CHL Import Draft
The CHL Import Draft is an annual event organized by the Canadian Hockey League (CHL), in which its 60 member teams from the Ontario Hockey League (OHL), Western Hockey League (WHL), and Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League (QMJHL) select the exclusive playing rights to eligible international players born outside of Canada and the United States, commonly referred to as "import" players.[1] Established in 1992 to facilitate the recruitment and development of global hockey talent within the CHL's junior ecosystem, the draft originally operated as a two-round process, permitting each team to roster a maximum of two import players to promote competitive balance and cultural diversity.[2] For the 2025 edition, held on July 2, the draft expanded to three rounds in alignment with a new policy allowing teams to dress up to three import players, resulting in 142 selections and underscoring the league's evolving emphasis on international integration.[3][1] Eligibility for the draft is restricted to players born in 2006, 2007, or 2008 who have not been previously selected and whose permanent residence is outside North America, with draft order determined by the reverse finishing positions of the teams from the prior season.[4] Since its inception, the draft has produced over 2,310 import selections, many of whom have advanced to prominent careers in the National Hockey League (NHL), including Edmonton Oilers star Leon Draisaitl (drafted by the Prince Albert Raiders in 2012) and Colorado Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog (drafted by the Kitchener Rangers in 2009).[1][5][6] This mechanism not only enriches the CHL's on-ice product but also serves as a critical pipeline for scouting and nurturing future NHL prospects from Europe and beyond.[7]Overview
Purpose and Format
The CHL Import Draft is an annual online event in which teams from the Canadian Hockey League's three member leagues—the Western Hockey League (WHL), Ontario Hockey League (OHL), and Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL)—select the playing rights to eligible import players born outside Canada and the United States.[1] The draft operates in a snake format over three rounds, with selections determined by the reverse order of each league's previous season standings; the team with the worst record picks first in odd-numbered rounds and last in even-numbered rounds. In the 2025 edition, a total of 142 players were selected—50 by OHL teams, 50 by WHL teams, and 42 by QMJHL teams—marking an expansion from prior two-round drafts to accommodate the new policy of up to three imports per team. Each pick requires an upfront fee of $2,000 CAD paid to the CHL.[1][3][8] CHL rules limit each team to a maximum of three import players on its active roster during the season, ensuring a balance between domestic development and international talent integration. Over its history since 1992, the draft has resulted in 2,380 total selections as of 2025.[3][9]Importance to CHL Teams and Players
The CHL Import Draft provides Canadian Hockey League (CHL) teams with a critical mechanism to acquire international talent, allowing them to bolster rosters with skilled players from outside North America and thereby enhance overall competitiveness. By granting each team the ability to select up to two (and starting in 2025-26, up to three) import players, the draft enables franchises, particularly those in leagues like the QMJHL with smaller domestic talent pools, to integrate high-caliber prospects who bring advanced technical abilities often developed in European systems.[1][10] This access not only strengthens team performance on the ice but also attracts NHL scouts, as import players frequently demonstrate the speed, puck-handling, and tactical sophistication that elevate league play and draw professional attention.[11] For young import players, typically aged 17 to 20, the draft represents a pivotal opportunity to immerse themselves in North American hockey's physical and fast-paced style, fostering essential development in a high-level junior environment that serves as a direct pipeline to the NHL. Successful imports acclimatize to the continent's demanding conditions, refining their game through rigorous competition and coaching, which significantly boosts their draft stock and professional prospects.[10] Notable examples include Leon Draisaitl, who transitioned from the Prince Albert Raiders to a stellar NHL career with the Edmonton Oilers, and Nikita Kucherov, whose time in the CHL preceded his emergence as a Tampa Bay Lightning superstar, illustrating how the league acts as a vital stepping stone.[1][10] On a broader scale, the draft promotes diversity across the CHL by incorporating players from dozens of nations over its history, with the 2025 edition alone featuring selections from 18 countries, thereby enriching the league's global profile and cultural exchange. This international infusion contributes substantially to the NHL talent pipeline, as CHL alumni—many originating as imports—account for a significant portion of professional rosters, underscoring the draft's role in bridging European and North American hockey ecosystems.[1][11]History
Establishment in 1992
