College Sports
Boston College’s James Hagens Selected in First Round of 2025 NHL Draft by Bruins
With the No. 7 overall pick of the first round of the 2025 National Hockey League (NHL) Draft on Friday at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles, Calif., the Boston Bruins selected Boston College men’s hockey forward James Hagens from Hauppauge, N.Y. “I’m so excited,” said Hagens. “I’m so excited to be back in Boston […]

With the No. 7 overall pick of the first round of the 2025 National Hockey League (NHL) Draft on Friday at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles, Calif., the Boston Bruins selected Boston College men’s hockey forward James Hagens from Hauppauge, N.Y.
“I’m so excited,” said Hagens. “I’m so excited to be back in Boston and to be able to have Adam Sandler make the pick, it was special.”
The rising sophomore also shared what Bruins fans can expect from the prospect when he takes the ice for the organization.
“Just hard work,” said Hagens. “Someone that will put his soul and body on the line. I love to win and I’m really glad that I’m in Boston.”
For Boston!
James Hagens has been selected 7th overall by the Boston Bruins!#NHLDraft pic.twitter.com/psdvsssJeh
— BC Men’s Hockey (@BC_MHockey) June 28, 2025
Hagens is the 27th first-round pick in program history, good for the second-most first rounders from a single collegiate hockey program in NCAA history.
The lefty skater was touted as the best prospect available in the 2025 NHL Draft prior to his first season in Chestnut Hill, but his draft stock dipped slightly after the 2024-25 season. As one of the best natural scorers and puck controllers in the draft class, Hagens needed some time and development to adjust to the pace and physicality of the collegiate level.
Prior to becoming an Eagle, Hagens played for the U.S. National Team Development Program where he tallied 187 points over two seasons—a tally which ranks fifth in USNTDP history. He appeared in 58 games for the U.S. Under-18 team in 2023-24, registering 39 goals and 63 assists for 102 points, good for seventh-most in a single season.
Hagens additionally broke the IIHF Under-18 Men’s World Championship scoring record with 22 points—nine goals and 13 assists—leading the U.S. to a silver medal and becoming the tournament Most Valuable Player.
As a freshman for BC last year, Hagens was named to the Hockey East All-Rookie Team and skated in all 37 games for the Eagles, averaging a point per game. His 11 goals and 26 assists, including a plus-minus rating of plus-21, helped BC make the first round of the NCAA Tournament—the Eagles ultimately fell in the Manchester Regional to Denver, 3-1, which ended their season.
He can now choose to remain with the Eagles for another season or sign an entry-level contract with the Bruins which former BC forward Will Smith decided to do after just one season on the Heights last offseason with the San Jose Sharks.
However, Gauthier (Anaheim Ducks), Ryan Leonard (Washington Capitals), Gabe Perreault (New York Rangers) and Dean Letourneau (Boston Bruins)—all first-round draft picks from BC’s program in the past three years—have taken the alternate path, choosing to remain with Greg Brown for an additional season and compete for a National Championship.
BC has won five National Championships in program history. Its last trophy came in 2012.
College Sports
Myers: Big money signings the latest twist in college hockey’s new world
At the 2023 NCAA Frozen Four in Tampa, Fla., Gophers coach Bob Motzko took questions before the tournament with future NHLers like Logan Cooley, Ryan Johnson and Jimmy Snuggerud flanking him. On that day, just over two years ago, Motzko was asked about how name, image and likeness money was affecting other college sports and […]

