College Sports
BC’s James Hagens selected No. 7 by the Bruins in NHL Draft
James Hagens was a freshman at Boston College this past season. (Patrick Donnelly/NEHJ) He’s not from here, but he sure can’t seem to get away from New England. James Hagens, a native of Hauppauge, N.Y., was selected seventh by the Boston Bruins in the NHL Draft on Friday night. Hagens spent last season at Boston […]


James Hagens was a freshman at Boston College this past season. (Patrick Donnelly/NEHJ)
He’s not from here, but he sure can’t seem to get away from New England.
James Hagens, a native of Hauppauge, N.Y., was selected seventh by the Boston Bruins in the NHL Draft on Friday night.
Hagens spent last season at Boston College, posting 11 goals and 37 points in 37 games as a freshman. He typically centered the top line between Ryan Leonard (Amherst, Mass.) and Gabe Perreault.
Growing up, Hagens skated with the Long Island Royals before making his way to Mount St. Charles in Woonsocket, R.I., for his 14U season.
At Mount, Hagens had 27 goals and 57 points in 27 games at the 14U level during his first season. He followed that up by exploding for 54 goals and 115 points in 54 games as a 15O, which helped him earn a spot on the U.S. National Team Development Program the following season.
Hagens had a strong U17 year with the program, scoring 26 goals and tallying 66 points in 43 games, while also seeing some time on the U18 team. Once on the U18 team full-time in 2023-24, he posted 39 goals and 102 points in 58 games.
Most notably, he set a record for most points at the U18 World Championship, scoring nine goals and finishing with 22 points in seven games.
READ MORE: Our profile on James Hagens from February 2024
It’s not confirmed yet where Hagens will be next season, but going back to Boston College for his sophomore year is the likely spot.
Hagens is the highest selection by the Bruins since they took Tyler Seguin second overall in 2010.
College Sports
College soccer
By Dylan Reubenking / dylanr@chronline.com Clarence Karteh is entering uncharted territory in his seventh season at the helm of the Centralia College women’s soccer program. Over 70% of his roster — 24 out of 34 players — is made up of freshmen. In order for Karteh’s Trailblazers to earn their first playoff berth in the […]

By Dylan Reubenking / dylanr@chronline.com
Clarence Karteh is entering uncharted territory in his seventh season at the helm of the Centralia College women’s soccer program.
Over 70% of his roster — 24 out of 34 players — is made up of freshmen.
In order for Karteh’s Trailblazers to earn their first playoff berth in the program’s history that dates back to 2016, he and his coaching staff are instilling a new philosophy.
Ubuntu, an ancient African word that roughly translates to “I am because we are,” spread across the back of every Centralia College player’s warmup shirts before their Saturday scrimmages against Pacific Northwest Christian College and Clackamas Community College.
In the first week of training for the 2025 campaign, Karteh and his staff have focused on the values of teamwork and how unity overpowers individualism in soccer. With such a young roster, they’ve also been locked in on the fundamentals and adjusting to the junior college level.
“It’s a new team. We’re really trying to find our niche in terms of how we want to play and our style of play,” Karteh said. “Our identity is we want to be the best possession team. We want to be able to maintain possession, and when we don’t have possession, we want to press.”
The Trailblazers defeated Pacific Northwest Christian College 2-0 Saturday afternoon in the opener before falling 2-1 to Clackamas in the nightcap, with the latter contest featuring three 30-minute periods. Karteh was impressed with his team’s defensive effort even in losing fashion to Clackamas.
“Even though the result did not go our way, I’m pleased with the performance. Defensively, we were strong. I felt like we moved the ball really well,” he said.
Nearly two-thirds of the Blazers’ goal production from a season ago is gone, although leading scorer and Timberline High School graduate Maylania Mikaele is back after netting eight goals last fall. Celestine Allsup, a central midfielder and right wing and fellow Timberline grad, is set for a more significant workload as a sophomore, while Felicity Phillips is one of the top defenders for Centralia College.
Karteh expects Allison Woods, Kate Wisnewski and Azlyn Olofson to contribute in their debut season. Bailey Evans also scored a goal in her first college scrimmage. Overall, the unprecedented freshmen group has impressed the coaching staff in the first week of training.
