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2025 NHL Draft Preview: Defenseman Sascha Boumedienne, Sweden
Our focus continues to remain on the blueline after looking at Blake Fiddler. However, we’ll switch back to the left side, which is a bigger hole in the Kings pipeline. There are some additional parallels that they have in common. Sascha Boumedienne Vitals Date of Birth: January 17, 2007Height: 6-foot-2Weight: 183 lbsShoots: LeftPosition: Defense 2024-25 […]

Our focus continues to remain on the blueline after looking at Blake Fiddler. However, we’ll switch back to the left side, which is a bigger hole in the Kings pipeline. There are some additional parallels that they have in common.
Sascha Boumedienne
Vitals
Date of Birth: January 17, 2007
Height: 6-foot-2
Weight: 183 lbs
Shoots: Left
Position: Defense
2024-25 Season
Boumedienne spent most of the 2024-25 season playing for the NCAA for Boston University. In 40 games, he has 13 points (3 G, 10 A).
The Freshest Man
The mobile defender played his freshman season this year; his numbers are all the more impressive, as he was the youngest player in men’s collegiate hockey this year.
NHL Roots
Much like the previously featured Blake Fiddler, whose father Vern played in the NHL, Boumedienne also has ties to the highest level of hockey, as his father, Josef, suited up for Washington, Tampa Bay, and New Jersey.
International Individual
Born in Finland, Boumedienne also has Swedish citizenship, which is who he represents in international competition. Most of his development has been in the United States, though.
Most recently at IIHF’s U-18 World Junior Championship, the lanky rearguard had an outstanding performance. While earning silver, he was awarded WJC All-star honors, best defenseman, most assists (both in tourney and among all defenders – 13), and most points by a defenseman (14).
NHL Combine Results
Boumedienne attended the NHL Combine, and these are the categories in which he was ranked in the top-25:
Horizontal Jump: 110 inches (15th)
Pro Agility – Left Time: 4.37 seconds (20th)
Vertical Jump: 22.85 inches (12th)
No Arm Jump: 20.05 inches (10th)
Bench Press 50% of Body Weight – Power: 6.72 watts/kg (19th)
Left Hand Grip: 150 lbs (tied for 12th)
Right Hand Grip: 161 lbs (tied for 8th)
Pull-Ups Consecutive: 14 (tied for 5th)
Rankings by Independent Scouting Services
Ranked No. 31 by Future Considerations: “Boumedienne is a mobile, offensively inclined defenseman whose game is anchored by elite-level skating, advanced puck-moving ability, and a consistent competitive edge. His straight-line speed and rapid acceleration allow him to close gaps quickly on defense and drive play in transition, while his edgework and lateral agility make him both elusive and dangerous as a puck carrier in tight areas. He uses his feet exceptionally well on retrievals, creating separation with quick turns, weight shifts, and deceptive movement before executing accurate breakout passes that facilitate clean exits. In the offensive zone, his instincts shine as he walks the blue line with confidence, finds shooting lanes, and releases pucks with both velocity and accuracy, particularly when operating on the power play. He possesses a quick-release wrist shot and a powerful one-timer, which he deploys from the point and as a trailer on the rush. His passing touch is another asset, capable of threading pucks through seams or connecting with teammates in high-danger areas, whether off the rush or during extended zone possession. His hockey sense is advanced for his age, demonstrated through his ability to scan, process, and react to plays as they unfold. Boumedienne’s comfort as a power-play quarterback is further high lighted by his well-timed movements away from the puck and his ability to shift into shooting positions fluidly. Defensively, he uses a long reach and decent stick positioning to break up passes and challenge entries, though his physical play and gap control vary from shift to shift. While he does not shy away from contact, he often relies more on stickwork than assertive body engagement, which can limit his effectiveness in board battles or in front of his own net. His decision-making under pressure has also led to costly pinches and turnovers, particularly in moments where he pushes the offensive envelope and fails to recover.”
