College Sports
Augustana hockey reveals 2025–26 schedule, set for first season with full CCHA slate – Sioux Falls Live
SIOUX FALLS — The time has arrived to mark the calendar for Augustana hockey’s upcoming season. On Tuesday, the Vikings announced the schedule for their 2025-26 season. The 34-game slate features 19 home games and 15 road games. Following an exhibition game that has yet to be finalized, Augustana will open the regular season on […]

SIOUX FALLS — The time has arrived to mark the calendar for Augustana hockey’s upcoming season.
On Tuesday, the Vikings announced the schedule for their 2025-26 season. The 34-game slate features 19 home games and 15 road games.
Following an exhibition game that has yet to be finalized, Augustana will open the regular season on Oct. 10-11 at Minnesota Duluth before returning to Midco Arena the following weekend for its home opener versus Arizona State.
For the Vikings, CCHA action begins the following weekend when they travel to face Bemidji State in a two-game series.
The Vikings will play on home ice throughout December and into the first weekend of January before conference action resumes in the second half of the season.
All four of Augustana’s non-conference series are against teams in the National Collegiate Hockey Conference.
The Vikings’ 2025-26 season is their first with a full league schedule. They’ll play in a total of 26 conference games this season.
In its second season as a program in 2024-25, Augustana had its first winning record in program history, finishing with an 18-13-4 mark. The Vikings had a 9-5-2 record in conference play, earning the No. 2 seed in the Mason Cup Playoffs. They were 9-6-2 at home and 9-7-2 away from Midco Arena.
Here’s a glance at Augustana’s 2025-26 schedule with further analyses.
Oct 10-11 | @ Minnesota Duluth
- Bulldogs’ 2024-25 record: 13-20-3
- Analysis: This season-opening series marks the first time the two longtime Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference foes will meet on the ice. Last season, the Bulldogs finished 7-9-3 at Amsoil Arena. Scott Sandelin has been at the helm of the program since 2000 and has led UMD to three national titles, including back-to-back championships in 2018 and 2019. Forward Max Plante is one of the Bulldogs’ top returning players after notching 28 points (nine goals, 19 assists) as a freshman in 2024-25.
Oct. 17-18 | vs. Arizona State
- Sun Devils’ 2024-25 record: 21-14-2
- Analysis: The Sun Devils will make the trip to Sioux Falls for the first time ever when the two teams meet in Augustana’s home opener. ASU and AU didn’t play against each other last season, but in the second half of Augustana’s inaugural season in 2023-24, they split a pair of games in Tempe after the Vikings were triumphant in a 5-4 decision in the series opener to notch the program’s first win against a nationally ranked team. Bennett Schimek heads into the 2025-26 campaign as the Sun Devils’ top returning point-getter. He will be a team captain this season after recording 37 points on 15 goals and 22 assists in 2024-25.
Trent Singer / Sioux Falls Live
Oct. 24-25 | @ Bemidji State
- Beavers’ 2024-25 record: 15-18-5
- Analysis: Augustana’s first CCHA series of the season will be against its most familiar league opponent. The Vikings are 3-4 all-time against BSU, which includes a series defeat in March in the first round of the Mason Cup Playoffs. Entering his 25th season at the helm of the program, Beavers coach Tom Serratore is now the current longest-tenured coach in the CCHA. Forward Kirklan Irey will be back for the Beavers after producing a team-best 24 points in 2024-25, including a team-leading 11 goals.
Oct. 31 – Nov. 1 | vs. Northern Michigan
- Wildcats’ 2024-25 record: 5-27-2
- Analysis: Augustana is 3-0-1 in all-time meetings with the Wildcats. Last season, the Vikings claimed a pair of 4-1 victories at Midco Arena to sweep the season series. NMU finished in last place in the CCHA standings, missing the CCHA playoffs. Dave Shyiak returns for his second year as bench boss for the Wildcats, who were 3-11-2 on the road last season.
Nov. 7-8 | @ Ferris State
- Bulldogs’ 2024-25 record: 13-20-3
- Analysis: The Bulldogs will be in their first season under the direction of new coach Brett Riley, who replaces the legendary Bob Daniels. FSU leads the all-time series between the two teams, 3-1. In 2024-25, Augustana split a pair of games at FSU, winning the first game of the series in a 5-2 decision before losing 4-1 in the finale. The Bulldogs had a 6-8-3 mark at home last season.
