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Chaisilprungruang Selected as WGCA All-American Honorable Mention

CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. – Pinky Chaisilprungruang of the Charlotte Women’s Golf team has been named to the 2024-25 Women’s Golf Coaches Association Division I All-American Honorable Mention Team, announced on Tuesday. Chaisilprungruang, the AAC Golfer of the Year and Freshman of the Year, finished the season ranked as the 46th individual golfer in the national […]

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CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. – Pinky Chaisilprungruang of the Charlotte Women’s Golf team has been named to the 2024-25 Women’s Golf Coaches Association Division I All-American Honorable Mention Team, announced on Tuesday.

Chaisilprungruang, the AAC Golfer of the Year and Freshman of the Year, finished the season ranked as the 46th individual golfer in the national D1 Player Rankings. She collected three AAC Golfer of the Week awards and was named AAC Golfer of the Month for September. She has finished in the top 10 in every event this season leading up to the NCAA Regionals including six top five finishes. Her 203 (-13) at the Daniel Island Invitational set a program record for 54 holes and tied the school’s single-round low score with a 66. She recorded the best single-season stroke average in program history at 71.31 and now becomes the first Niner to be named to the All-American team.

The Women’s Golf Coaches Association, founded in 1983, is a non-profit organization representing women’s collegiate golf coaches. The WGCA was formed to encourage the playing of college golf for women in correlation with a general objective of education and in accordance with the highest tradition of intercollegiate competition. Today, the WGCA represents over 750 coaches throughout the U.S. and is dedicated to educating, promoting and recognizing both its members and the student-athletes they represent.  

WGCA All-American First Team

Carla Bernat, Kansas State University

Carolina Chacarra, Wake Forest University

Megha Ganne, Stanford University

Eila Galitsky, University of South Carolina

Jasmine Koo, University of Southern California

Maria José Marin, University of Arkansas

Paula Martín Sampedro, Stanford University

Meja Örtengren, Stanford University

Andrea Revuelta, Stanford University

Kiara Romero, University of Oregon

Mirabel Ting, Florida State University

Lottie Woad, Florida State University

 

Second Team

Hannah Darling, University of South Carolina

Anna Davis, Auburn University

Kary Hollenbaugh, The Ohio State University

Lauren Kim, University of Texas

Marie Eline Madsen, North Carolina State University

Farah O’Keefe, University of Texas

Catherine Park, University of Southern California

Patience Rhodes, Arizona State University

Louise Rydqvist, University of South Carolina

Amanda Sambach, University of Virginia

Rocío Tejedo, Louisiana State University

Kendall Todd, University of Arkansas

Suvichaya Vinijchaitham, University of Oregon

Kelly Xu, Stanford University

Honorable Mention Team

Brooke Biermann, Michigan State University

Vanessa Borovilos, Texas A&M University

Pinky Chaisilprungruang, Charlotte

Lauren Clark, University of Kansas

Beth Coulter, Arizona State University

Cayetana Fernández García-Poggio, Texas A&M University

Cindy Hsu, University of Texas

Grace Kilcrease, Oklahoma State University

 



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Teddy Mutryn Talks Boston College Commitment, Being Drafted by Sharks

Boston College men’s hockey forward commit Teddy Mutryn was one of three players for BC to be selected in the 2025 NHL Draft over the weekend.  The 18-year-old was picked by the San Jose Sharks with the No. 95 overall pick in the third round.  Shortly after being drafted, Mutryn spoke to the media about […]

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Boston College men’s hockey forward commit Teddy Mutryn was one of three players for BC to be selected in the 2025 NHL Draft over the weekend. 

The 18-year-old was picked by the San Jose Sharks with the No. 95 overall pick in the third round. 

Shortly after being drafted, Mutryn spoke to the media about where he was and how he found out that he was being selected by the Sharks. 

“I was watching on TV actually,” said Mutryn. “We had two TVs going and one was a little ahead of the other and I was in the room that was a little behind. So everyone started going nuts and I didn’t see anything for like 30 seconds… It was a crazy experience.” 

The Norwell, Mass., native joins former Boston College forward Will Smith in San Jose’s organization as well as a couple other players from the Boston area in forward Macklin Celebrini, who played at Boston University, forward Cam Lund, who is from Bridgewater, Mass., and played at Northeastern, and defenseman Henry Thrun, who is a native of Southborough, Mass., and played at Harvard. 