Ranked No. 15 by Hockey Prospect Radio. “recognized for his ability to excel in the challenging NCAA environment as a 17-year-old freshman. His scouting report emphasizes strong puck-moving skills, high energy, and an excellent skating base, positioning him as a top-25 draft pick. Despite lacking specialization, Boumedienne’s secondary production and playmaking, combined with his adaptability in a structured college system, enhance his appeal as a safer pick. His potential World Junior appearances and ongoing development against older opponents underscore his high ceiling as a versatile, puck-moving defenseman.”
Ranked No. 30 by Smaht Scouting. “Boumedienne is a player whose stock has probably taken a hit over the season. Going into the year many projected him as a player who would go inside the top 20, while now? It seems a toss-up as to whether he will go in the first or second round. This season he made the step up to play College Hockey with Boston University, and while he has more than held his own playing around 18 minutes a night, his lack of top-end offensive skill and clunky edge-work have meant many NHL scouts have real doubts about his ability to be a difference maker at the highest level one day. Additionally, he has struggled with consistency, albeit his game has got better over the season. However, in terms of the positives he is a smooth passer, with solid straight-line speed, good size, solid defensive chops and a tenacious playing style. Furthermore, he is still growing into his frame, and throw several of the defensemen who will likely be drafted ahead of him into College Hockey? They would likely do worse than the young Swede has. Expect a jump in his production next season too when he gets some PP time for the Terriers, as this year he has rarely seen ice in man-up situations, and he excelled there in the USHL. He is an interesting player in a draft that is weak in terms of defensemen. If everything goes well you might get a good second pairing defenseman, and his floor is high enough to say that he should at worst play games in the NHL one day.”
See For Yourself
Video of Boumedienne versus Providence in the NCAA:
Final Comments
From the readings above, the general sense for Boumedienne is he was underwhelming for an offensive defenseman. In a vacuum, it’s a fair criticism. However, we here at Mayor’s Manor love the word “context.”
Many players his age don’t play college hockey. Even in Europe when playing against older competition, prospects get bounced around to play at varying leagues with different levels of difficulty. For this collegiate defenseman, he spent all season (minus time in tournaments). These were hard minutes for someone who turned 18 years old four months ago.
Without the puck, Boumedienne boasts a good-size frame with good mobility in all directions. Consequently, the Oulu-born blueliner can cover a lot of ice. Struggling to make the right defensive reads inhibit moving around effectively though. With coaching and experience, this can improve.
He sees the ice well, particularly in transition. The breakout passes find their mark, which allows for a dangerous attack against the opposition. The vision and puck movement capabilities also make for a good powerplay quarterback.
For a young skater, Boumedienne didn’t back down when challenged. He is more of a puck mover than a puck carrier, despite having good skating ability. From an offensive standpoint, there should be a lot of growth. If the consistency and defensive reads can improve, there is good potential for a top-four defenseman.
Chat with David: You can find him on Twitter @Davidenkness to talk more hockey.
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Kraken get an elite playmaker in drafting Jake O’Brien at No. 8 overall
With the 8th overall pick in the 2025 NHL Entry Draft, the Seattle Kraken added another talented center to their growing pipeline, selecting Jake O’Brien of the Brantford Bulldogs. The Toronto native turned heads this season with his elite vision and playmaking ability, racking up 32 goals and 66 assists for 98 points in just […]


With the 8th overall pick in the 2025 NHL Entry Draft, the Seattle Kraken added another talented center to their growing pipeline, selecting Jake O’Brien of the Brantford Bulldogs. The Toronto native turned heads this season with his elite vision and playmaking ability, racking up 32 goals and 66 assists for 98 points in just 68 OHL regular-season games.
O’Brien was the engine behind Brantford’s power play, quarterbacking the top unit and piling up 41 power-play assists—a testament to both his patience and precision. His ability to manipulate defenders and carve through coverage is already drawing praise from scouts. Cam Robinson of Elite Prospects described O’Brien as a player whose “head is always up, scanning, adjusting routes, and inviting defenders to make the first move before slicing them apart with a feed.” In short: he sees plays develop before they even happen.