- Tommies’ 2024-25 record: 19-14-5
- Analysis: Going into this one-off game, Augustana has a 3-1 record in the brief all-time series between the two programs. This will be UST’s final season as members of the CCHA. The Tommies are set to join the NCHC for the 2026-27 season. Led by coach Rico Blasi, UST had an 8-6-3 mark on the road a season ago.
Trent Singer / Sioux Falls Live
Nov. 28-29 | @ Lake Superior State
- Lakers’ 2024-25 record: 12-22-2
- Analysis: Following a week off, the Vikings return to action Thanksgiving weekend when they travel to Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, to take on the Lakers. AU has a 3-1 all-time record against LSSU. Damon Whitten enters his 12th season at the helm of the Lakers’ program. LSSU was 4-10-1 last season at Taffy Abel Arena.
Dec. 5-6 | vs. Bemidji State
- Beavers’ 2024-25 record: 15-18-5
- Analysis: The Vikings will close out their regular season series with the Beavers on the first weekend of December when the two teams meet at Midco Arena for a two-game set. Last season, BSU won three of five games played between the two teams. All of them took place in Sioux Falls. The Beavers finished 9-10-3 in road contests last season.
Dec. 12-13 | vs. Minnesota State
- Mavericks’ 2024-25 record: 27-9-3
- Analysis: Augustana will be seeking its first official win against the Mavs when the top two teams from the 2024-25 CCHA regular season meet in December at Midco Arena. The Vikings are 0-3-1 in all-time matchups versus MSU. Luke Strand enters his third year as coach of the Mavericks, who won the league’s regular season and tournament titles last season. MSU was 10-4 in road games a season ago.
Dec. 19-20 | vs. Nebraska Omaha
- Mavericks’ 2024-25 record: 18-17-1
- Analysis: The rivalry between the Mavs and Vikings carries on for another season. UNO will travel north up I-29 to play at Midco Arena for the first time ever. It’ll be the Vikings’ final series of the first half of the season. Augustana was swept by Omaha in its inaugural season, but in 2024-25, the Vikings traveled to Omaha and claimed a pair of nationally ranked wins. Mike Gabinet enters his 10th season as UNO’s bench boss. The Mavericks return one of the top goaltenders in the country in Simon Latkoczy, who notched a .922 save percentage in 31 appearances last season.

Casey Gibson / Colorado College Athletics
Jan. 2-3 | vs. Colorado College
- Tigers’ 2024-25 record: 18-18-1
- Analysis: The Vikings will begin the new year against a CC program that has yet to beat them. Augustana has a 3-0 all-time record against the Tigers, including a sweep last season when CC was ranked No. 8 in the country. This will be the Tigers’ first trip to Sioux Falls. Kris Mayotte enters his fifth season as CC’s coach. The Tigers, who were 7-12-1 last season away from Colorado Springs, bring back their top forward in Owen Beckner, who tallied 27 points on seven goals and 20 helpers in 2024-25.
Jan. 9-10 | @ Northern Michigan
- Wildcats’ 2024-25 record: 5-27-2
- Analysis: After more than a month of playing in front of their home crowd, the Vikings will return to conference play when they travel to Marquette to take on the Wildcats. One of NMU’s top players in the fold for the 2025-26 season will be forward Caiden Gault, a Ferris State transfer. Gault generated 25 points on 10 goals and 15 assists last season with the Bulldogs.
Jan. 16-17 | vs. Ferris State
- Bulldogs’ 2024-25 record: 13-20-3
- Analysis: Augustana will head back to Midco Arena for another conference tilt with FSU, which finished with a 6-10 mark in away games a season ago. The Bulldogs will welcome in forward Carter Rapalje, who had 30 points (17 goals, 13 assists) last season while playing under Riley at Long Island.
Jan. 24 | @ Minnesota State
- Mavericks’ 2024-25 record: 27-9-3
- Analysis: Next up is one-off game in Mankato for the Vikings, who were swept last season at Mayo Clinic Health System Event Center. Goalie Alex Tracy will be back for MSU after being named CCHA Player of the Year in 2025. He was a finalist for the Mike Richter Award after going 26-9-3 between the pipes with a 1.42 goals-against average and .946 save percentage. MSU finished 17-4-3 at home in 2024-25.
