told ESPN earlier this month. “If players are getting paid, why don’t we just do it the correct way? The amateurism isn’t there anymore. Let’s not pretend that it is.”
The new system for compensation treats players as independent contractors who are receiving money in exchange for the rights to use their name, image and likeness in university promotions rather than employees who are being paid for their performance on the field. But contracts between schools and players could potentially strengthen the legal argument that athletes should be granted the rights that other employees have.
Two different groups of college athletes who were petitioning the NLRB for the right to form unions dropped their cases late last year shortly after Trump was elected.
There is one ongoing federal case (Johnson v. NCAA) that argues athletes should be considered employees under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The plaintiff’s attorney in that case, Paul McDonald, has previously argued that any action that blocks college athletes from being employees would be unconstitutional because it would treat the work athletes do as different than the work of other students who hold campus jobs.
Sports
Elko: Unsigned Bengals pick not returning to A&M
Published
3 hours agoon
July 17, 2025By
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Ben BabyJul 17, 2025, 03:42 PM ET
Close- Ben Baby covers the Cincinnati Bengals for ESPN. He joined the company in July 2019. Prior to ESPN, he worked for various newspapers in Texas, most recently at The Dallas Morning News where he covered college sports. He provides daily coverage of the Bengals for ESPN.com, while making appearances on SportsCenter, ESPN’s NFL shows and ESPN Radio programs. A native of Grapevine, Texas, he graduated from the University of North Texas with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. He is an adjunct journalism professor at Southern Methodist University and a member of the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA).
Texas A&M coach Mike Elko on Thursday quashed any speculation about Cincinnati Bengals rookie defensive end Shemar Stewart potentially seeking a return to college amid a contract dispute with the NFL team.
Yes, the defensive end has been working out in College Station with his former A&M teammates this summer. However, despite speculation, Stewart will indeed be swapping his Aggies’ maroon-and-white jersey for the Bengals’ orange-and-black one.
“There’s no intentions of Shemar to play for the Aggies this year,” Elko told ESPN’s Shae Cornette. “But Shemar has been around. He’s very comfortable in our program. Really likes what we do training-wise. He’s been training, getting ready for his season this year with the Bengals. We wish him the best.”
Earlier this week, speculation was raised about the possibility of Stewart potentially returning to Texas A&M for his final year of NCAA eligibility — a move that likely would have required a lawsuit against the collegiate governing body. A source close to Stewart told ESPN earlier in the week that, although it was a possibility, the most desirable outcome was to play for the Bengals this season.
Stewart, the 17th overall pick in April’s draft, is the lone first-round selection who has yet to sign, and he has not participated in any of Cincinnati’s offseason workouts as he seeks to alter contract language that could potentially affect future guaranteed money.
“In my case, I’m 100% right,” Stewart said in June. “I’m not asking for anything [the team] hasn’t been done before. But in [the team’s] case, y’all just want to win an argument instead of winning more games, in my opinion.”
The Bengals’ rookies are scheduled to report Saturday, with the first practice Wednesday. Stewart and linebacker Demetrius Knight Jr., the team’s second-round pick, are the lone members of Cincinnati’s draft class to remain unsigned.
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