At 6-foot-1.5 and 172 pounds, O’Brien isn’t the biggest player on the ice, but he rarely needs to be. His game is built on feel, finesse, and hockey sense. While many analysts have noted that he still has room to grow in terms of shooting and skating, his offensive instincts are already NHL-caliber.
Brantford opens the scoring
#NHLDraft prospect Jake O’Brien scores a late first period goal for the @BulldogsOHL to put them up 1-0 heading into the first intermission!#OHLPlayoffs | @CHLHockey pic.twitter.com/p1EaqcmBTA
— Ontario Hockey League (@OHLHockey) April 19, 2025
The Kraken are banking on that upside. O’Brien’s pedigree also speaks volumes, his mom played high-level hockey and now runs her own hockey school, which Jake frequented growing up to fine-tune his craft. His dad also played Division I college hockey and logged a year in the ECHL. The hockey DNA runs deep in the O’Brien family.
This selection marks the fourth time in five drafts that Seattle has used a first-round pick on a center, following Matty Beniers (2021), Shane Wright (2022), and Berkly Catton (2024). And while not all centers stay at that position as pros, the organizational philosophy is clear: keep stacking the middle of the ice. The old saying goes, “You can never have too many centers,” and Seattle seems happy to live by that rule.
Whether O’Brien eventually lands at center or shifts to the wing, his ability to create offense and tilt the ice is what earned him OHL Rookie of the Year honors in 2023-24, when he posted 64 points in 61 games as a 16-year-old. That was just the beginning. The Kraken hope he’s only getting started.
College Sports
From Ice to Diamond: Fischer’s competitive fire fuels Big Sticks surge – The Dickinson Press
DICKINSON — For people that have viewed a Badlands Big Sticks boxscore, there’s roughly an 80-90% chance that Chayton Fischer’s name is on it. Rarely does his stat line feature zeros. In his first year with the Big Sticks, the 21-year-old is fourth on the team with a .333 average and leads the team with […]

DICKINSON — For people that have viewed a Badlands Big Sticks boxscore, there’s roughly an 80-90% chance that Chayton Fischer’s name is on it. Rarely does his stat line feature zeros. In his first year with the Big Sticks, the 21-year-old is fourth on the team with a .333 average and leads the team with a 1.217 OPS.
While he is currently playing baseball at the Division II level, it wasn’t the only sport he played growing up. His first love, as he says, was hockey. His family never played the sport and he didn’t envision himself putting on a baseball uniform.
“My mom was the one that taught me how to skate when I was two and I started playing games when I was three,” Fischer said. “When it came to winter, I was ice fishing and I even brought my skates out to go to the ice fishing spots when there was no snow on the ice.”
One of Minnesota’s most iconic annual events is the state tournament at the Xcel Energy Center, the home of the Minnesota Wild. In the 2021-22 season, Maple Grove advanced to the Class AA championship game, but lost 6-5 in double overtime to Andover. Despite losing, competing in one of the biggest high school hockey tournaments in the country was unforgettable.
“You grow up in Minnesota dreaming of being in the Minnesota State hockey tournament. I happened to go to the championship. No one would ever take that away from me,” Fischer said.

Courtesy of Chayton Fischer
While his offensive prowess is evident on the baseball, that wasn’t his role on the ice. During his high school years at Maple Grove High, he’d play a polarizing game, using his big 6-foot, 220-pound frame to deliver big hits.
“When I got to high school, [the coaches] were always like, ‘All right we need the big hit.’ and I was like, ‘I’ll do whatever I can to get our team to win,” Fischer said. “My main goal was to protect my teammates, have fun and win games.”
The physicality of his game on the ice translated to his role as catcher on the baseball diamond. He decided on catcher because of his older brother, who played behind the plate growing up.
