Yesterday, PuckPedia reported that certain aspects of this summer’s CBA extension will take effect for the upcoming 2025-26 campaign instead of the 2026-27 season as was initially expected. Among those items is a proposed exception to the current transfer agreement between the NHL and CHL, Canada’s top association of junior leagues, that would allow teams to loan one 19-year-old player drafted from that league to their AHL affiliate without permission from the player’s CHL club. Under current rules, teams must wait until a player’s age-20 season to send them to the AHL full-time – until then, it’s either the NHL or CHL.
It’s not yet clear whether that rule will actually be implemented this season. While the league will make an aggressive push for it to happen, PuckPedia added that the CHL hasn’t yet signed off on the change and that serious negotiations haven’t started yet.
If the league does manage to strike an agreement with the CHL to allow the exception to happen, though, it’s a good time to take a look at some potential candidates who could test the waters. This isn’t an exhaustive list of every player who’s eligible for the rule, rather, a deep dive into which names might actually make sense to receive the early start to their pro careers.
Anaheim Ducks: Beckett Sennecke
Sennecke might be as slam-dunk a pick as anyone on this list. While most opined he was a reach when the Ducks selected him third overall in the 2024 draft, the 6’4″ winger responded with a 36-goal, 86-point effort in 56 games for the OHL’s Oshawa Generals last season. That promising jump from his draft-year production (68 points in 63 GP) makes it easy to make the case for his development being better served by jumping to pro hockey for his DY+2 – that is, if he doesn’t make Anaheim’s NHL roster out of camp. He’s only 28 days short of the age cutoff for AHL eligibility under the current rules anyway.
Calgary Flames: Jacob Battaglia, Zayne Parekh
The Flames will almost certainly use the exception to stash Parekh with the AHL’s Calgary Wranglers if he doesn’t make the NHL roster out of camp, but that stipulation is looking unlikely at this stage with Calgary’s right-side defense largely uninspiring and Rasmus Andersson’s impending departure making the picture even less rosy.
That could pave the way for Calgary to send Battaglia, one of the dark horses on this list, to begin his professional career earlier than expected. The stocky winger was one of the last picks of the second round in 2024 but exploded in his post-draft season, leading the OHL’s Kingston Frontenacs in scoring with 40 goals and 90 points in 68 games. While the Flames might end up deciding his development would be better served by a fourth and final junior season for the Frontenacs, his name is one to watch out for if they have the option.
Chicago Blackhawks: Marek Vanacker
Moving Vanacker to the pros before he finishes out his junior eligibility might be a bit of a rush job for a winger who was drafted as a bit of a project. It might be something Chicago at least considers for the 2024 No. 27 overall pick anyway. The 6’1″ winger’s April 2006 birthday makes him one of the younger players on this list, and he’s coming off an underwhelming post-draft season with OHL Brantford that saw him dip back below the point-per-game mark. For that reason, a return to the Bulldogs is far more likely, but his first-round pedigree will at least generate some speculation about a loan to AHL Rockford.
Detroit Red Wings: Carter Bear
Bear is the only player from the 2025 draft class on this list, and that has to do with the difference between how the NHL defines draft eligibility and how the CHL defines a player’s age for a given season. The NHL’s draft cutoff is September 15, while the CHL’s age cutoff is January 1. Since Bear has a November 2005 birthday, he was a couple of months too young to be eligible for the 2024 NHL draft, but he has already been credited with his age-18 season in the CHL’s eyes. The winger was the No. 13 overall selection by Detroit and likely could have gone a few spots higher if not for some concern about a partial Achilles laceration that ended his season in March. He managed 82 points in only 56 games for the WHL’s Everett Silvertips before that happened, though, and his 6’0″, 180-lb frame should help an early AHL transition along.
Los Angeles Kings: Liam Greentree
Even if this rule doesn’t get approved for 2025-26, Greentree might find himself in the AHL anyway. He’s a January 1 birthday – if he were born a few hours earlier, he’d be eligible for a full-time loan to AHL Ontario and wouldn’t need to return for a fourth OHL season with the Windsor Spitfires. The 6’3″ winger is coming off an incredible post-draft season after going to the Kings 26th overall in 2024, erupting for 119 points in 64 games and earning a spot on the league’s First All-Star Team.
There’s a recent precedent for such an exception. The OHL granted one to the Kraken and Shane Wright, who has a January 5 birthday but was granted eligibility for a full-time AHL assignment in 2023-24, which would have technically been his age-19 season in the junior league’s eyes.