Jan. 30-31 | vs. Lake Superior State
- Lakers’ 2024-25 record: 12-22-2
- Analysis: The Vikings will close out their January slate with a home series against the Lakers. Augustana won 6-3 and 4-3 against LSSU in 2024-25 at Midco Arena. The Lakers, who finished 8-11-1 in road games last season, will bring back their top forward in Connor Milburn, who had 23 points on nine goals and 14 helpers.
Trent Singer / Sioux Falls Live
Feb. 6-7 | @ Michigan Tech
- Huskies’ 2024-25 record: 16-17-3
- Analysis: AU will open its final month of the regular season by making a trek to the Upper Peninsula, where they’ll square off against the Huskies in Houghton. This will be the only regular season meeting between the two teams in 2025-26. MTU posted a 7-9 record at home last season and holds a 2-1-1 all-time record against the Vikings. Led by Joe Shawhan, who enters his ninth season as bench boss, the Huskies will bring back their top forward from 2024-25 in Stiven Sardarian, who had 35 points (11 goals, 24 assists).
Feb. 13-14 | vs. Bowling Green
- Falcons’ 2024-25 record: 18-14-4
- Analysis: In their final regular season series, AU will take on BGSU. Dennis Williams heads into his second year at the helm of the Falcons’ program. Augustana leads the all-time series, 3-0-1. Bowling Green was 8-9-1 a season ago on the road but expects to be a force in 2025-26. As it stands, the Falcons have the No. 1 recruiting class in the nation, according to
Neutral Zone.
Falcons forwards Ben Doran and Brody Waters each had 22 points last season, and both are expected to be back in the mix this season.
Feb. 20-21 | @ St. Thomas
- Tommies’ 2024-25 record: 19-14-5
- Analysis: A tough test awaits the Vikings in their regular season finale when they travel to St. Paul for a series with the Tommies. It’ll be their first visit to Lee and Penny Anderson Arena, a $175 million facility that’s expected to open this year on UST’s campus. The Tommies will return one of the league’s top forwards in Lucas Wahlin, who recorded 41 points on 17 goals and 24 assists in 2024-25.
Augustana’s 2025-26 schedule
- Friday, Oct 10 | @ Minnesota Duluth
- Saturday, Oct. 11 | @ Minnesota Duluth
- Friday, Oct. 17 | vs. Arizona State
- Saturday, Oct. 18 | vs. Arizona State
- Friday, Oct. 24 | @ Bemidji State
- Saturday, Oct. 25 | @ Bemidji State
- Friday, Oct. 31 | vs. Northern Michigan
- Saturday, Nov. 1 | vs. Northern Michigan
- Friday, Nov. 7 | @ Ferris State
- Saturday, Nov. 8 | @ Ferris State
- Saturday, Nov. 15 | vs. St. Thomas
- Friday, Nov. 28 | @ Lake Superior State
- Saturday, Nov. 29 | @ Lake Superior State
- Friday, Dec. 5 | vs. Bemidji State
- Saturday, Dec. 6 | vs. Bemidji State
- Friday, Dec. 12 | vs. Minnesota State
- Saturday, Dec. 13 | vs. Minnesota State
- Friday, Dec. 19 | vs. Nebraska Omaha
- Saturday, Dec. 20 | vs. Nebraska Omaha
- Friday, Jan. 2 | vs. Colorado College
- Saturday, Jan. 3 | vs. Colorado College
- Friday, Jan. 9 | @ Northern Michigan
- Saturday, Jan. 10 | @ Northern Michigan
- Friday, Jan. 16 | vs. Ferris State
- Saturday, Jan. 17 | vs. Ferris State
- Saturday, Jan. 24 | @ Minnesota State
- Friday, Jan. 30 | vs. Lake Superior State
- Saturday, Jan. 31 | vs. Lake Superior State
- Friday, Feb. 6 | @ Michigan Tech
- Saturday, Feb. 7 | @ Michigan Tech
- Friday, Feb. 13 | vs. Bowling Green
- Saturday, Feb. 14 | vs. Bowling Green
- Friday, Feb. 20 | @ St. Thomas
- Saturday, Feb. 21 | @ St. Thomas
Trent Singer is a sports reporter for Sioux Falls Live. He focuses his coverage on Augustana men’s hockey and Sioux Falls area sports. Singer’s previous stops include Just Women’s Sports, the Southeast Missourian and the Kentucky New Era.