“I just like the competition. I didn’t like sitting in the outfield, and I didn’t like sitting in the infield just doing nothing. So anything I could do that was doing a lot, it was just fun,” Fischer said. “I think that’s why I kept playing. If I would have been playing outfield or another position, there’s no way I would keep playing baseball.”
Fischer played his first two seasons of collegiate baseball at Minnesota State Mankato before transferring to Iowa Central Community College last summer. He led the team batting .404 and a .554 on base percentage while ranking second with 14 home runs. This spring he’ll be playing for the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UT-RGV) for his redshirt junior season.
“He’s a competitor. I think above all that’s definitely the big piece for him that allows us to be successful. He’s mature in the box, he’s not going to get cheated. And I think that’s been a big piece for guys to see because no matter what the result of the last AB was, he’s going to go up there and try and do the exact same thing,” Big Sticks manager Kelby Coburn said. “I had high expectations coming into the season knowing what kind of hitter he was, but you never know if you’ll actually get that when they arrive. And it’s been really cool to see him just go out there and do his thing.”
Jacob Cheris / The Dickinson Press
Though he has only been in Dickinson for one month, he’s formed relationships and has learned lessons that he’ll take with him heading into next spring — and for the rest of his life.
“Everyone’s not given their position. When I was at school, I wasn’t given it,” Fischer said. “When you come here, you have to prove yourself again. So every time you go to a summer ball, go to a new team, it always just proves that you have to work hard to earn your spot every single time.”
Jacob Cheris covers a variety of high school and college sports. A graduate of Penn State University’s class of 2023, with a degree in broadcast journalism, he covered Penn State Men’s Hockey for three years. Jacob also covers Big Ten Hockey for College Hockey News.
College Sports
Democrats are trying to figure out what to do about John Fetterman; One of them is stepping up
ENOLA — Democratic Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania isn’t even up for reelection until 2028, but already a one-time primary foe, former U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb, is crisscrossing Pennsylvania and social media, looking and sounding like he’s preparing to challenge Fetterman again. At town hall after town hall across Pennsylvania, Democrats and allied progressive […]

ENOLA — Democratic Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania isn’t even up for reelection until 2028, but already a one-time primary foe, former U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb, is crisscrossing Pennsylvania and social media, looking and sounding like he’s preparing to challenge Fetterman again.
At town hall after town hall across Pennsylvania, Democrats and allied progressive groups aren’t hearing from Fetterman in person — or Republicans who control Washington, for that matter.
But they are hearing from Lamb, a living reminder of the Democrat they could have elected instead of Fetterman. The former congressman has emerged as an in-demand town hall headliner, sometimes as a stand-in for Fetterman — who just might bash Fetterman.
“I thought I was going to play Senator Fetterman,” Lamb joked as he sat down in front of a central Pennsylvania crowd last Sunday.
Democrats are frustrated with Fetterman
Lamb’s reemergence comes at an in-between moment, roughly halfway through Fetterman’s six-year term, and is helping define the struggle facing Democrats in swing-state Pennsylvania.
There, Democrats figure prominently in their national effort to push back on President Donald Trump, but also in their struggle to figure out what to do about Fetterman, who is under fire from rank-and-file Democrats for being willing to cooperate with Trump.
Frustration with Fetterman has been on display on social media, at the massive “ No Kings ” rally in Philadelphia and among the Democratic Party’s faithful. The steering committee of the progressive organization Indivisible PA last month asked Fetterman to resign.
It’s quite a turnabout for the hoodies-and-shorts-wearing Fetterman, elected in 2022 with an everyman persona and irreverent wit, who was unafraid to challenge convention.
For some progressives, frustration with Fetterman began with his staunch support for Israel’s punishing war against Hamas in Gaza, an issue that divides Democrats.
It’s moved beyond that since Trump took office. Now, some are wondering why he’s — as they see it — kissing up to Trump, why he’s chastising fellow Democrats for their anti-Trump resistance and whether he’s even committed to their causes at all.
Most recently, they question his support for Trump’s bombing of Iran.