At the 2023 NCAA Frozen Four in Tampa, Fla., Gophers coach Bob Motzko took questions before the tournament with future NHLers like Logan Cooley, Ryan Johnson and Jimmy Snuggerud flanking him. On that day, just over two years ago, Motzko was asked about how name, image and likeness money was affecting other college sports and how it might affect NCAA hockey in the future.
“Hockey is behind a little bit in the conversation,” Motzko said, perhaps inadvertently quoting Minnesota music legend Bob Dylan in his answer. “I think it’s going to be a conversation that’s going to heat up more and more in hockey over the next couple of years. We just don’t have that many teams compared to football and basketball. But it’s starting to heat up. And there are more discussions. You’re hearing million-dollar deals for football and basketball. Our players get burritos. But I think times are changing.”
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It’s 27 months later. And the times have changed in a big, big way.
Gavin McKenna, a Canadian forward with eye-popping offensive numbers in major junior hockey is 17 years old and projected by many experts to be the top overall pick in the 2026 NHL draft. Last week, he was reportedly offered $250,000 to attend Michigan State in the fall and skate for a Spartans team that returns one of the nation’s top goalies in Trey Augustine. The Spartans are a not-overly-risky bet to win the Big Ten’s first NCAA hockey title since an underdog Spartans team did it in 2007.
After visiting campus and mulling their official bid, McKenna handed Michigan State a polite ‘No thank you,’ and instead opted to skate for conference rival Penn State next season. That decision came after the Nittany Lions – who are coming off the program’s first Frozen Four appearance – were able to reportedly triple Michigan State’s monetary offer.
Tilting ice
Over the past 15 years, the money game is the fourth seismic shift to hit the world of college hockey, which involves roughly 60 teams from Alaska in the West to Maine in the East and as far South as Arizona State’s rapidly emerging program.
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The first came in 2010 when Terry Pegula, the billionaire owner of the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres and the NFL’s Buffalo Bills, gave more than $100 million to his alma mater, Penn State, to build an arena that facilitated the Nittany Lions’ move from club to Division I hockey. That made for a half-dozen Big Ten schools with hockey programs (with the Nittany Lions joining Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Ohio State and Wisconsin). In short order, the Big Ten became the first Power Five conference to include hockey, and long-standing, hockey-only conferences like the Western Collegiate Hockey Association and the original Central Collegiate Hockey Association either disbanded or radically changed their membership.
The next two changes came in the past five years, as NIL meant, for the first time, college athletes could get paid for the use of their name, image and likeness without losing their NCAA eligibility.
While football and basketball players were receiving six-figure deals from the start, the immediate impact on hockey was players hosting summer hockey camps, websites giving players a few hoodies in exchange for the use of an athlete’s name, and the aforementioned free burritos, with the Mexican chain Chipotle signing several Gophers skaters to endorse their food.
With the money offered to top players skyrocketing, there seems to be a movement afoot in Dinkytown to get the Gophers more involved in that game. Last month, social media posts were sent and a bare-bones website went live announcing the Golden Helmet Collective, which is lacking detail, but seems to be the start of a hockey-specific effort to raise NIL money for future Gophers.
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The opening of the transfer portal allowed players to move from one program to another without having to sit out or lose eligibility. This brought de facto free agency to college hockey, where smaller schools are now routinely losing their top players to bigger schools after a year or two.
One coach in Atlantic Hockey America, which is home to mid-major programs like Air Force, Bentley, Mercyhurst and Robert Morris, compared their conference to a shopping center, where many of the six players named to the AHA all-rookie team one season are likely to be playing in the Big Ten or Hockey East by the time they’re sophomores.
The Gophers have been sporadic but effective users of the transfer portal, bringing in players like NHL first-rounder Matthew Wood from Connecticut and goalie Liam Souliere, who backstopped much of last season’s Big Ten title run, from Penn State.
Open borders
In November 2024, a lawsuit prompted the NCAA to allow players from Canadian major junior leagues to maintain college hockey eligibility, which had not been the case for the past four decades or so. Because major junior players often receive a stipend of a few hundred dollars per month for living expenses, they were long considered professionals in the eyes of the NCAA. So in 2012 when current Minnesota Wild forward Ryan Hartman, who was committed to play college hockey at Miami of Ohio, went to play for a major junior team instead, his NCAA eligibility disappeared.
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The opening up of major junior players to college recruitment has meant a windfall of new talent available to NCAA programs. McKenna is just the latest player from the Canadian leagues to pack for a home on campus in the fall, with Wild prospect Ryder Ritchie (Boston University), defenseman Benjamin Vigneault (Bemidji State), defenseman Henry Mews (Michigan), left winger Blake Montgomery (Wisconsin), defenseman Ethan Armstrong (Minnesota State Mankato), left winger Nathan Piling (St. Thomas), defenseman Grayden Siepmann (Minnesota Duluth) and center Cayden Lindstrom (Michigan State) all moving from major junior to college hockey in the fall.
North Dakota, which is a program in transition after a coaching change in the spring, landed two of the top players from the Victoria (B.C.) Royals, center Cole Rischny and defenseman Keaton Verhoeff.
McKenna made his future Nittany Lions announcement live on ESPN SportsCenter, in a move reminiscent of LeBron James and his infamous, nationally-televised “Decision” from 2010. While some decried the big-money signing as an omen of college hockey’s demise, others noted that having the sport covered on national TV in the middle of the summer, and attracting the top young talent on ice, at least for one season, is a net positive, even as the sport goes through yet another recent change.
Whatever your personal opinion, it’s clear that the future of college hockey has arrived. And for programs large and small to attract and keep the game’s best players, more than burritos will be required.
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College Sports
Big money signings the latest twist in college hockey’s new world – Twin Cities
At the 2023 NCAA Frozen Four in Tampa, Fla., Gophers coach Bob Motzko took questions before the tournament with future NHLers like Logan Cooley, Ryan Johnson and Jimmy Snuggerud flanking him. On that day, just over two years ago, Motzko was asked about how name, image and likeness money was affecting other college sports and […]