College Sports
132 SJC Student-Athletes Claim GNAC All-Academic Accolades
Story Links WINTHROP, Mass. — Winthrop, Mass. – The Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC) announced its 2024-25 Academic All-Conference Team on Monday (June 16) afternoon. The list includes a 1,648 student-athletes, which eclipses a new league-high. In order to be eligible for academic all-conference, a student-athlete must maintain a 3.25 cumulative GPA and […]

WINTHROP, Mass. — Winthrop, Mass. – The Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC) announced its 2024-25 Academic All-Conference Team on Monday (June 16) afternoon. The list includes a 1,648 student-athletes, which eclipses a new league-high.
In order to be eligible for academic all-conference, a student-athlete must maintain a 3.25 cumulative GPA and have completed second-year academic status. Student-athletes must also have competed in at least one of the conference’s 21 championship sports.
This the sixth year in a row that more than 1000 student-athletes have earned Academic All-Conference honors.
This year’s impressive list marks the sixth consecutive year that more than 1,000 GNAC student-athletes have received selection, and (at least) the 17th straight year that the GNAC has had a conference-record total:
Saint Joseph’s has had at least 40 athletes honored in each of the institution’s 18 years as a member of the GNAC (2008 – 42, 2009 – 61, 2010 – 59, 2011 – 58, 2012 – 75, 2013 – 70, 2014 – 82, 2015 – 86, 2016 – 89; 2017 – 92, 2018 – 95, 2019 – 115, 2020 – 117, 2021 – 120, 2022 – 118, 2023 – 114, 2024 – 132, 2025 – 132; 1,658 total).
The Saint Joseph’s College men’s lacrosse program led the 2024-25 academic honorees with an impressive 18 student-athletes recognized. Baseball followed closely with 16 selections, while the field hockey and women’s soccer teams each featured 8 honorees. Women’s basketball and women’s lacrosse both landed 7 student-athletes on this year’s list. In total, 13 multi-sport Monks were also honored for their academic achievements across seasons.
The Monks’ group of 132 honorees features 84 repeat-honorees, including 28 who earned the award third time (***) and 56 for the second time (**) during their respective collegiate careers.
View the full list of the 132 Saint Joseph’s GNAC All-Academic Honorees here!
ABOUT THE GREAT NORTHEAST ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
The Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC) is an NCAA Division III association made up of 14 member institutions and over 3,500 student-athletes across the New England region. Founded in 1995, the GNAC annually sponsors and administers 22 championships, while balancing academic integrity, athletic opportunity and community involvement in an effort to enhance the student-athlete experience.
Stay up to date with all the latest news from the Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC)!
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College Sports
Arkansas baseball star pitches historic no
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! University of Arkansas baseball star Gage Wood pitched just the third no-hitter in College World Series history and first in 65 years on Monday, striking out a record 19 against Murray State to protect his team’s 3-0 victory. Wood joined Jim Ehrler of Texas in 1950 and […]

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
University of Arkansas baseball star Gage Wood pitched just the third no-hitter in College World Series history and first in 65 years on Monday, striking out a record 19 against Murray State to protect his team’s 3-0 victory.
Wood joined Jim Ehrler of Texas in 1950 and Jim Wixson of Oklahoma State in 1960 as the only pitchers to throw CWS no-hitters.
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Arkansas Razorbacks starting pitcher Gage Wood (14) celebrates with infielder Gabe Fraser (6) after throwing a no hitter against the Murray State Racers at Charles Schwab Field. (Steven Branscombe-Imagn Images)
The junior only had two three-ball counts as 83 of his 119 pitches were strikes.
Wood had bid for a perfect game in the eighth inning, but a 2-2 breaking ball hit Dom Decker in his back foot.
“When I hit the guy in the foot, I knew I screwed up,” Wood said after the game.
