Early Life & Junior Career

Connor Andrew McDavid was born January 13, 1997, in Richmond Hill, Ontario, to Brian and Kelly McDavid. His father was a high school hockey player and diehard Boston Bruins fan. His mother played one year of recreational hockey before switching to skiing. He has an older brother, Cameron.

McDavid started skating at three — on rollerblades in the family basement, because his parents couldn't get him to stop moving. He joined organized hockey at four, and his parents had to fudge his age to get him into a league with five-year-olds. By six, the local association in Newmarket refused to let him play up against older kids, so Brian and Kelly enrolled him in an Aurora program where he could actually be challenged. He won four Ontario Minor Hockey Association championships with the York-Simcoe Express, a team his father coached.

In 2012, Hockey Canada granted McDavid exceptional player status — making him just the third player in history to receive it, after John Tavares and Aaron Ekblad. The designation allowed him to enter the OHL at 15. The Erie Otters selected him first overall, and he immediately justified the hype: 25 goals and 41 assists for 66 points as a 15-year-old rookie. His sophomore year produced 28 goals and 71 assists for 99 points in 56 games despite a broken hand. Then came the final OHL season: 44 goals, 76 assists, 120 points in 47 games. That's 2.55 points per game. In junior hockey. At 17.

The 2015 NHL Draft was billed as McDavid vs. Jack Eichel — the most anticipated draft since Sidney Crosby in 2005. It wasn't really a debate. Edmonton won the lottery and took McDavid first overall. The only question was how quickly he'd take over the league.

NHL Career

The answer was: immediately, then not quite, then completely. McDavid broke his collarbone in November of his rookie season, missed 37 games, and still finished with 48 points in 45 games — a point-per-game pace that earned him third in Calder Trophy voting despite playing barely half a season. The injury actually increased the hype. People saw what he could do in limited action and realized the ceiling was absurd.

Edmonton named him captain in October 2016 at age 19 — the youngest in franchise history. He responded with 30 goals, 70 assists, and 100 points, winning the Hart Trophy, Art Ross Trophy, and Ted Lindsay Award in the same year. He was 20. The Oilers made the playoffs for the first time since 2006 and pushed Anaheim to seven games before bowing out.

What followed was a stretch of individual dominance the league hadn't seen since the Gretzky era. McDavid won five Art Ross Trophies in seven seasons (2017, 2018, 2021, 2022, 2023), three Hart Trophies (2017, 2021, 2023), and the Maurice Richard Trophy in 2023 with 64 goals. That 2022-23 season was the one that changed the conversation from "best player right now" to "historically great": 64 goals and 89 assists for 153 points — the most by any player since Mario Lemieux's 161 in 1995-96. He also recorded 100 assists in a single season, something only Wayne Gretzky had done before.

I'd argue his best season wasn't the 153-point year. It was 2023-24, when the entire league adjusted specifically to contain him — and he still put up 32 goals and 100 assists for 132 points while leading Edmonton to the Stanley Cup Final. He won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP despite the Oilers losing to Florida in seven games — only the sixth player in NHL history to win the award on the losing side. His 19 goals and 27 assists for 46 points in 25 playoff games that spring were arguably the greatest individual playoff run since Gretzky.

Edmonton returned to the Cup Final in 2024-25, losing to Florida again in six games. McDavid's numbers dipped slightly during the regular season — 26 goals and 74 assists for 100 points in 67 games — but the playoff production remained elite.

Current Season (2025-26)

At 29, McDavid is having another vintage year: 38 goals, 78 assists, and 116 points in 71 games. He reached 400 career goals in March 2026 and sits at 399 regular-season goals with 799 assists for 1,198 career points. The pace is 44 goals and 90 assists for 134 points over a full 82 games.

He signed a 2-year, $25 million extension ($12.5M AAV) in October 2025 — deliberately below the $16-18M he could have commanded on the open market. The discount was explicitly about giving Edmonton cap space to build a contender. "It's about winning," he told reporters. After 2027-28, he becomes an unrestricted free agent at 31. That's the window. Two years.

Edmonton sits second in the Pacific Division with 77 points — a fact that McDavid himself called "a pillow fight" after a loss to Tampa Bay. With Draisaitl dealing with injury concerns, the pressure on McDavid to carry this team has never been higher.

Off the Ice

McDavid married interior designer Lauren Kyle on July 27, 2024, in Muskoka, Ontario. They'd been set up on a blind date in 2016 by Kyle's cousin and McDavid's then-teammate Luke Gazdic. They live in Edmonton year-round with their Bernedoodle, Lenard — which is the most Edmonton thing I've ever typed.

Lauren runs Kyle & Co. Design Studio, Sports Club Atelier, Bar Trove, and Trove Living — a multi-concept space in downtown Edmonton. Together, they've hosted charity poker nights for the Oilers Foundation and support "Every Kid Deserves a Shot," a youth sports initiative in Alberta. McDavid is notoriously private. He doesn't do podcasts, rarely gives extended interviews, and his social media is managed corporate-clean. He's the best player alive and also, by all accounts, genuinely boring off the ice — which in a league full of drama might be his most impressive achievement.