At the 2023 NCAA Frozen Four in Tampa, Fla., Gophers coach Bob Motzko took questions before the tournament with future NHLers like Logan Cooley, Ryan Johnson and Jimmy Snuggerud flanking him. On that day, just over two years ago, Motzko was asked about how name, image and likeness money was affecting other college sports and how it might affect NCAA hockey in the future.
“Hockey is behind a little bit in the conversation,” Motzko said, perhaps inadvertently quoting Minnesota music legend Bob Dylan in his answer. “I think it’s going to be a conversation that’s going to heat up more and more in hockey over the next couple of years. We just don’t have that many teams compared to football and basketball. But it’s starting to heat up. And there are more discussions. You’re hearing million-dollar deals for football and basketball. Our players get burritos. But I think times are changing.”
It’s 27 months later. And the times have changed in a big, big way.
Gavin McKenna, a Canadian forward with eye-popping offensive numbers in major junior hockey is 17 years old and projected by many experts to be the top overall pick in the 2026 NHL draft. Last week, he was reportedly offered $250,000 to attend Michigan State in the fall and skate for a Spartans team that returns one of the nation’s top goalies in Trey Augustine. The Spartans are a not-overly-risky bet to win the Big Ten’s first NCAA hockey title since an underdog Spartans team did it in 2007.
After visiting campus and mulling their official bid, McKenna handed Michigan State a polite ‘No thank you,’ and instead opted to skate for conference rival Penn State next season. That decision came after the Nittany Lions – who are coming off the program’s first Frozen Four appearance – were able to reportedly triple Michigan State’s monetary offer.
Tilting ice
Over the past 15 years, the money game is the fourth seismic shift to hit the world of college hockey, which involves roughly 60 teams from Alaska in the West to Maine in the East and as far South as Arizona State’s rapidly emerging program.
The first came in 2010 when Terry Pegula, the billionaire owner of the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres and the NFL’s Buffalo Bills, gave more than $100 million to his alma mater, Penn State, to build an arena that facilitated the Nittany Lions’ move from club to Division I hockey. That made for a half-dozen Big Ten schools with hockey programs (with the Nittany Lions joining Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Ohio State and Wisconsin). In short order, the Big Ten became the first Power Five conference to include hockey, and long-standing, hockey-only conferences like the Western Collegiate Hockey Association and the original Central Collegiate Hockey Association either disbanded or radically changed their membership.
The next two changes came in the past five years, as NIL meant, for the first time, college athletes could get paid for the use of their name, image and likeness without losing their NCAA eligibility.
While football and basketball players were receiving six-figure deals from the start, the immediate impact on hockey was players hosting summer hockey camps, websites giving players a few hoodies in exchange for the use of an athlete’s name, and the aforementioned free burritos, with the Mexican chain Chipotle signing several Gophers skaters to endorse their food.
With the money offered to top players skyrocketing, there seems to be a movement afoot in Dinkytown to get the Gophers more involved in that game. Last month, social media posts were sent and a bare-bones website went live announcing the Golden Helmet Collective, which is lacking detail, but seems to be the start of a hockey-specific effort to raise NIL money for future Gophers.
The opening of the transfer portal allowed players to move from one program to another without having to sit out or lose eligibility. This brought de facto free agency to college hockey, where smaller schools are now routinely losing their top players to bigger schools after a year or two.
One coach in Atlantic Hockey America, which is home to mid-major programs like Air Force, Bentley, Mercyhurst and Robert Morris, compared their conference to a shopping center, where many of the six players named to the AHA all-rookie team one season are likely to be playing in the Big Ten or Hockey East by the time they’re sophomores.
The Gophers have been sporadic but effective users of the transfer portal, bringing in players like NHL first-rounder Matthew Wood from Connecticut and goalie Liam Souliere, who backstopped much of last season’s Big Ten title run, from Penn State.
Open borders
In November 2024, a lawsuit prompted the NCAA to allow players from Canadian major junior leagues to maintain college hockey eligibility, which had not been the case for the past four decades or so. Because major junior players often receive a stipend of a few hundred dollars per month for living expenses, they were long considered professionals in the eyes of the NCAA. So in 2012 when current Minnesota Wild forward Ryan Hartman, who was committed to play college hockey at Miami of Ohio, went to play for a major junior team instead, his NCAA eligibility disappeared.
The opening up of major junior players to college recruitment has meant a windfall of new talent available to NCAA programs. McKenna is just the latest player from the Canadian leagues to pack for a home on campus in the fall, with Wild prospect Ryder Ritchie (Boston University), defenseman Benjamin Vigneault (Bemidji State), defenseman Henry Mews (Michigan), left winger Blake Montgomery (Wisconsin), defenseman Ethan Armstrong (Minnesota State Mankato), left winger Nathan Piling (St. Thomas), defenseman Grayden Siepmann (Minnesota Duluth) and center Cayden Lindstrom (Michigan State) all moving from major junior to college hockey in the fall.
North Dakota, which is a program in transition after a coaching change in the spring, landed two of the top players from the Victoria (B.C.) Royals, center Cole Rischny and defenseman Keaton Verhoeff.
McKenna made his future Nittany Lions announcement live on ESPN SportsCenter, in a move reminiscent of LeBron James and his infamous, nationally-televised “Decision” from 2010. While some decried the big-money signing as an omen of college hockey’s demise, others noted that having the sport covered on national TV in the middle of the summer, and attracting the top young talent on ice, at least for one season, is a net positive, even as the sport goes through yet another recent change.
Whatever your personal opinion, it’s clear that the future of college hockey has arrived. And for programs large and small to attract and keep the game’s best players, more than burritos will be required.