“They’ve bought in. They’re eager to learn from our coaching staff, who are doing a really good job of trying to break down the game for them,” Karteh said. “Every day in training, they’re asking questions in terms of our system and our style. I’m really pleased that they want to learn and they want to compete.”
Karteh believes the program is heading in the right direction after going 9-6-1 in 2024 for its second nine-win season in three years. But the postseason has been elusive, and the Blazers have their eyes on a top-three slot in the Northwest Athletic Conference in order to get there.
“I think we have a really good shot this year if we can get everything together and working at the right time,” Karteh said. “The ultimate goal for us is to really do well in our conference and compete for a top-three spot. One of the things our program hasn’t done yet is make it to the playoffs, and our goal this year is to try to push for that. But we don’t want to look too much ahead. We just want to take it game by game and see where we land.”
Centralia College will open the season at home against Everett Community College on Saturday, Sept. 6 at 2 p.m.
College Sports
Peegs' Take
[embedded content] CAROLINA, Puerto Rico—The Indiana Hoosiers dug a 20-point first-half deficit before pulling out a last-second victory over Mega Superbet on Monday afternoon. Superbet led 50-30 at halftime before Lamar Wilkerson and Tucker DeVries found their footing in the second half to lead the charge. The Hoosiers leave Puerto Rico 3-0 on the week-long […]


CAROLINA, Puerto Rico—The Indiana Hoosiers dug a 20-point first-half deficit before pulling out a last-second victory over Mega Superbet on Monday afternoon. Superbet led 50-30 at halftime before Lamar Wilkerson and Tucker DeVries found their footing in the second half to lead the charge. The Hoosiers leave Puerto Rico 3-0 on the week-long adventure and head back to Bloomington to get prepared for the regular season.
Tayton Conerway was the only Hoosier who looked comfortable in the first half. He changed of speed with the dribble to get into the lane for scores and kickout passes. He scored 18 of Indiana’s 30 first-half points.
Wilkerson and DeVries went scoreless in the first half on limited shot attempts, much like Saturday against the same opponent. The second half was a different story as the two main Indiana scorers combined for 30 points in the second half, with Wilkerson tallying 17.
Peegs.com’s Trevor Andershock and Jeff Rabjohns discuss the latest Indiana comeback and a few overall thoughts on the exhibition trip for the Hoosiers.
The complete video is available above.
College Sports
Official Site of The ECHL
WORCESTER, Mass. – The Worcester Railers Hockey Club, ECHL affiliate of the New York Islanders, announced that the club has signed forwards Tanner Schachle and Porter Schachle to contracts for the 2025-26 season. Tanner Schachle, 28, re-signs in Worcester following an 11-game stint with the team last season. Schachle had five points (1g-4a) following a trade with the Orlando […]

WORCESTER, Mass. – The Worcester Railers Hockey Club, ECHL affiliate of the New York Islanders, announced that the club has signed forwards Tanner Schachle and Porter Schachle to contracts for the 2025-26 season.
Tanner Schachle, 28, re-signs in Worcester following an 11-game stint with the team last season. Schachle had five points (1g-4a) following a trade with the Orlando Solar Bears. He has played in 146 ECHL games across his four-year professional career, amassing 43 points (14g-29a) and 168 penalty minutes.
Prior to professional hockey, Schachle played four seasons of college hockey between the University of Alaska-Anchorage and Long Island University. In 74 collegiate games, the Wasilla, Alaska native recorded 21 points (9g-12a) to go with 153 penalty minutes. Before playing in college, Schachle played three seasons in the North American Hockey League between the Kenai River Brown Bears and Fairbanks Ice Dogs. There he had 82 points (41g-41a) in 166 games along with 180 penalty minutes. Schachle played in one season in the Alberta Junior Hockey League and tallied 10 points (4g-6a) and 99 penalty minutes in 53 games played.
Porter Schachle, 24, signs on with Worcester for his first season of professional hockey. He arrives in Worcester with four seasons of college hockey experience, having split time between the University of Vermont and the University of Alaska-Anchorage. In 114 collegiate games, Schachle had 32 points (18g-14a) along with 108 penalty minutes.
Prior to collegiate hockey, Porter played 117 games in the NAHL between the Kenai River Brown Bears and Danbury Jr. Hat Tricks, totaling 76 points (35g-41a) along with 422 penalty minutes across his junior career.