The Canadian Hockey League (CHL) launched the Import Draft in 1992 as a mechanism to formalize the recruitment of non-North American players, responding to the rising availability of skilled European talent seeking opportunities in junior hockey. This development came amid growing international interest in the CHL, where teams previously handled import signings on an ad hoc basis without centralized oversight.[12] The primary purpose of the draft was to regulate the acquisition of import players by limiting each CHL team to a maximum of two such roster spots and establishing a structured selection process modeled after the National Hockey League (NHL) entry draft. This approach aimed to ensure fair competition among the league's 44 teams at the time, preventing imbalances caused by uneven access to international prospects and promoting balanced development across franchises.[10] In its early years, the Import Draft emphasized skaters from Eastern Europe, with selections heavily featuring players from the Czech Republic, Russia, and Slovakia. The inaugural 1992 draft consisted of a single round with 35 picks, reflecting the league's initial conservative scale while laying the groundwork for an annual event that would integrate global talent into CHL play.[13]Major Changes and Developments
In the 2000s, the Canadian Hockey League underwent substantial expansion, increasing from 54 teams in 2000 to 60 teams by the mid-2010s across the Ontario Hockey League, Western Hockey League, and Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League. This growth directly influenced the Import Draft, as the number of available picks expanded to align with the larger membership, enabling more clubs to secure international talent while maintaining the two-import-player roster limit. By the 2010s, annual drafts consistently featured over 100 selections per year, supporting the league's broader competitive landscape.[14] A key procedural shift occurred around 2010, when the CHL transitioned the Import Draft to an online platform for greater efficiency and accessibility. This change allowed teams to submit picks remotely in real time, with selections tracked live on the official CHL website, reducing logistical challenges and streamlining the process for all 60 member clubs.[15] Global events prompted adaptive measures, notably during the COVID-19 pandemic, when the 2020 Import Draft was held entirely in a virtual format to comply with health protocols and travel restrictions. Despite the uncertainties, 66 players were selected online, ensuring the event's continuation and preserving teams' ability to build rosters with international prospects.[16] The 2018 lifting of the ban on European goaltenders marked a significant policy reversal, reversing restrictions imposed from 2014 to 2017 that had aimed to prioritize domestic netminder development. This change immediately boosted goalie participation, with six European goaltenders selected in the 2018 draft—compared to none in prior years—enhancing positional diversity and providing teams with more options in a critical role.[17] By 2025, the Import Draft continued to evolve with a focus on modern scouting practices, including increased reliance on video analysis and performances in international youth tournaments such as the U17 World Hockey Challenge to evaluate prospects remotely. A major structural update for that year expanded the draft to three rounds, permitting teams to carry up to three import players on their rosters for the first time, which broadened selection opportunities and reflected ongoing adaptations to global talent pools.[3][18]Draft Process
Selection Mechanism
The selection mechanism of the CHL Import Draft operates through a structured process designed to allocate import player rights to teams based on their needs and prior performance. The draft order for each round is determined by the reverse order of the teams' final regular-season standings from the previous season, with playoff performance serving as the primary tiebreaker.[3] This ensures that teams with weaker records in the prior year receive earlier opportunities to select players, promoting competitive balance across the CHL's three leagues: the Ontario Hockey League (OHL), Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), and Western Hockey League (WHL). The order also rotates sequentially among the leagues in each pick to maintain fairness in the distribution of selections.[4] The draft consists of three rounds, expanded from two in prior years to align with a new policy allowing teams to carry up to three import players on their rosters for the 2025-26 season.[3] Each team is allocated a specific number of picks based on their current import player count at the time of the draft: teams with no imports receive three picks (one per round), those with one import receive two picks, and teams with two imports receive one pick.[3] For the 2025 draft, teams were permitted to trade selections for the first time. The format follows a snake draft structure, where the order reverses for subsequent rounds—meaning the team with the last pick in Round 1 selects first in Round 2, and so on—allowing the 60 teams to participate while respecting individual allocations.[19] Teams may pass on their turn if they do not wish to select a player, forgoing the selection and allowing the draft order to continue, which provides flexibility for strategic planning.[3] Upon selection, the drafting team acquires exclusive rights to the player, enabling them to negotiate and secure a CHL standard player agreement.[3] Selected players are required to sign with the team by December 31 of the draft year; failure to do so results in the expiration of those rights, freeing the player to be eligible for selection by another team in future drafts.[3] In cases where a player does not report immediately, teams historically hold rights for up to two years, after which the rights may expire or become subject to trade if the player remains unsigned.[10] This mechanism underscores the draft's role in efficiently matching international talent with CHL opportunities while enforcing timely commitments.Timing and Administrative Details