College Sports
Former Tampa Infielder Kevin Karstetter Transfers To Penn State Baseball
The transfer portal rolls on in college baseball, as Mike Gambino continues to build up Penn State baseball for the 2026 season. The latest addition to the roster is a bit of a homecoming story. Infielder Kevin Karstetter, born and raised in State College, is transferring to Penn State for his graduate season, he announced […]

The transfer portal rolls on in college baseball, as Mike Gambino continues to build up Penn State baseball for the 2026 season.
The latest addition to the roster is a bit of a homecoming story. Infielder Kevin Karstetter, born and raised in State College, is transferring to Penn State for his graduate season, he announced on social media on Friday. He has one year of eligibility remaining.
Karstetter was the No. 321 player in the country and No. 8 in Pennsylvania in the Class of 2021, committing to State College of Florida. At this junior college, he spent the first three years of his collegiate career. After batting .415 in his junior year in 2023, he transferred to Arizona State, where he slashed a modest .260/.372/.410 with two home runs and 13 RBI in 34 games. He played two seasons with the State College Spikes in the MLB Draft League while he was there.
He spent 2025 with the University of Tampa in Division II. This past season, he slashed .332/.414/.500 with five home runs, 24 extra base hits, 48 RBI, and 19 stolen bases for the eventual national champions. He hit a massive game-tying home run late in a loser’s bracket elimination game to save Tampa’s season.
Karstetter got a sixth year of eligibility due to not only playing in the 2021 season, impacted by COVID-19, but also the recent court ruling that granted former junior college athletes an additional year of eligibility. The third baseman will join an infield consisting of Jack Porter, Bryce Molinaro, and two recent transfers, but things could change in this week’s MLB draft.
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College Sports
Brainstorming Penn State-Themed Covers For EA College Basketball 26
On the final day of June, EA Sports appeared to announce the return of its college basketball video game on X. While the game, which ended with NCAA Basketball 10, will not be released again until 2028, according to a Collegiate Licensing Company memo, it’s never too soon to brainstorm covers. So, similar to we […]

On the final day of June, EA Sports appeared to announce the return of its college basketball video game on X.
While the game, which ended with NCAA Basketball 10, will not be released again until 2028, according to a Collegiate Licensing Company memo, it’s never too soon to brainstorm covers.
So, similar to we did for College Football 25, Onward State decided to create some Penn State-themed covers for EA College Basketball 26. Here’s what we’ve got.
Yanic Konan Niederhauser

Let’s keep it simple to start. The first-ever Penn State men’s basketball first-round NBA draft pick deserves a cover, right?
Penn State

This cover’s got it all. Zach Hicks, Ace Baldwin Jr., Mike Rhoades, a pennant, a ticket, the Big Ten, the Nittany Lion, a throwback logo. EA, you’re missing out if you don’t use this one.
Court Storm Edition

Last year’s squad pulled off a stunner against then-No. 8 Purdue and rallied the fans to storm the court at the Bryce Jordan Center, so it’s only fitting EA puts out a “Court Storm Edition” that features a Nittany Lion-themed cover.
Sweat With Us


Grab a Gatorade, get on your feet, and “Sweat With Us.” Who cares if you’re playing video games? You can still sweat.
Return To Rec Hall Edition


Hello again, Yanic Konan Niederhauser. However, this time he’s featured on a “Return to Rec Hall” cover to pay homage to the team’s annual game in the legendary arena. We can never have enough special edition covers.