“It hurts,” said John Abbott, who attended Sunday’s event in suburban Harrisburg.
Speaking at the flagship “No Kings” rally in Philadelphia, Indivisible co-founder Leah Greenberg name-checked Fetterman.
“We’re looking to the leaders who will fight for us, because even today there are folks among the Democratic Party who think we should roll over and play dead,” Greenberg said. “Anyone seen John Fetterman here today?”
The crowd booed.
Why is Conor Lamb crisscrossing Pennsylvania again?
In Pittsburgh, progressives trying to land an in-person town hall with Fetterman or first-term Republican Sen. David McCormick noticed when the two senators advertised an event together at a downtown restaurant to celebrate the release of McCormick’s new book.
Progressive groups organized to protest it and — after it got moved to a private location with a private invite list — went ahead with their own town hall. They invited Lamb and a local Democratic state representative instead.
More invitations for Lamb started rolling in.
By his count, he’s now attended at least a dozen town halls and party events, easily clocking more than 2,000 miles to appear in small towns, small cities and suburbs, often in conservative areas.
“Showing up matters and it really does make a difference,” said Dana Kellerman, a Pittsburgh-based progressive organizer. “Is that going to matter to John Fetterman? I really don’t know. I don’t know what he’s thinking. I don’t know if he’s always been this person or if he’s changed in the last two years.”
Fetterman has brushed off criticism, saying he’s a committed Democrat, insisting he was elected to engage with Republicans and — perhaps hypocritically — questioning why Democrats would criticize fellow Democrats.
At times, Fetterman has criticized Trump, questioning the move to “punch our allies in the mouth” with tariffs or the need for cuts to social-safety net programs in the GOP’s legislation to extend 2017’s tax cuts. Fetterman’s office didn’t respond to an inquiry about Lamb.
Is Conor Lamb running for Senate?
For his part, Lamb — a former U.S. Marine and federal prosecutor — says he isn’t running for anything right now, but he’ll do whatever he can to “stop this slide that we’re on toward a less democratic country and try to create one in which there’s more opportunity for people.”
To some Democrats, he sounds like a candidate.
“That he’s doing these town halls is a good indication that he’ll be running for something, so it’s a good thing,” said Janet Bargh, who attended the event in suburban Harrisburg.
Aside from the town halls, he spoke at the Unite for Veterans event on the National Mall. He has also been active on social media, doing local radio appearances and appearing on MSNBC, where he recently criticized the June 14 military parade ordered up by Trump.
Not long ago, it was hard to envision Lamb losing a race, ever.
In 2018, he won a heavily Trump-friendly congressional district in southwestern Pennsylvania in a special election. It was the center of the political universe that spring, drawing campaign visits by Trump and then-presidential hopeful Joe Biden.
Suddenly, Lamb was ascendant. Then he ran for Senate and lost handily — by more than two-to-one — to Fetterman in 2022’s primary.
People often ask Lamb if he’s going to challenge Fetterman again. Lamb said he reminds them that Fetterman has three years left in his term and pivots the conversation to what Democrats need to do to win elections in 2025 and 2026.
Still, Lamb is unafraid to criticize Fetterman publicly. And, he said, he’s a magnet for Democrats to air their unhappiness with Fetterman. What he hears, over and over, is frustration that Fetterman spends too much time attacking fellow Democrats and not enough time challenging Trump.
“And that is, I think, what’s driving the frustration more than any one particular issue,” Lamb said.
At the town hall, Lamb wasn’t afraid to admit he’d lost to Fetterman. But he turned it into an attack line.
“When I watch the person who beat me give up on every important issue that he campaigned on … the more I reasoned that the point of all of this in the first place is advocacy for what’s right and wrong,” Lamb told the crowd. “And advocacy for not just a particular party to win, but for the type of country where it matters if, when you stand up, you tell the truth.”
The crowd cheered.