Philadelphia Flyers: Jett Luchanko
Luchanko surprised out of the gate last year, working his way onto the Flyers’ opening night roster despite being one of the youngest players selected in the 2024 draft. The 5’11” center went pointless in four games before Philly sent him back to juniors to finish the season, where he had 21 goals and 56 points in 46 games with the OHL’s Guelph Storm. He had six assists in seven playoff games with AHL Lehigh Valley to end the year, showing a jump to that level full-time wouldn’t be so far-fetched if he can’t land an NHL job out of the gate again.
Pittsburgh Penguins: Harrison Brunicke
The Penguins have projected a ton of external confidence in Brunicke, their second-round selection in 2024. The South African-born defenseman is a smooth-skating right-shot with good size already at 6’3″ and 203 lbs. He’s played major minutes for an understaffed squad in the WHL’s Kamloops Blazers the past three years, and if possible, the Pens would like to get him out of that environment and into a more competitive one in AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. He’ll even be given a crack at making the NHL roster out of camp as a result, but current roster math makes that hard to foresee. He had 30 points in 41 games for the Blazers last year.
San Jose Sharks: Sam Dickinson
There’s a strong case for Dickinson ending up on San Jose’s opening night roster, but the Sharks’ decision could be influenced by whether the exception actually goes into effect. The left-shot defender has nothing left to prove at the junior level, scoring 91 points with an incredible +64 rating in 55 games with the OHL’s London Knights last season. The 2024 No. 11 overall pick is now a two-time OHL champion, a Memorial Cup champion, and was this season’s CHL Defenseman of the Year. If they have the option to send him to AHL San Jose, they might take advantage of it while they ship out their overstock of depth veterans, but if not, it’s unlikely they’d have many qualms about waiving one or two of them to make room for Dickinson in the NHL.
Seattle Kraken: Berkly Catton
The math isn’t kind for Catton to compete for an NHL job this season. But after leading the WHL in playoff scoring with 31 assists and 42 points in 20 games for the Spokane Chiefs – and that coming on the heels of back-to-back 100-point regular seasons – it’s hard to see what another season in juniors does for his development. The 5’10” center is only two weeks shy of the standard age cutoff, so the Kraken could argue for an exception if the new rule doesn’t go into effect, but the WHL has been less willing to dole those out in the past than their other CHL counterparts.
Tampa Bay Lightning: Sam O’Reilly
O’Reilly is the Bolts’ new top prospect after they brought him in from the Oilers in exchange for the signing rights to Isaac Howard. While he projects as more of a third-line utility man at the NHL level, the 6’1″ center has displayed good offensive instincts in juniors and had 71 points in 62 OHL games for the London Knights last year. It’s worth noting that those numbers came in an extremely offense-friendly environment, though. It might be worth it for Tampa to avoid shiny-new-toy syndrome and give him his final year of junior eligibility undisturbed to allow him to focus on boosting his offensive ceiling.
Utah Mammoth: Cole Beaudoin, Tij Iginla
The Mammoth will have a tough decision to make here if they are able to send a 19-year-old bound by the current CHL transfer agreement to AHL Tucson. Iginla would be the higher-profile choice. The winger was the No. 6 overall pick in 2024, but he’s missed significant time to injuries over the past couple of years and had 32 points in just 21 contests last year. That lack of playing time may mean a full year of juniors without the added stress of adjusting to pro hockey, which may do him some good for his long-term projection.
That could open a path for the ever-steady Beaudoin to vie for the honor and jump to Tucson. The 6’2″, 209-lb center was the No. 24 overall pick in that same 2024 draft and, like O’Reilly, is more of a projectable third-line piece long-term. They could take that same path and look to leave him in juniors for another year to see what other offensive development they could squeeze out of him, but on the other hand, getting him a head start on adjusting to pro life may be beneficial. He had 51 points in 52 games for the OHL’s Barrie Colts last year.
In addition to his birthday, Shane Wright was only a single game short of having the required four seasons. He was credited for the missed COVID season and his last season in Junior he played in 24 games, one less than the 25 required to count as a full season. That was a significant part of being granted the exception.
it’s rumoured that McKenna got around 700K in NIL cash to go to Penn state
let’s say farewell to the CHL as that is only going to hurt those leagues more
whats up with all of these oversized ads blocking whole sections with no X’s
The CHL is getting kicked while it’s already down. You’d think the NHL would’ve given them a year before adding to their woes. But this does keep some CHL kids from jumping to NCAA programs and taking spots from other prospective college players.