College Sports
New Jersey Golfer Chris Gotterup Wins At Genesis Scottish Open
We have a good-sized list of famous athletes from New Jersey. Carli Lloyd and Mike Trout, just to name a few. Another one just got added to that list today when Chris Gotteruo won the Genesis Scottish Open Sunday afternoon. He was tied for the lead with Rory McIlroy heading into the final round and […]

We have a good-sized list of famous athletes from New Jersey. Carli Lloyd and Mike Trout, just to name a few.
Another one just got added to that list today when Chris Gotteruo won the Genesis Scottish Open Sunday afternoon. He was tied for the lead with Rory McIlroy heading into the final round and held him off, ultimately winning by two strokes.
It was Gotterup’s second career victory on the PGA TOUR, and his first this year.
SEE MORE: Delicious bar and grill in central NJ
Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images
Gotterup was born in Maryland but played college golf at Rutgers University (2017-2021), where he had a standout career. He won the New Jersey State Open in 2019. He transferred to the University of Oklahoma in 2022 to finish his collegiate career. While there, he won the Haskins Award and the Jack Nicklaus Award as the top college golfer.
His win on Sunday earned him an entry into the final major of the golf season this week at the Open Championship. It will be his first ever start in the event. Gotterup has played in two majors thus far in his career, the PGA Championship (2024), where he missed the cut, and the U.S. Open (2025), where he finished tied for 23rd.
Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images
He made the entire state proud with his victory today in large part because of how he fended off the number two-ranked player in the world, Rory McIlroy, arguably the greatest player of this generation.
I’m a big Rory fan, but was pulling hard for Gotterup today because of my New Jersey pride. Golf is a hard sport to win at, but early into Gotterup’s career, the talent is clearly showing. Best of luck to him this week at the Open Championship.
These are the best NJ high schools for sports
Gallery Credit: Stacker
Professional Sports Teams That Play In New Jersey
Professional Sports Teams That Play In New Jersey
Gallery Credit: Vin Ebenau
The post above reflects the thoughts and observations of New Jersey 101.5’s Kyle Clark. Any opinions expressed are his own.
Click here to contact an editor about feedback or a correction for this story.
College Sports
North American Soccer Expo Launches
In the sprawling world of soccer, the brand-new North American Soccer Expo aims to bring together top coaches, directors and soccer professionals at all levels. While other opportunities exist to bring together officials from around the continent or world, the North American Soccer Expo aims to line up when the club calendar begins this summer. […]

In the sprawling world of soccer, the brand-new North American Soccer Expo aims to bring together top coaches, directors and soccer professionals at all levels.
While other opportunities exist to bring together officials from around the continent or world, the North American Soccer Expo aims to line up when the club calendar begins this summer.
“We saw a need for an event that brings club leaders together—not just to learn, but to connect,” Paul Tinnion, Michigan Jaguars Executive Director said. “The idea came from conversations with directors, coaches, and administrators who wanted more opportunities to share ideas, build relationships, and grow the game through collaboration. The North American Soccer Expo was created to be that space. We identified a need for local coaches who were unable to attend the United Soccer Coaches Convention.”
Set to be held from August 1-3 in Novi, Michigan, more than 50 presenters have already been locked up for the event. That includes coaches and technical staff from various levels of the game, spanning several MLS Academies, to college soccer coaches and officials from US Youth Soccer, US Club Soccer, Girls Academy and National League.
The overall goal is multi-fold. Offering education opportunities for coaches, hands-on learning to the real challenges club leaders face. It’s a space for decision-makers to connect, share ideas, and grow the game.
“Our primary goal is to raise the standard of soccer in North America by empowering the people who build it from the ground up,” Tinnion said. “By bringing together coaches and directors in one space, we’re encouraging dialogue across roles, disciplines, and levels of the game. We want attendees to walk away with new tools, fresh ideas, meaningful connections, and a renewed energy for the work they do—whether that’s improving player development models, enhancing club operations, or fostering positive cultures.”
The vision from Tinnion and the rest of the organization is that this becomes something bigger.
“We want to build an event that grows year after year, fueled by innovation, collaboration, and a shared commitment to improving the soccer landscape,” he said. “Ultimately, we want this to be more than just an annual event—it should be a platform for continual growth and leadership development.”
To learn more and register for this year’s event, visit northamericansoccerexpo.com.
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