Mutryn shared his feelings on what it means to be able to play alongside numerous local players and how that impacts his excitement to be with San Jose. 

“Definitely,” said Mutryn. “I think it’s exciting. [You] get to see those guys get picked and have success. And there’s obviously some pride being from Boston, being from Massachusetts I think. It’s exciting to get to show the world and show the league what we can do.”

He also gave insight to which players in the NHL he likes to model his game after. 

“I liked to watch Charlie Coyle when he was on the Bruins,” said Mutryn. “Just the way he protects the puck down low and is able to make plays, I feel like that’s kind of who I like to model my game after a little bit. I’m a bigger player, physical presence, and I think being able to use my size down low and create plays, create offenses, [it’s] a big part of my game. And then Chris Kreider too.” 

Mutryn talked about why he chose Boston College and how beneficial it is to play alongside some of college hockey’s best talent. 

“I think BC obviously is a historically phenomenal program,” said Mutryn. “I grew up around the school. My father played quarterback for BC. My mom went there as well, she played lacrosse, so I’ve kind of grown up around the school, going to football games, going to hockey games. Obviously I explored other options college wise but when I stepped onto BC’s campus, I knew it was home. 

“They always bring in a great pool of players. James [Hagens] is a phenomenal player. Obviously Will [Smith] was there, Ryan Leonard, they always bring in great players so you know you’re going to go there and play with good guys.” 

Mutryn is expected to join the Eagles for the 2026-27 season. 



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Utah Mammoth prospect Tij Iginla returns to ice after double-hip surgery

Tij Iginla will be a partial participant in the Utah Mammoth’s development camp this week. Utah Hockey Club forward Tij Iginla (12) moves the puck against San Jose Sharks defenseman Mario Ferraro during the second period of a pre-season NHL hockey game, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024, in San Jose, Calif. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez) Tij […]

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Tij Iginla will be a partial participant in the Utah Mammoth’s development camp this week.

Utah Hockey Club forward Tij Iginla (12) moves the puck against San Jose Sharks defenseman Mario Ferraro during the second period of a pre-season NHL hockey game, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024, in San Jose, Calif. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez)

Tij Iginla has had a long year.

Most hockey players his age are skating for their junior or college teams, gaining the developmental experience necessary to take the eventual next step to their NHL clubs.

Iginla had to put all of that on pause.

“It wasn’t probably what I would’ve expected — at 18 years old getting double-hip surgery,” he said.

It was previously reported that Iginla underwent one hip surgery in December; however, he confirmed on Sunday that it was two. Iginla got his right hip done at the beginning of December and waited six weeks to build up “strength and stability” to support the surgery on his left hip at the end of January, he said.

Iginla is in Utah this week for the Utah Mammoth’s development camp and can participate in “a lot of the drills,” general manager Bill Armstrong said. The forward will, however, wear a non-contact jersey. He said he thinks he will be back to full contact and 100% skating in the next month or so.

Tij Iginla, center, poses after being selected by the Utah Hockey Club during the first round of the NHL hockey draft Friday, June 28, 2024, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Steve Marcus)

“He’ll be out there. He’s really excited about being here,” Armstrong said. “He’ll move slowly, but get going. Good to see him and he is back on the ice.”

Iginla — who was Utah’s sixth overall pick in the 2024 NHL Draft — sat out the majority of last year’s training camp due to a lower body injury. He went on to play 21 games for the Western Hockey League’s Kelowna Rockets — and had 32 points (14 goals, 18 assists) — before he officially addressed the hip issue.

“It was great to be a part of that [Utah] camp,” Iginla said. “I definitely learned a lot — for one thing, I learned that my hips were pretty messed up. Other than that, it was good to see the level, see the guys, be around that.”

The taste of NHL pace Iginla got in September is what has fueled him through his rehabilitation. He wants to return stronger and make up for the time and on-ice reps he has missed compared to his Mammoth prospect counterparts.

Accordingly, Iginla watched a lot of hockey. Whether it was Mammoth games, tape of current NHLers, video of himself or even his brother and sister’s seasons, Iginla worked to sharpen his IQ of the sport while sidelined. He used virtual reality, he said, for hockey sense training. Iginla has spent a lot of time in the weight room, too, to build his power away from the ice.