The CHL Import Draft is conducted annually in late June or early July, immediately following the conclusion of the NHL Entry Draft, allowing teams to integrate international talent into their rosters for the upcoming season. For instance, the 2025 edition occurred on July 2 at 11:00 a.m. ET, with the Kelowna Rockets holding the first overall selection.[20] The draft operates through a centralized virtual platform managed by CHL headquarters in Toronto, Ontario, where teams submit their picks electronically in a structured order that rotates among the WHL, OHL, and QMJHL. This online format, in place since the early 2010s, facilitates efficient participation without requiring physical attendance, evolving from earlier conference call-based processes to fully digital submissions.[21][22] Administrative aspects include a $2,000 CAD fee per selection, which supports CHL operations and is required for each pick made during the draft. Following the event, official selection lists are promptly published on the CHL's website, CHL.ca, providing public access to all 142 selections across the three rounds.[1]Eligibility Criteria
Player Qualifications
Players eligible for the CHL Import Draft must be of birth years corresponding to turning 17, 18, or 19 during the draft year.[10] This age range ensures selected players have sufficient time to develop within the CHL's major junior structure, typically allowing for 1 to 3 seasons of play before aging out at 20.[10] Although younger prospects (turning 16) may be scouted, they are generally not draft-eligible until the following year to prioritize those ready for immediate junior-level competition.[23] Eligibility also requires that players have not exhausted their CHL playing rights, meaning they cannot have previously participated in more than a limited number of CHL seasons, though most imports enter with zero prior experience in the league. Players must also not have previously participated in the CHL, NCAA, U SPORTS, or any professional league.[3] This criterion aligns with broader CHL rules limiting major junior eligibility to under 20 years old and no more than five total seasons across junior leagues.[24] All positions—forwards, defensemen, and goaltenders—are open for selection, subject to temporary restrictions such as bans on certain European goaltenders.[10] Teams target skilled players across these roles to bolster rosters, with no inherent positional preferences beyond availability and team needs.[10] Prospective draftees must be unattached to any professional contracts that would prevent their participation in CHL development, such as agreements with leagues like the KHL.[10] An International Transfer Card (ITC), approved by the IIHF and relevant national federations, is mandatory to confirm availability and resolve any conflicting commitments, ensuring players are free to join a CHL club for amateur junior hockey.[10] This requirement underscores the draft's focus on developmental prospects rather than established professionals.[25]Residency and Origin Rules
The residency and origin rules for the CHL Import Draft determine eligibility based on a player's connection to North America, primarily through the full-time residence of their parents or guardians. A player is classified as an import if their parent(s) do not reside in Canada or the United States as of January 11 preceding the draft year.[26] This classification focuses on the parents' primary residency at the time of the draft, verified through documents such as housing deeds, banking records, or lease agreements, rather than the player's own length of stay in North America.[10] These rules create distinct categories: players with parents residing outside North America are imports, regardless of their birthplace or personal relocation history, while those with North American parental residency are treated as domestic and enter the leagues' priority selections. For instance, David Levin, born in Israel and holding Israeli citizenship, was deemed ineligible for import status and instead eligible for the OHL Priority Selection after establishing residency in Toronto by living with extended family, despite his parents remaining in Israel.[27][28] In contrast, Ivan Provorov, born in Yaroslavl, Russia, was classified as a Russian import and selected 30th overall by the WHL's Brandon Wheat Kings in the 2014 CHL Import Draft, even after relocating to the United States at age 13 to play junior hockey.[29] Exceptions to strict import classification arise in cases of early relocation, where leagues may grant domestic status on a case-by-case basis if a player establishes significant North American residency prior to draft age, potentially bypassing the import draft through direct entry into a league's priority selection or signing process.[10] Such determinations involve appeals to league officials and emphasize long-term integration, as seen with players moving during their early teens or bantam years (under-14 level). This flexibility ensures that players with strong North American ties are not unnecessarily routed through the import system, though it requires rigorous documentation to override parental residency factors.[30]Special Regulations
European Goalkeeper Ban