College Sports
UConn men’s hockey releases 2025-26 schedule
The encore to UConn men’s hockey’s best season ever is set. On Monday, the Huskies released their complete 2025-26 schedule. The new campaign begins on Friday, Oct. 3 with weekend series at Colorado College. UConn has the next weekend off before facing Ohio State for two at home on Oct. 17-18. The Huskies then begin […]

The encore to UConn men’s hockey’s best season ever is set. On Monday, the Huskies released their complete 2025-26 schedule.
The new campaign begins on Friday, Oct. 3 with weekend series at Colorado College. UConn has the next weekend off before facing Ohio State for two at home on Oct. 17-18. The Huskies then begin Hockey East play with a home-and-home series against Boston University the following weekend.
The first half ends at Toscano Family Ice Forum against Merrimack on Dec. 6 and resumes with a New Year’s Eve tilt in Storrs versus LIU. The regular season concludes with a Mar. 7 trip to Providence.
The Huskies will play at PeoplesBank Arena (formerly the XL Center) in Hartford on four occasions: Oct. 18 (Ohio State), Stonehill (Nov. 25), UMass Lowell (Jan. 9) and Boston College (Feb. 21).
UConn will also face Harvard (Oct. 31 at home) and LIU (Jan. 31 at home; Jan. 3 away) in standard non-conference action, while the sixth annual Connecticut Ice tournament will be held on Jan. 23-24 at Yale’s Ingalls Rink. The Huskies will take on the host Bulldogs in the opening round on Friday.
In Hockey East, UConn will host Vermont for two (Jan. 16-17) while traveling to Maine for a pair (Feb. 13-14) — the only two opponents that aren’t part of a home-and-home. The Huskies will also play four teams three times: Merrimack (Nov. 1 and Dec. 6 at home; Dec. 5 away), UNH (Nov. 22 and Mar. 5 at home; Nov. 21 away), Northeastern (Nov. 15 and Feb. 6 away; Nov. 14 home) and Providence (Nov. 8, Mar. 7 away; Nov. 7 home).
All but three contests are scheduled for either a Friday or Saturday. The exceptions are a Tuesday night matchup with Stonehill, a New Year’s Eve meeting with LIU on a Wednesday, and a Thursday contest with UNH — all of which are at home.
Unlike last season when the Huskies played 12 of 13 games on the road at one point but were home for the entire month of February, the splits are much more balanced this year. UConn has a four-game home stand early in the season and a four straight road games at the end of the year, but nothing longer than that.
In total, UConn will play 34 games with exactly half of them coming on home ice.
College Sports
Pick Six
With rising expectations in competitive conferences, money flowing directly to players and unforgiving fan bases, the pressure has never been higher across college football. Six coaches who could very well be on the hot seat — from warm to scorching — entering the 2025 season: Brent Venables, Oklahoma The clock is ticking for Brent Venables, […]

With rising expectations in competitive conferences, money flowing directly to players and unforgiving fan bases, the pressure has never been higher across college football. Six coaches who could very well be on the hot seat — from warm to scorching — entering the 2025 season:
Brent Venables, Oklahoma
The clock is ticking for Brent Venables, who heads into his fourth season in Norman yet to meet the expectations that come with this storied program. His sole winning season is sandwiched between 6-7 records in 2022 and 2024. He’s yet to lead the program to a bowl win, going 0-3, and the Cheez-It, Alamo and Armed Forces bowls aren’t where Sooners fans want to end the year.
Oklahoma finished with a 2-6 conference record in its inaugural season in the SEC a year ago while fellow newbie and rival Texas topped the conference. Entering year two in the SEC, Venables could use a standout year.
Hugh Freeze, Auburn
Hugh Freeze is feeling the heat after opening with two seven-loss seasons. Recruiting efforts have been admirable, but in-game decisions in high-pressure moments have raised concerns. Auburn hasn’t hesitated to part ways with coaches in recent years, and Freeze could be next on the chopping block if he doesn’t produce fast results. Getting Georgia and Alabama at home might help … right?
Sam Pittman, Arkansas
What to do with Sam Pittman? He is a folksy, charming guy and he has three winning seasons out of five for the Razorbacks that included bowl wins. But he is 30-31 overall and Arkansas has not emerged as any kind of a consistent threat in the SEC.