WOMEN’S SOCCER TEAM DUBS ITSELF ‘IMMIGRANT CITY FOOTBALL CLUB’ AMID ANTI-ICE RIOTS IN LOS ANGELES

The Arkansas Razorbacks celebrate with starting pitcher Gage Wood (14) after pitching a no hitter to defeat the Murray State Racers at Charles Schwab Field. (Dylan Widger-Imagn Images)
Still, Wood, a junior right-hander who set the CWS record for strikeouts in a nine-inning game, celebrated his feat after the game.
“The only special thing was I didn’t want to go home. That’s it,” he said. “We’re not going home. We get to play tomorrow night. But it’s pretty cool.”
Wood has gone from closer as a freshman to middle reliever as a sophomore to weekend starter as a junior. He injured his right shoulder throwing a warmup pitch in his Feb. 23 start against Michigan and didn’t return until April 18 against Texas A&M, a total of 54 days.
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Arkansas Razorbacks starting pitcher Gage Wood (14) pitches against the Murray State Racers during the ninth inning at Charles Schwab Field. (Dylan Widger-Imagn Images)
Asked what he did with the game ball, Wood said, “I gave it to my dad and said happy late Father’s Day.”
Arkansas (49-14) plays another elimination game Tuesday night against the winner of Monday night’s game between LSU and UCLA.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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College Sports
Dartmouth Athletics Announces Thompson Arena Renovations
Story Links HANOVER, N.H.—Dartmouth’s Haldeman Family Director of Athletics and Recreation, Mike Harrity and Dartmouth College announce a project to renovate Dartmouth’s Rupert C. Thompson Arena, that will modernize locker rooms and team spaces, and benefit team building, student-athlete development, and future recruiting. Thompson Arena has been the home of […]

HANOVER, N.H.—Dartmouth’s Haldeman Family Director of Athletics and Recreation, Mike Harrity and Dartmouth College announce a project to renovate Dartmouth’s Rupert C. Thompson Arena, that will modernize locker rooms and team spaces, and benefit team building, student-athlete development, and future recruiting.
Thompson Arena has been the home of Dartmouth men’s and women’s hockey since opening in 1975. The 11,050-square-foot renovation will provide both programs with new locker rooms, team lounges, sports medicine spaces, a weight room, a coaches’ suite, as well as a new donor and fan hospitality space on the concourse level.
Over the last year, Dartmouth women’s hockey welcomed new head coach Maura Crowell, who brings a record of sustained success from the University of Minnesota Duluth (UMD). Crowell led UMD to three consecutive 20 plus win seasons and two NCAA Frozen Four appearances (2021, 2022). She was named the USCHO Division I Women’s Coach of the Year and the CCM/AHCA National Coach of the Year in 2016–17 and was a finalist for the CCM/AHCA award again in both 2021 and 2022. Her leadership signals a new chapter for Dartmouth women’s hockey, rooted in competitive excellence and academic achievement.
The men’s hockey program continues to thrive under Koenig Family Head Coach of Dartmouth Men’s Hockey, Reid Cashman. The program is coming off a historic 2024–25 season, returning to the Top 20 rankings and winning the Ivy League Championship outright for the first time since 1979–80. In addition, Cashman and his staff were named Ivy League coaching staff of the year in 2024-25, while Cashman was named Tim Taylor ECAC Coach of the Year previously for the 2023-24 season. This success reflects the program’s continued investment in holistic student-athlete development—combining elite performance with academic rigor.
“This renovation will create a modern space to facilitate individual student-athlete development and team cohesion both on and off the ice,” Harrity shared. “We’re able to provide our teams with this enhancement because of the tremendous support from our alumni, the college, and the athletics and recreation department.”
The Thompson Arena locker rooms were last renovated in the summer of 2016 with both the men’s and women’s locker rooms receiving improvements. Part of the 2016 renovation also saw updates to the playing surface including new dasher boards and glass and a new refrigeration system.
Crowell is excited about the upgraded locker room, which will be among the best in Division I hockey. “An upgraded locker room is meaningful to our team because it will give us the ability to have more space and create a true hockey epicenter, which is important to our program. The upgraded stalls and design will put us among the best locker rooms in the nation.”