The European Goalkeeper Ban was a regulatory measure implemented in the CHL Import Draft, prohibiting the selection of goaltenders born outside North America from 2014 through 2017 to foster greater opportunities for domestic goaltending talent within the league.[17] This rule effectively barred European-born goalies from being drafted as imports, limiting CHL teams to two import slots per roster, which were thereby reserved exclusively for non-goaltending positions or North American-born players.[31] The ban applied league-wide across the Ontario Hockey League (OHL), Western Hockey League (WHL), and Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), aiming to address perceived declines in Canadian goaltender development.[10] The policy originated from consultations between the CHL and Hockey Canada, driven by concerns that the influx of highly skilled European goalies—often professionalized early in competitive leagues abroad—was displacing North American prospects and stunting the domestic goaltending pipeline.[17] CHL Commissioner David Branch emphasized that the decision sought to enhance the caliber of Canadian goaltending by increasing playing time for local players in major junior.[17] As a transitional measure, the 2013 Import Draft permitted European goalies to be selected only in the first round, allowing existing European netminders in the CHL to complete their eligibility without interruption.[32] Following a review by CHL leadership, the ban was repealed effective with the 2018 Import Draft, reinstating eligibility for European-born goaltenders and resulting in a surge of selections that year, including high-profile picks like Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen by the Sudbury Wolves.[33] During the ban's duration, some European prospects circumvented the restriction by relocating to North America at a young age to play minor hockey, thereby meeting residency requirements and avoiding import classification.[10] Others pursued development in alternative junior circuits, such as the United States Hockey League (USHL), which saw an uptick in European goaltender participation.[34]Ban on Russian and Belarusian Players
In response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the CHL announced that Russian and Belarusian players would be ineligible for selection in the 2022 and 2023 Import Drafts.[35] This policy, the first nationality-based ban since the European goaltender restriction, aimed to align with international sanctions and ethical considerations amid the ongoing conflict.[36] The ban was lifted for the 2024 Import Draft, reinstating eligibility for players from these countries.[37]Inherent Risk Assessment
Teams selecting players in the CHL Import Draft face significant inherent risks, primarily centered on the possibility that drafted imports may not report to their assigned clubs. Common reasons for non-reporting include lucrative offers from professional leagues in Europe, such as the KHL, which can provide better financial incentives and development opportunities closer to home, as well as personal factors like family commitments or reluctance to relocate overseas at a young age (typically 17-19 years old).[10][38] Additionally, even if players arrive, adaptation challenges can lead to early returns, including language barriers that hinder communication and team integration, the transition to smaller North American ice rinks (which differ from the larger international standard and affect playing style), and broader cultural adjustments to life in Canada or the United States.[10] To mitigate these risks, CHL teams employ various scouting methods, often relying on indirect evaluation due to logistical constraints. Primary tools include video footage from European leagues and international tournaments like the IIHF World Junior Championship, where prospects' performances against top competition can be assessed, supplemented by reports from NHL scouts or affiliated networks. In-person scouting is limited for many clubs, particularly smaller-market teams, leading to heavy dependence on agent contacts to gauge a player's commitment and willingness to relocate before investing a draft pick, which incurs upfront costs like transfer fees of approximately $2,400 CAD.[10] These pre-draft agreements with agents help confirm interest but do not eliminate uncertainty, as players may still opt for domestic options post-selection.[10] The outcomes of these selections reflect the draft's high-risk nature, with a historically significant non-reporting rate that disadvantages teams, especially those unable to trade picks under certain rules, leaving them without roster additions or compensatory assets.[12][38] Despite this, successful cases—such as Slovakian forward Dalibor Dvorsky, who reported after a second-round selection and advanced to the NHL with the St. Louis Blues—demonstrate the potential for high-impact talent that can transition directly to professional levels.[38] In contrast to domestic drafts, where players are typically local and face fewer relocation or adaptation hurdles, the import process amplifies financial and developmental risks for CHL clubs, though it remains a key avenue for accessing global talent.[10][39]Selections and Impact
Draft Picks by Country of Origin
The CHL Import Draft has resulted in selections from over 25 different nations since its inception in 1992, reflecting the global talent pool available to CHL teams.[9] Of the 2,380 total picks made through the 2025 draft, the majority have originated from European countries, particularly those in Eastern Europe. This distribution underscores the draft's focus on international development pathways for young players ineligible for North American junior leagues under residency rules. Eastern European nations have dominated selections since the draft's early years, driven by strong hockey infrastructures and player availability. Czechia leads with 634 picks, producing numerous players who have appeared in NHL games, highlighting its consistent contribution to professional talent. Russia follows with 529 selections, while Slovakia stands out for its per capita success rate, with a high proportion of draftees advancing to the NHL relative to its smaller population and 347 overall picks.[9] These figures are compiled from comprehensive CHL records and player tracking databases.| Country | Total Picks | NHL Players |
|---|---|---|
| Czechia | 634 | Numerous |
| Russia | 529 | Numerous |
| Slovakia | 347 | High per capita** |