Expectations were high for Pittman after a 9-4 season in 2021 but the Hogs look like a mostly middling program. The schedule this year includes visits to Ole Miss, Tennessee and, on back-to-back weekends, LSU and Texas.
Billy Napier, Florida
Billy Napier’s tenure in Florida started with 6-7 and 5-7 records before last year’s 8-5 finish that included a 4-4 mark in the SEC. Does gradual improvement meet the high standards of a historically dominant program?
A dominant season by quarterback DJ Lagway and a few marquee wins could help Napier’s job security. The Gators won’t have to wait long to see how they stack up: A four-game stretch that starts in Week 3 features LSU, Miami, Texas and Texas A&M, with only the Longhorns visiting the Swamp of the group.
Luke Fickell, Wisconsin
After two full seasons at the helm, Luke Fickell could use a breakout season. Wisconsin went 5-7 last year after a 7-6 finish in his first full season, easily an afterthought in a Big Ten Conference that grabbed two national titles. Inconsistent quarterback play, injuries and a difficult schedule have troubled the Badgers.
Fickell’s strong run at Cincinnati seems a long time ago now. Up next is a schedule that includes visits to Alabama, Michigan and Oregon. At least Ohio State is at Camp Randall Stadium.
Lincoln Riley, USC
Lincoln Riley’s first year with the Trojans felt somewhat magical for a while, an 11-3 effort stymied by a pair of losses to Utah and one-point bowl loss to Tulane. What’s followed has warmed things up for Riley: an 8-5 record in 2023 and a 7-6 mark last year. Much of Riley’s fate could be in the hands of quarterback Jayden Maiava but the Trojans would love to see new assistant and former NFL veteran Rob Ryan field a shutdown defense.
Honorable mention
Alabama’s Kalen DeBoer saw his team put up a 9-4 mark in his first season in Tuscaloosa; the Crimson Tide will need to be better than that — as in, make the College Football Playoff … Oklahoma State went 12-2 in 2021 but Mike Gundy’s teams have been inconsistent for a while now and last year’s 3-9 collapse raised questions about the veteran coach … Mike Norvell has had two good seasons sandwiched by two bad ones, including last year’s 2-10 mark. Surely everyone in Tallahassee heard former coach Jimbo Fisher tell a podcast last week he was ready to come back to the right situation in college football?
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College Sports
Frederick Richard is taking his fight to make gymnastics ‘cool’ to a new front: His uniform
Frederick Richard is challenging men’s gymnastics norms with his wardrobe. NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Frederick Richard is taking the fight to make men’s gymnastics matter to a new front: his wardrobe. The charismatic 21-year-old Olympic bronze medalist switched out the stirrup pants that have long been a staple of the men’s uniform for shorts with […]

Frederick Richard is challenging men’s gymnastics norms with his wardrobe.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Frederick Richard is taking the fight to make men’s gymnastics matter to a new front: his wardrobe.
The charismatic 21-year-old Olympic bronze medalist switched out the stirrup pants that have long been a staple of the men’s uniform for shorts with compression leggings at the U.S. Championships this weekend, firm in his belief that the three-tenths (0.3) deduction he receives every day of competition that he breaks the rules is worth it if it makes his sport more accessible.
Even when those tenths add up. Richard edged Fuzzy Benas by less than a quarter of a point for second place behind two-time national champion Asher Hong. If Richard had worn the traditional uniform, his margin over Benas could have been a little more comfortable.
Yet asked if the statement he is trying to make — that it’s time for men’s gymnastics to modernize its uniforms — is worth the risk to his potential placement during a given meet, he didn’t hesitate.
“It’s 1,000% worth it,” Richard said. “If you look at these kids in the crowd, I’m thinking about them and I’m thinking about when I was younger.”
While Richard quickly fell in love with gymnastics as a kid growing up in the Boston area, the stirrup pants worn by the guys on pommel horse, still rings, parallel bars, and high bar were another matter.
“If I left the gym to go to the gas station, I didn’t want anybody to see me in my pommel horse pants,” Richard said. “Kids would say, ‘Do you do gymnastics?’ I’d say ‘Yeah.’ But I didn’t want them to search ‘gymnast’ and see the uniform. I didn’t feel like it was cool.”
