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It's official: Gavin McKenna's worst-case scenario has come true

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David St-Jean
June 8, 2026  (4:59 PM)
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Oct 10, 2025; University Park, PA, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions forward Gavin McKenna (72) skates past Clarkson Golden Knights defenseman Noah Houle (3) during the third period at Pegula Ice Arena.
Photo credit: Barry Reeger-Imagn Images

An anonymous NHL executive just handed Gavin McKenna a backhanded compliment so sharp it doubles as a warning, and the hockey world is paying attention this Monday.

The quote came via The Athletic and spread fast.

According to the piece, an unnamed league executive said this: "He's like Artemi Panarin. He'll get his accolades, but he'll also be on 3-4 teams and never make real noise in the playoffs."

Think about what that actually means. It's not a knock on McKenna's talent. It's a knock on his ceiling.

Panarin is one of the best left wings of his generation. This season with the New York Rangers and the Los Angeles Kings, he posted 84 points in 78 games, 28 goals, 56 assists. He carries an $11.6 million cap hit. He's produced everywhere he's played.

And yet, the exec's point holds weight. Panarin has never won a Cup.

That's the comparison McKenna is now living inside. Gifted enough to command a max deal. Built for big numbers. But destined, in this executive's view, to collect accolades on losing franchises.

McKenna is compared to Panarin in the wort way

If McKenna lands in Toronto, which is where all signs point, he joins a franchise that has struggled to build around its best players for over a decade. The ice he's skating onto is not warm.

The anonymous executive's quote stings worse when you hold it up against that backdrop. It's one thing to predict a player bounces around the league. It's another when the first stop is already a tire fire.

Comparisons to Panarin are usually compliments. Someone somewhere turned it into a warning label.

McKenna may prove every skeptic wrong. The draft hasn't happened, the ink isn't dry, and 18-year-olds have shocked the league before.

But anonymous quotes from league executives don't come from nowhere. Someone in a front office, someone paid to evaluate talent for a living, has real concerns about fit, winning, and legacy. Whether it's jealousy, genuine scouting, or just noise, it's out there now.

The post lit up fast, pulling over 167,000 views by Monday morning. The comparison hit a nerve because it's precise enough to be uncomfortable.

McKenna's draft stock isn't moving. What's moving is the narrative around what his career might actually look like, and not everyone is buying the franchise-cornerstone story anymore.