Cashman is looking forward to having a central hub for Dartmouth hockey. “One of the great positives from this renovation is that everything related to Dartmouth hockey will now be under the Thompson roof. Our new coaches’ suite will allow our coaches to have more integration with our student-athletes. The new locker rooms and lounges will give our student-athletes an unbelievable atmosphere to prepare on and off the ice.”
The project will be divided into three phases, with the final phase expected to be completed in the fall of 2026.
“Renovated facilities are great for the current student-athletes but also should enhance recruiting to grow our program. Thompson Arena is already an incredible rink but the decision to renovate is a testament to Dartmouth’s commitment to constant improvement in all areas,” Dartmouth women’s hockey player Izee Powell ’26 added. “This renovation will create a better training facility for our team which is an important signal that Dartmouth is investing in the student-athletes so that we can be the best we can possibly be. I’m really lucky to be a part of it and I can’t wait for the future success of Dartmouth women’s hockey.”
Matt Fusco ’27 of the men’s hockey team is excited about all of the renovations. “The plans for the rink look unbelievable. We will have so many resources at our disposal, and everything we need will be right there for our whole team. This addition will be big and will help us separate from the rest of college hockey. Having all of the benefits of what Dartmouth offers its students plus the addition to the rink; it makes Dartmouth the place to be in college hockey.”
Phase one, which started in January 2025, focuses on adding to the building infrastructure of the arena. Phase two focuses on the energy upgrades to the mechanical systems which is part of Dartmouth’s decarbonization effort to reach carbon-zero operations by 2050.
Phase three will complete the interior renovations and all site work upgrades with the completion anticipated in time for the start of the season in fall 2026.
Throughout the renovations, both Dartmouth men’s and women’s hockey will continue to call Thompson Arena home. Dartmouth Athletics and Recreation is grateful to campus leaders for their support in updating Thompson Arena for the first time in 50 years. Dartmouth hockey has benefitted from an energized alumni and fan base with millions of dollars in private support committed to this project. For more information on how you can make a transformational gift to the Thompson Arena renovation, contact Steve Maciejewski, Senior Associate Athletics Director for Development (steven.j.maciejewski@dartmouth.edu).
2025-26 season ticket deposits are now on sale, to secure your season ticket for 2025-26, click here for men’s hockey and click here for women’s hockey.
College Sports
University of Minnesota Athletics
MINNEAPOLIS – Sarah Martin has been invited to participate in the first-of-its-kind Women’s College Talent ID Camp, U.S. Soccer announced Monday. The camp will take place June 18–22 in Atlanta, home of the new Arthur M. Blank U.S. Soccer National Training Center. Martin, a goalkeeper from Champlin, Minn., is one of 42 players selected. The […]

Martin, a goalkeeper from Champlin, Minn., is one of 42 players selected. The camp is part of U.S. Youth National Teams’ evolving scouting strategy aimed at increasing programming opportunities for college players with high potential, with the goal of expanding the U.S. under-18, under-19 and under-20 women’s national team player pools.
Last season, Martin started all 22 matches for the Golden Gophers in goal. She finished the year with 60 saves and a 0.714 goals-against average, ranking sixth all-time in Minnesota’s single-season records. She recorded seven shutouts, including three straight: at Illinois (Sept. 12), vs. North Dakota State (Sept. 15), and vs. Michigan (Sept. 19).
Martin is one of 14 Big Ten players selected and the only Minnesotan invited.
College Sports
UMaine hockey adds NHL draft pick from Canada with ‘blazing one-timer’
Another NHL draft pick is on the way to Orono. Carolina Hurricanes fifth-round draft choice (156th overall) Justin Poirier, who scored 122 goals in 181 regular season games over the last three seasons for Baie-Comeau Drakkar in the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League, will be playing for the University of Maine this coming season. The […]

Another NHL draft pick is on the way to Orono.
Carolina Hurricanes fifth-round draft choice (156th overall) Justin Poirier, who scored 122 goals in 181 regular season games over the last three seasons for Baie-Comeau Drakkar in the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League, will be playing for the University of Maine this coming season.
The 5-foot-9, 183-pound Poirier scored 43 goals and added 37 assists in 58 games for Baie-Comeau Drakkar this past season after leading the league in goals in 2023-24 with 51. He also had 31 assists for 82 points in 68 games two years ago.