College Sports
Devils Keep Picks 50 and 63, Take Two College-Bound Forwards
The New Jersey Devils did not make any waves during the second round of the 2025 NHL Draft, opting to use both of their second-round picks. With picks 50 and 63, the Devils first selected center Conrad Fondrk, then right wing Benjamin Kevan. Both players are products of the USNTDP system, with Fondrk playing mostly […]

The New Jersey Devils did not make any waves during the second round of the 2025 NHL Draft, opting to use both of their second-round picks.
With picks 50 and 63, the Devils first selected center Conrad Fondrk, then right wing Benjamin Kevan. Both players are products of the USNTDP system, with Fondrk playing mostly with the US National U18 team. He posted 13 goals and 27 points in 40 games. Kevan played in the USHL with Des Moines, posting 13-30-43 in 51 games.
Fondrk:
Fondrk has some upside, with the most bullish projections seeing him have upwards of a 2C/3C upside. From EliteProspects:
“Equally skilled as a shooter and passer, Fondrk has the tools to score in the NHL. A precise one-time shooter, he’s a scoring threat from the top of the circle and just inside the slot, and consistently finds openings between defenders for chances. He also hooks pucks through opponents for chances, deceives before passing, and occasionally dangles through traffic.”
Fondrk broke his leg in March, but is committed to Boston University. He’ll be joining the Terriers on a loaded team, featuring Cole Eiserman, Cole Hutson, and more elite talent. BU went to the National Championship, but ultimately fell short.
Kevan:
Benjamin Kevan is a great value selection. EP ranked him as their #41 prospect, and the Devils got him at #63.
From your usual writer, James Nichols, on Kevan: “6-foot, 183-lbs. Incredibly fast and quick on his edges. Burns defenders. Weaves through traffic. Playmaker. Plus forechecker. Crashes the net.”
EP’s super bullish on him, saying he reminds them of JJ Peterka. The low side of this pick is comparisons to Kasperi Kapanen. Both are very speedy players, and that’s exactly what Kevan is.
He’s committed to Arizona State, though he will spend another year in the USHL first. Kevan’s an extremely intriguing prospect, one who could end up being a coup for the Devils late in the second round.

College Sports
Vinny Cerrato’s son Charlie lands with Carolina Hurricanes
Editors note: The Carolina Hurricans picked Charlie Cerrato, who grew up in Fallston and is the son of local sports talk host Vinny Cerrato, with the 49th pick of the NHL Draft on Saturday. “Great fit for Charlie,” Vinny said. “So excited,” Charlie said. “Can’t wait to get started with them.” Below is our story […]

Editors note: The Carolina Hurricans picked Charlie Cerrato, who grew up in Fallston and is the son of local sports talk host Vinny Cerrato, with the 49th pick of the NHL Draft on Saturday.
“Great fit for Charlie,” Vinny said.
“So excited,” Charlie said. “Can’t wait to get started with them.”
Below is our story on Charlie’s unusual path to pro hockey.
The story many hockey fans remember when they think about Charlie Cerrato involves him, at age 4, staring at a naked Alex Ovechkin. Cerrato, a longtime Capitals fan, doesn’t remember it. But his father, Vinny, a former NFL executive, does.
Maybe that was the moment when something subconscious in Charlie clicked. His father worked in football, but he was destined to be a hockey player.
That’s something of an unusual goal for a kid growing up in Maryland. The Cerratos settled in Fallston — Vinny is a host on Baltimore’s 105.7 The Fan now — and Charlie embarked on a long journey that could lead to a new path Saturday.
Most projections have him going in the middle rounds of the NHL draft (the first round concluded Friday night; the other six are Saturday). He would become only the sixth Virginia native drafted.
Cerrato had hoped to hear his name when he was first eligible two years ago. But an unexpected detour led him on an exhilarating run to the pinnacle of college hockey and now has him poised to realize a dream.
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“I’ve been passed up twice now,” he said. “In the moment, yeah, it’s tough. Like, you want to get drafted. A lot of your friends get drafted, but just use it as motivation, a little adversity and a chip on your shoulder.”