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) Tij Iginla (12) shoots the puck as Carsen Musser (35) defends the goal during the scrimmage game following UtahÕs 2024 Development Camp at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Friday, July 5, 2024.

“I think there’s a certain aspect of resilience that you have to have going through that,” Iginla said. “Keeping a good head space and finding ways to keep getting better. For someone like me, that’s what keeps me sane going through something like that. Just knowing that I’m not just sitting on the couch getting worse.”

Double-hip surgery is not exactly uncommon for hockey players. Mammoth defenseman Ian Cole underwent the procedure in 2019 (he was 30 at the time), as did Florida Panthers forward Brad Marchand in 2022 (he was 34 at the time). Obviously, Iginla being 18 and needing the surgery stands out.

The Utah doctors, training staff, coaches and front office will keep a close eye on Iginla this week as he takes the ice in the limited capacity alongside other top prospects for the Mammoth. Some notable names attending development camp are 2025 fourth-overall pick Caleb Desnoyers, Cole Beaudoin, Dmitri Simashev, Daniil But and Michael Hrabal.

Six of Utah’s seven players selected in the 2025 NHL Draft will be at development camp — forward Yegor Borikov will not be there.

(Damian Dovarganes | AP) Caleb Desnoyers, left, stands with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman after being drafted by the Utah Mammoth during the NHL hockey draft Friday, June 27, 2025, in Los Angeles.

The event — which goes until Thursday — offers the opportunity for players to show their progress and get a feel of the pros, and for the organization to get an up-close look at the assets in its system.

The on-ice sessions are set for June 30 and July 1 at Park City Ice Arena and happen in two groups (scheduled for 9:45-11:45 a.m. and 12:15-2:15 p.m.). Those practices will be open to the public. Development camp will conclude on July 3 with a scrimmage at Utah’s Olympic Oval. The prospects will play in a four-on-four, intra-squad competition to simulate a mock game with officials. While the scrimmage is closed to the public, the Mammoth will host 500 youth hockey players from the Utah Amateur Hockey Association to watch.

For Iginla, it is the first phase of getting back to some hockey normalcy and starting to see his hard work in recovery pay off.

“Try to trust the process and believe that it will all work out for the best,” Iginla said. “At this point, I can definitely see the light at the end of the tunnel.”



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Grading Every Team’s 2025 NHL Draft Class

There were rumors that the Sharks might do something unorthodox at second overall, but sanity won out and GM Mike Grier took the runaway best player available in Michael Misa. Misa is impossible not to notice quickly in any given game. He’s quite the skater and he has a lot of octane in the tank. […]

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There were rumors that the Sharks might do something unorthodox at second overall, but sanity won out and GM Mike Grier took the runaway best player available in Michael Misa.

Misa is impossible not to notice quickly in any given game. He’s quite the skater and he has a lot of octane in the tank. Misa layers a lot of different talents together in ways that lead to his line controlling play. He has a separation burst and the stick skills to separate from checks. He slings wrist shots into the corners of the net. He finds high-difficulty passing lanes in motion. He is also lethal in pressuring in the defensive zone to create turnovers and then blowing past defenders in transition.

Sometimes Misa tries to do too much and, despite his point totals, I would have liked to see him dominate more. Scouts also wonder if he’s better suited for the wing. In any case, San Jose already looks good at center with Celebrini and Smith and Misa should be a great two-way forward.

Joshua Ravensbergen is a good value at 30th overall and, with how deep San Jose’s prospect pool is, they could afford to take a risk on a big, athletic goaltender. Haoxi Wang, taken 33rd overall, is also a high-upside flyer. The 6’5″ defenseman skates like the wind and shows good shutdown potential, but is still figuring out the offensive side of the game. Cole McKinney has a strong defensive foundation to his game and, with a little offensive jump, could develop into a middle-six center.

The Sharks didn’t do anything beyond the scope of what was expected of them with the draft picks they had, but they didn’t throw away any value, either. A deep prospect pool gets deeper.