He led the league in playoff goals in 2023-24 with 18 in 17 games. He had nine playoff assists.
Poirier, who will turn 19 on Sept. 4, said there were a number of reasons behind his decision to come to UMaine.
“I liked the fact the guys were all friends with each other,” Poirier said about the Black Bears locker room.
He also liked that he was coming to a winning program and he was impressed with the renovations to the Alfond Arena.
UMaine won the Hockey East Tournament last season for the first time since 2004 and has reached the NCAA Tournament the last two years for the first time since the 2005-06 and 2006-07 seasons.
UMaine is in the midst of a $50 million renovation to the 48-year-old arena.
“There’s going to be a lounge where you can have dinner and do your homework and that’s very cool,” said Poirier, who added that he liked the fact the rink was on campus and close to the classrooms and living facilities.
Poirier will be expected to help fill a scoring void left by the departure of players who scored exactly half of UMaine’s goals last season. Sixty-two of the 124 goals were scored by players who have departed.
“That’s what I’m going to try to bring to the team, my offensive side. I’m going to keep shooting the puck and hope to score some goals,” said Poirier, who is from Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec.
According to the Elite Prospects 2024 NHL Draft Guide, Poirier “drives all over the offensive zone in search of goals, positioning himself at the far-post for backdoor plays and jumping on rebounds in front of the net.”
Poirier “instinctively knows when and where a scoring chance will arise and how to seize them all,” according to that draft guide, which adds that he “can fire in the middle of steps on the rush, directly off passes with a catch-and-release motion or with a blazing one-timer.”
The incoming right wing knows there is going to be a significant adjustment and he is looking forward to it.
“I’ll be playing against older guys and bigger guys,” Poirier said. “In Major Junior, the players are 16-20 years old while in NCAA, they’re 18-to-25. So this will be way better for my development. I want to play in the NHL so I’m excited to make this jump.”
He intends to keep working on his strength in the offseason and he is also focusing on improving his quickness, especially in tight spaces. He wants to be able to get close to full speed in as few steps as possible.
“I want to become the best hockey player I can for the entire 200 feet. Hard work is the key to success,” said Poirier.
He noted that Orono will be a much shorter commute for his family compared to when he was playing for Baie-Comeau Drakkar, and they’re excited about coming to watch him play.
“It is five and a half hours to Orono while it was nine hours the last three years in juniors,” he pointed out.
His coming to UMaine is contingent upon him being accepted into the school and meeting NCAA eligibility requirements.
College Sports
Roesch Invited to U.S. Soccer Women's College Talent ID Camp
EVANSTON, Ill. – Sophomore forward Kennedy Roesch has been called up to U.S. Soccer’s inaugural Women’s College Talent ID Camp. Forty-two collegiate players will attend the camp in Atlanta from June 18-22. Camp Calling ?????????@KennedyRoesch has received an invitation to the inaugural @USYNT Women’s College Talent ID Camp! pic.twitter.com/IAqLEdxAZp — Northwestern Soccer (@NUWSoccer) June 16, […]


EVANSTON, Ill. – Sophomore forward Kennedy Roesch has been called up to U.S. Soccer’s inaugural Women’s College Talent ID Camp. Forty-two collegiate players will attend the camp in Atlanta from June 18-22.
Camp Calling ?????????@KennedyRoesch has received an invitation to the inaugural @USYNT Women’s College Talent ID Camp! pic.twitter.com/IAqLEdxAZp
— Northwestern Soccer (@NUWSoccer) June 16, 2025
During her rookie campaign in Evanston, Roesch led all Wildcats with six goals and 14 points. Roesch’s six goals marked the most by a Wildcat first-year since 2010 (Kate Allen).
The camp is part of the growing U.S. Youth National Teams’ scouting strategy with the objective of increasing programming opportunities for college-specific players with high potential and therefore expanding the U.S. Under-18, Under-19 and Under-20 Women’s National Team player pools.
All of the field players invited to this camp have limited prior programming with the U.S. Soccer’s Youth National Teams. The camp will be a collaboration between the Talent ID staff, the U.S. Youth National Teams’ head coaches and USWNT staff.
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