
It is very likely to be a historic evening Friday night for the University of Denver hockey program.
The Pioneers — defending NCAA champions, winners of a record 11 titles, including three of the past five — have never had multiple first-round NHL Draft picks in the program at the same time. That is expected to change Friday, when incoming freshmen Daxon Rudolph and Ryan Lin will hear their names called at KeyBank Arena in Buffalo during the opening round of this year’s draft.
Rudolph and Lin are the headliners from the most anticipated recruiting class in program history. Two other incoming Pios are expected to be drafted Saturday — defenseman Ben MacBeath is projected to be a second-round selection, while center Mikey Berchild should go in the middle rounds. The other four guys in the eight-member class are already NHL draft picks, including Blake Fiddler, the No. 36 selection in the 2025 draft.
“I think it’s exciting for our fans. There’s a notoriety that comes with (multiple first-round picks),” DU coach David Carle told The Denver Post. “I think our challenge is not change at all who we are or the people we’re bringing in. That’s what we’re most excited about. This has more to do with the CHL rule change than anything else.”
Tapping the CHL pipeline
The landscape of college hockey has changed dramatically in recent years. The 2026-27 season will be the second year in which players from the CHL — a combination of Canada’s three top major junior leagues — will be eligible to play NCAA hockey. This Pios freshman class has seven CHL players (six from the WHL, one from the OHL) plus Berchild, who spent the past two years at the USA Hockey National Team Development Program.

Gavin McKenna, expected to be the No. 1 pick Friday night, spent this past season at Penn State after previously playing in the WHL. The Pios had six former CHL players in their 10-person freshman class last season, including postseason star goalie Johnny Hicks.
Recruiting players from the CHL has changed the process for college programs — not just the who but the when. Before CHL eligibility, amateur players would often commit two or three years before arriving on campus. Now, college hockey recruiting looks a bit more like football and basketball, with key prospects making their decisions much later in the process.
“Tavis did a remarkable job with this class. It’s not easy. At the start of the year, Lin, Rudolph and Fiddler — none of them were committed,” Carle said of Tavis MacMillan, who was promoted to general manager/assistant coach Wednesday. “Tavis, to his credit, just really built relationships with the players and their representatives throughout the year. We’re not surprised with the work Tavis was able to do with this group, but it’s a remarkable group that adds what is already a great group of returners.”
Randolph, Lin and MacBeath are all part of a dynamite crop of WHL players in the 2026 draft class. McKenna and North Dakota’s Keaton Verhoeff are projected top-10 picks with WHL roots, while Rudolph, Lin, Carson Caels (a NoDak signee) and JP Hurlbert (a Michigan signee) could all end up in the top 15-20 selections.
They will arrive at DU at a critical time. Hobey Baker finalist Eric Pohlkamp and senior captain Kent Anderson were expected to turn pro, but sophomore Garrett Brown and junior Boston Buckberger joined them after the title run. That’s the entire right side of the defense corps plus the No. 1 guy on the left side.

Insert righties Randolph, Lin and Fiddler, plus a lefty in MacBeath, to remake a defense corps that still includes Colorado Avalanche draft pick Tory Pitner, former WHL captain Eric Jamieson and senior Cale Ashcraft.
Changing landscape of college hockey
Denver has built itself into a college hockey powerhouse without the benefit of multiple first-round picks. The Pios have only had five in program history before this. There’s been plenty of future NHL talent, but not at the same levels of the sport’s other traditional powers.
Can the Pios still win big with a new level of player steadily finding its way to Magness Arena?
“I think that’s a fair speculation, and time will tell,” Carle said. “I’m very confident in our staff’s ability, our program’s ability, our culture’s ability to do it. … Great players want to be coached, want to be in environments where they are held accountable and they want to win. We’re not changing at all how we’re operating. Our intent is to win on the ice, in the weight room, in the classroom and develop these players as people first while helping them achieve their dreams of winning a national championship.
“They’re not picking Denver because we’re the fastest road to the NHL, or we’re offering the most money or we have the shiniest stuff. They’re coming here because they want to be part of something bigger than themselves and they want to add to what we’ve already been able to do on this historic run.”
The new talent pool isn’t the only major change. This will be the second year of revenue sharing for college athletes.
Carle said the Pios did not offer any revenue-sharing money last season, opting to wait and plot out best practices for allocating the resources. DU players have earned compensation through Name, Image and Likeness contracts in recent seasons, but that money did not come through the university.
The Pioneers are extending revenue-sharing money to their players this coming season, and not just the incoming freshmen. Retaining current roster members has become a critical part of the modern recruiting process, given the transfer portal and financial means for other schools to poach players.
“I think just the best developmental path for me,” Rudolph told reporters in Buffalo ahead of the NHL draft about choosing the Pios and college hockey. “I think my time in the WHL was so much fun and really helped my game progress. Moving on to Denver next year will help me adjust to the NHL when that time comes.
“I think there’s a few reasons (for Denver). Obviously the coaching staff is a big one. Who I’m going to be around — there’s lots of my buddies there and western Canadians.”
Not only are the Pios defending champs with an exciting recruiting class, but the 2026-27 schedule is also one of the most anticipated in program history. After a trip to Alaska-Anchorage, the first three home weekends of the season are all bangers.
DU will welcome the NTDP U-18 team to Magness Arena, followed by Michigan and then Boston College. It’s the Wolverines’ first trip to Denver since 1981. The Pios beat the Wolverines in an instant classic at the 2025 Frozen Four and will make a return visit to Yost Arena next season.
Carle said the Pios are talking with the Wolverines about scheduling future games. They’re also working on future series with blue bloods like Minnesota and Boston University.
“We remain very hungry to continue to add to what we’re doing,” Carle said. “There is zero interest to take any steps backwards. It is pedal to the floor to capitalize on our success and to continue to build our brand and our momentum. I mean … certainly the five-year run, we feel like we’re in this golden age of Denver hockey and we want to capitalize on it to its full extent.”