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UMass Lowell excited about 14-player incoming hockey class

Outside his office a couple of slap shots from the Merrimack River, temperatures would soon soar past 90 degrees. Hockey season seemed light years away, but UMass Lowell head coach Norm Bazin was busy earlier this week assembling a roster he hopes will shine during the 2025-26 season. The college hockey landscape is ever changing […]

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Outside his office a couple of slap shots from the Merrimack River, temperatures would soon soar past 90 degrees.

Hockey season seemed light years away, but UMass Lowell head coach Norm Bazin was busy earlier this week assembling a roster he hopes will shine during the 2025-26 season.

The college hockey landscape is ever changing – and so are the rosters of every Division 1 team. UML will turn over about half its roster from a team that went 16-16-4 last season.

Bazin and his staff are excited about the 14 newcomers who will don River Hawk uniforms in the fall. (If they find the right forward, likely a center, a 15th player will finalize the incoming class.)

“We want to get faster. It’s more important than it’s ever been. It’s the key to the game. We want to get grittier. Time will tell whether we can improve on our toughness,” he said. “We’re excited. We think they’re good prospects. Every team is replacing half their team. It’s challenging and exciting all wrapped into one.”

Eleven of the 14 newcomers hail from Canada. One major change is for the first time NCAA programs can add players with Major Junior experience. UML is bringing in seven with Canadian Hockey League experience.

Three are National Hockey League draft picks.

Goaltenders

Austin Elliott: A 6-1, 185-pound native of Strathmore, Alb., Elliott was waived early in the season. Switching from the Western Hockey League to the Ontario Hockey League, Elliott caught fire for the London Knights.

He won 55 of 58 starts with the Knights and led them to the prestigious Memorial Cup championship, compiling a .943 save percentage in the pressure-filled tournament. Elliott went 32-1 during the regular season with a .924 save percentage and then continued his winning ways in the postseason.

Austin Elliott (Courtesy photo)
Austin Elliott (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “Austin had a very strong year. It’s exciting to win a Memorial Cup. He’s very calm. Very composed. He’s eager to play college hockey. He’s humble and he’s eager to win.”

Samuel Richard: Richard also has a winning background. A 6-foot, 170-pound native of Ste-Catherine, Que., Richard guided the University of New Brunswick to the University Cup title two seasons ago.

In this past season, he sported a 1.48 goals against average and .926 save percentage during the regular season for New Brunswick.

Samuel Richard (Courtesy photo)
Samuel Richard (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “He’s been to three NHL camps. He’s got a good attitude and knows what he needs to do. He’s a battler. He was a national champion two years ago. He’s won also. He’s no kid.”

Nikola Goich: Goich is a big goaltender with plenty of potential. He’s coming off a strong season with Shreveport of the North American Hockey League. A 6-5, 175-pound netminder, Goich was 24-11-3 last season with a 2.24 goals against average and .924 save percentage.

Nikola Goich (Courtesy photo)
Nikola Goich (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “He’s a big and he’s a southpaw. He had a strong season. It will be interesting to see him complement the other guys. I think he has a huge amount of upside.”

Forwards

Diego Buttazzoni: Buttazzoni figures to make an immediate impact. The 5-9, 183-pound native of Langley, B.C., enjoyed a productive season with Portland of the Western Hockey League, scoring 38 goals and 77 points during the regular season.

He elevated his play in 18 playoff games, netting 14 goals and 27 points. He’s the younger brother of UML forward Mirko Buttazzoni, who’s coming off a strong freshman season.

Diego Buttazzoni (Courtesy photo)
Diego Buttazzoni (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “I would say his shot is his biggest asset. He likes to have the puck in big moments. He wants to be the guy to score a game-winning goal. He’s a goal scorer. There are few shoot-first guys.”

Jay Ahearn: A transfer from Niagara University, Ahearn is a player to watch. He scored 82 points in 87 games at Niagara and is coming off a 19-goal campaign which topped his team. His 39 points tied for the team high.

Jay Ahearn (Courtesy photo)
Jay Ahearn (Courtesy photo)

A 5-11, 170-pound native of Staten Island, N.Y., Ahearn is excited about the challenge of playing in Hockey East.

Bazin: “He had a good year last year. He was a two-time captain at Niagara. Most of his goals come from within 10 feet of the net. My former assistant (Jason Lammers) can’t say enough good things about him. He’s always where you can score goals.”