Chasing the game
While Maryland’s hockey culture has improved — in part due to Ovechkin’s influence — Cerrato had to leave the state to hone his game.
He first learned to skate when he was 3 or 4 in Reston, Virginia. His father — a high school hockey star in Minnesota who opted to chase a college football career — would start the day at 6 a.m. at the rink where Charlie would skate with the hockey director. A quick stop at McDonald’s for breakfast, and then Vinny Cerrato would drop his son off at preschool before heading to work for Washington’s NFL team.
Eventually, Charlie needed to find better competition, which meant driving 84 miles (each way) for practices at Hollydell Ice Arena in Sewell, New Jersey.
“If I didn’t have a dad who was in the position to be able to spend so much time in the car, drive me all over the place, I would not be where I’m at,” Charlie Cerrato said.
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Charlie would complete his homework and watch YouTube videos on the car ride, but, more than anything, he liked listening to his father make phone calls.
In 2021, Charlie joined the prestigious USA Hockey National Team Development Program in Michigan, which annually produces top draft prospects.
In the 2023-24 season, he played with the Youngstown Phantoms in Ohio (it is common for college-bound players to delay school and play junior hockey). Originally committed to Michigan, he picked Penn State after the Wolverines changed coaches.
That was good news for Vinny, who’d found it difficult missing his son’s game when he was in the Midwest.
“He and I traveled three days a week.” Vinny Cerrato said. “And then it was basically cold turkey after that because I wasn’t able to go into the practice. … That was something that was totally foreign to me because I was at every one of those games.”
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Charlie Cerrato said leaving home forces players to “grow up quicker.”
From learning to do laundry to perfecting the art of cooking steaks, Cerrato picked up life lessons that would help him as he traveled across the United States and Canada.
Making history at Penn State
Cerrato’s freshman year did not get off to the start he wanted. The Nittany Lions went 0-8 against Big Ten opponents.
That only made the team’s dramatic run to end the year more satisfying.
Cerrato’s steal and behind-the-back pass set up the game-winning goal in overtime of the regional final, sending Penn State to its first Frozen Four in school history.
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Assistant coach Andrew Sturtz rushed to hug Cerrato after that pass. He was overcome by the pride he felt for a kid he said put in extra time and effort for his team.
“There’s so many things that he did in the run, and it just was really rewarding to see the smile on his face when we won that game and he got to go to his first-ever Frozen Four,” Sturtz said. “It’s a moment I’ll never forget in my coaching career.”
Cerrato doesn’t remember the exact words “Sturtzy” said to him in the moments after the win.
“Maybe a couple curse words, like, ‘Fuck yeah’” he said. “That was great.”
Cerrato said the team’s success led to a change on campus.
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“We start winning, and we go to the playoffs, and we make it to the Frozen Four,” he said. “You see people start wearing Penn State hockey stuff, and you see the buzz on whether it’s social media or on campus or at games. It really, really was something special to watch last year.”
Vinny Cerrato credits the national program for helping his son pair his innately high-energy game with a level of professional polish.
Charlie says it’s partially because he grew up around athletes. He saw what it was like to be a professional player, taking cues from his father’s job with the Washington Commanders.
Being Vinny’s kid had other perks. The Cerrato family once spent time with Tom Cruise and his family at an amusement park, and Cruise nicknamed him “Meatball.”
But mostly Charlie learned what it would take to succeed at the highest level. He’ll gather his family — including those who hosted him when he was living in Ohio — for a draft party as they await the next step in his career.
Like any media-aware player, Charlie says he is happy to join whatever team selects him. He plans to be back at Penn State this fall but is eager to start pushing toward his ultimate goal of playing in the NHL.
Although he does admit, with a small grin spread across his face, that there might be one player in particular he’d love to play with: Ovechkin.