His solution was to design an alternative. With the help of the apparel company Turn, Richard debuted the look earlier this year and “refined” it ahead of nationals.
During the opening night of competition on Thursday, the rising Michigan junior wore maize-and-blue colored zebra-patterned leggings with (almost) matching blue shorts. On Saturday, Richard swapped the maize and blue for gray.
Both times, there was a “ND -0.3” next to Richard’s score on the first event in which the traditional pants were required. Yet Richard wasn’t as focused on the ribbon board where his score was posted, but on the young boys in the stands below them.
“(I want them to) see this, and they’re like, ‘This is cool. I want to wear this. This kid is trying to make the sport cool, he looks cool,’” Richard said. “And that’s the stuff that gets kids into the sport, that’s stuff that keeps kids in the sport.”
Even if it’s a largely American conversation.
While the popularity of men’s gymnastics in the U.S. has declined for decades (though there is optimism that the bronze medal Richard and his teammates captured at the 2024 Olympics could help stem the tide), there are no such issues overseas.
They’re not talking about stirrup pants in China. Or Japan. Or Russia. Places with dominant programs whose stars become champions and national heroes in the process.
The challenges men’s gymnastics faces in the U.S. are many. The number of Division I programs that offer it as a scholarship sport is a fraction of what it was decades ago. And the impact of the recent House settlement could make opportunities at a level that has long served as a feeder system to the U.S. national team even scarcer.
At the Olympic level, the men have long competed in the shadow of the star-studded (and highly successful) women’s program.
Richard has long understood this. He’s seen the attrition firsthand. While the uniform didn’t stop him from pressing on, he believes he might be the exception, not the rule.
Countless young boys dabble in multiple sports growing up, gymnastics included. Richard thinks tweaking the uniform requirements into something he considers more modern could remove what he thinks might be a roadblock to sticking with it for some.
“It does add to what makes a 12-year-old boy decide, ’Do I want to keep doing this sport? Or should I play football or soccer, because my friends think I’m cool when I play with them?” he said.
The rules do allow for a little latitude. Some German female gymnasts opted for full-body unitards at each of the last two Olympics, though the design does not run afoul of FIG regulations.
What Richard is doing does.
And while he stressed he would never wear his outlawed uniform in a team competition — he wore regulation pants while helping lead Michigan to the NCAA championship this spring — that might not be the case the next time he competes internationally.
“We’ll see about the world stage,” Richard said. “We’ll have to talk and see what they allow, but I want to keep pushing it. I’m having fun. I feel more free.”
He’ll have some time to think about it. When the six-man roster for the 2025 World Championships was announced late Saturday night, Richard’s name wasn’t on it. The decision had nothing to do with Richard’s uniform but the uniqueness of this year’s world meet, which does not include a team event and is largely designed for event specialists.
At his best, Richard is one of the top all-arounders on the planet. Yet even he admitted he was at about “80%” at nationals following a whirlwind stretch that included traveling to places like Uganda. Richard is partnering with the African nation to open a facility for boys there interested in acrobatics.
The joy he felt during the trip was palpable. So has the criticism he’s received back home for his uniform choice, with some telling him if he wants to look like a basketball player, maybe he should go play basketball.
While Richard’s modified look wouldn’t look out of place on the court, pommel horse specialist Stephen Nedoroscik — who won a pair of bronze medals in Paris and became a breakout star in the process (all while wearing stirrup pants) last summer — agrees with his Olympic teammate that there “should be a certain level of flexibility” when it comes to uniforms, though he also pointed out that having everyone wear identical outfits is designed to help the judges do their jobs.
“So like, you can’t wear like super baggy clothes, obviously,” Nedoroscik said. “But I do like there should be maybe a little bit of wiggle room.”
That’s all Richard says he is asking for, though it seems highly unlikely the FIG would eliminate the deduction for a uniform violation anytime soon. That is not going to stop Richard from pressing on.
“I’ll wear it for the next 10 years if I have to,” he said. “So eventually, if I keep succeeding and winning, and eventually on the international stage do the same thing and keep winning, (the FIG) will see how people like it (and) the younger kids will start wearing it … and the trend is going to grow.”
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