For many, it was a foregone conclusion. The belief was that 15-year-old defenceman Kade O’Rourke, currently playing for the Toronto Jr. Canadiens, would be granted exceptional status by Hockey Canada and would be the eventual first overall pick in the upcoming OHL Draft.
On Tuesday, however, it was first reported by Jeff Marek that the native of Round Rock, Texas, would not be granted the title of exceptional by Canada’s governing hockey body. Instead, the Oshawa Generals, who have the first overall pick in the OHL Draft will be looking for another top-end pick, while O’Rourke will have to wait another season to make the jump to the CHL.
Whatever the reasoning, Hockey Canada has made it clear that they will be extremely selective when handing out the status to upcoming players – looking for 15-year-old who will play and produce consistently at the next level.
O’Rourke Did Everything to Gain Exceptional Status
As for O’Rourke, the defenceman did everything in his power to earn the allocation by Hockey Canada. Unfortunately the six-foot-one, 180-pound defenceman couldn’t convince the power that be that he was deserving of exceptional status.
This season, O’Rourke put up 19 goals and 42 points in 32 games for the Canadiens in the Greater Toronto Hockey League (GTHL) during their regular season play. He added another 10 points in seven games in the OHL Cup, helping his team to a final appearance – a loss at the hands of the perennial contending Detroit Honeybaked.
Outside analysts are extremely high on his game. He’s a defenceman that can move the puck up with pace, both passing it out of his end and skating it up ice. His transition game is further developed with his ability to see the game on a different level than most of his young colleagues. In fact, his game seems almost seamless at the U16 level.
Add to that that he’s a right-handed defenceman with size and strength and teams will be salivating to get their hands on him when he finally does become eligible for the OHL.
O’Rourke Will Have to Wait For His Exceptional OHL Debut
As for his ability to adapt to the next level, it’s not the first time he’s been considered exceptional. He jumped from the U14 division to the U16 division this season, jumping over the U15 league. That said, he’ll have the wait for another season to make his OHL debut, falling just shy of Hockey Canada’s rare exceptional status.
“A number of people I spoke to this week said there is no question he’s ready,” said Elliotte Friedman on O’Rourke earlier this month.
As for the status, it has only been handed out six times in the OHL and nine times CHL-wide. Those names include, John Tavares (2005), Aaron Ekblad (2011), Connor McDavid (2012), Sean Day (2013), Joe Veleno (QMJHL – 2015), Shane Wright (2019), Connor Bedard (WHL – 2020), Michael Misa (2022) and Landon DuPont (WHL – 2024).
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