College Sports
Bruins taking James Hagens at No. 7 was best-case scenario in NHL Draft – NBC Sports Boston
The Boston Bruins didn’t have any luck in the NHL Draft Lottery last month when they landed the No. 7 pick, which was literally the worst possible outcome for the Original Six franchise. Fortunately for the Bruins, they got some good luck in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft on Friday night when […]

The Boston Bruins didn’t have any luck in the NHL Draft Lottery last month when they landed the No. 7 pick, which was literally the worst possible outcome for the Original Six franchise.
Fortunately for the Bruins, they got some good luck in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft on Friday night when Boston College star James Hagens fell to them at the No. 7 pick.
The 18-year-old center — rated by many experts as the top prospect in the 2025 draft class before the 2024-25 season — was too talented of a player for Boston to pass up.
“He’s excelled against his peer group at every opportunity he’s had,” Bruins general manager Don Sweeney told reporters Friday. “His production at the program is among the best that’s ever played. There’s been some pretty special players who have gone through there. He went into college hockey and played on a top line. We believe in the player and what he’s done.
“He won a gold medal at the World Juniors against the best players in his age group and across the world, and he was one of the top players for his team. He’s a really competitive young player and he wants to be the best player he can possibly be.”
Upgrading at center was something the Bruins had to achieve in this draft. They do not have a No. 1 center at the NHL level or anywhere in their prospect pool.
There were a couple highly rated centers on the board when Boston was on the clock, including Jake O’Brien and Roger McQueen. The B’s chose Hagens, and it’s hard to blame them. He has the elite offensive skill set to be a franchise center for a long time.
What kind of player are the Bruins getting?
“Someone who loves to compete,” Hagens told Emily Kaplan during ESPN’s draft broadcast. “Someone who’s gonna put his blood, heart and soul on the line. I know how much pride the Bruins fans take in their game and their team. I’ve been to a ton of games this year, so I was able to see it first hand. I’m just so excited to be a Boston Bruin.”
Hagens told reporters at the draft that he spoke to the Bruins quite a bit during the pre-draft process.
“I talked to them a lot,” Hagens said. “My sister had a tournament in Boston, so I drove her up and was able to meet with one of the scouts there. I was in contact with them a lot, and obviously being close to them playing at Boston College. You have no idea where you’re going to end up, but it’s just pure excitement when you hear your name called and it’s the Boston Bruins.”
Hagens tallied 37 points (11 goals, 26 assists) in 37 games for the Eagles last season, earning a spot on the Hockey East All-Rookie Team. His offensive numbers were not as impressive as some of the other forwards drafted in the top 10, which might explain why he slid to No. 7, but he did play against stronger competition in college hockey.
He came up clutch in some high-pressure moments for BC, including an NCAA Tournament win over Bentley in March. He also scored in the gold medal game for the United States at the 2025 IIHF World Junior Championships, which the Americans won.
Hagens is a fantastic playmaker. His passing, vision and hockey IQ are all off the charts. He’s also an excellent skater and has an underrated shot. Frankly, he needs to shoot more at BC next season because he does have the ability to be a very good goal scorer.
The primary concern with Hagens is his lack of size at 5-foot-11. But that shouldn’t prevent him from becoming a highly productive player in the NHL. He’s listed at about 177 pounds, but he told reporters Friday night that he’s now up to 190 pounds.
He has drawn comparisons to New Jersey Devils superstar center Jack Hughes because of their similar abilities and physical profile. Other experts have compared him to Toronto Maple Leafs winger William Nylander.
The Bruins didn’t mess around with their first-round pick. They didn’t overthink it. They didn’t reach on a player ranked outside the top 10. They did the right thing and bolstered a position of weakness in their prospect pool by taking the player whose skill set best fits what the organization needs.
Boston’s NHL roster has a severe lack of high-end talent, especially at center, and Hagens has the potential to be a cornerstone player for a long time.
And after falling outside the top five picks, Hagens should have a chip on his shoulder next season.
“I thought this year was really good,” Hagens said. “You just got to go out there next year and prove everyone that passed on you wrong. I’m in a spot where I want to be. I want to be a Boston Bruin, and I’m really excited to get things going.”
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