Gavin McKenna has become the name sitting at the top of nearly every 2026 draft board, but the story behind him still starts at home.
NHL says the Penn State left wing is projected to be the No. 1 pick in the 2026 NHL Draft, and Central Scouting recently called him the top ranked North American skater by a considerable margin.
NHL latest mock draft even had him landing in Toronto after the Maple Leafs won the lottery, which only added to the noise around his name.
The family that shaped him first
Long before the draft talk, McKenna was just a kid in Council Bluffs, Iowa, growing up around hockey and sports every day.
In the an old interview he said he was raised with his mom, dad, older brother and older sister, and that his father coached high school football in Iowa for 35 years while also playing quarterback in college. His mother ran track in college.
McKenna said that from a young age he was “always around ball” and “always around football,” from team settings to locker rooms to practices, and that he simply fell in love with being around the game.

That interview also showed how much his parents tried to keep him steady while the attention around him grew.
His father said it was not difficult to keep him grounded because they had always taught the kids to be grateful and understand that nothing in life comes easy.
“He’s a very kind hearted kid,” he said, while his mother added that she gets nervous only because she wants him to be successful and happy.
It came through as a family that understood the size of the moment without letting it take over the house.
McKenna was already carrying a heavy resume at that point. He was the youngest member of the Canadian team by three months, had posted a record setting performance at the U18s, won gold, starred in Medicine Hat and taken CHL rookie of the year honors.
His parents’ reaction to that kind of rise was simple. They were proud, but they still saw their son first.
From Medicine Hat to Penn State and the center of the draft race
The on ice rise has only made the family story more interesting. NHL’s draft diary has tracked McKenna all season and noted that he moved from the Western Hockey League to Penn State, where he became one of the youngest players in men’s college hockey.
He was the fourth youngest player in men’s college hockey and had 18 points in 16 games at one stage of the season and he finished tied for fourth in the NCAA with 51 points in 35 games, including 15 goals and 36 assists.
That is the kind of production that keeps a player at the very top of the board all year long.
His earlier WHL numbers explain why the spotlight arrived so quickly. McKenna was second in the Western Hockey League with 129 points in 56 games last season for Medicine Hat, and that he was named both WHL Player of the Year and Canadian Hockey League Player of the Year. T
hose numbers turned him from a highly rated prospect into the kind of player who starts draft conversations before the season even ends.
What stands out now is how the parents interview and the current draft buzz fit together. The family sound bites from 2024 already hinted at a kid who stayed humble and kept his focus on the rink.
The 2026 numbers show that the approach has held up. He moved from Medicine Hat to Penn State, stayed productive against older competition and never really left the top spot in the draft discussion.
That is why the current lottery chatter and mock draft talk feel so loud. His name is not just attached to hype anymore. It is attached to a season that backed it up.
McKenna has the game, the numbers and the draft buzz. His parents gave the story its base, and the current season has given it national weight.
When people talk about Gavin McKenna now, they are talking about a player who is already near the top of hockey’s next wave, but the reason he sounds so composed comes from the house that raised him.
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