Cole Lonsdale: A 5-11, 170-pound speedster from Mississauga, Ont., Lonsdale was the captain and MVP of his junior team.

Lonsdale played for the Nanaimo Clippers of the British Columbia Hockey League and tied for the team lead in goals (27) and points (67). Over his final two seasons with the Clippers, Lonsdale racked up 103 points in 103 games.

Cole Lonsdale (Courtesy photo)
Cole Lonsdale (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “He’s a good skater. He moves well. He’ll play the middle for us and we need some centers. He scored more than a point a game. He’s a center and he’s good on the power play.”

Dalyn Wakely: UML coaches are excited to work with the 6-1, 198-pound center from Port Hope, Ont.

Wakely is a 2024 sixth-round pick of the Edmonton Oilers. He excelled last season for the Barrie Colts of the Ontario Hockey League, scoring 23 goals and 58 points in 55 regular-season games. His production rose in the playoffs when he collected 24 points over 16 games.

Dalyn Wakely (Courtesy photo)
Dalyn Wakely (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “He’s a very good two-way center. Responsible. Honest. Good citizen. A two-time humanitarian winner. Center is where you start your offense. He had 104 points two years ago. He was an assistant captain.”

Defensemen

Tnias Mathurin: Mathurin, a native of Ajax, Ont., has good size (6-3, 201 pounds) and skating ability.

He was a fifth-round pick (137th overall) of the Detroit Red Wings in 2022. Mathurin played this past season for the Windsor Spitfires of the OHL. In 49 regular-season games, he posted a 7-16-23 line.

Tnias Mathurin (Courtesy photo)
Tnias Mathurin (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “He’s a 6-3 defenseman. We’re looking forward to see what he can do. He’s a two-way guy. He’s got a good presence about him. I think he’s going to be a good hockey player.”

Nate Misskey: Another big blueliner (6-4, 212 pounds), Misskey hails from Melford, Sask. Misskey was a two-time assistant captain for the Victoria Royals of the WHL.

In 2024 he was a fifth-round (143rd overall) selection of the San Jose Sharks. A right-shot defenseman, Misskey posted a 10-37-47 line in 63 regular-season games last season.

Nate Misskey (Courtesy photo)
Nate Misskey (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “He played three full years in the WHL. He was a two-year assistant captain. Defense is his strength. He’s not defunct of any (offensive) skill. He contributes. He’ll be very helpful on the special teams.”

Luke Shipley: A 6-foot, 187-pound native of Powell River, B.C., Shipley figures to see plenty of time on the power play.

He produced loads of points for the Brandon Wheat Kings of the WHL, netting 20 goals and 57 points in 60 regular-season games. That was a 21-point improvement in five fewer games from the previous season.

Luke Shipley (Courtesy photo)
Luke Shipley (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “He’s an intriguing guy. He really came into his own this year. He’s going to be a power play guy. He has a shot to help our special teams. Things seemed to click for him. He was a plus-37, which is impressive.”

Josh Mori: Mori will arrive in Lowell with plenty of experience after having skated in 230 WHL games. A 5-11, 174-pound native of Richmond, B.C., the smooth-skating Mori played this past season for the Edmonton Oil Kings.

Mori scored four goals and compiled 30 points in 68 regular-season games.

Josh Mori (Courtesy photo)
Josh Mori (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “Josh is a good skater. I think that’s the most important part of the game. He played four years in the WHL. He’s a defender. He’s hard to play against. He was an assistant captain in Edmonton.”

Dominic Payne: A 6-2, 190-pound defenseman, Payne is transferring to UML from Canisius University after a promising freshman season.

The North Vancouver, B.C., native was the top-scoring defenseman at Canisius as he posted 6-8-14 totals in 37 games. Bazin said Payne has the ability to play professionally if he develops.

Dominic Payne (Courtesy photo)
Dominic Payne (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “I like his skating ability. I think he’s going to be one of the best skaters on the team. He knows what this level demands. He had 14 points as a freshman and I think he has a lot of upside.”

James Johnson: A giant on skates, the 6-6, 203-pound Johnson has the tools to be, in time, a shutdown defender. The Ajax, Ont., native played 50 games last season in the British Columbia Hockey League.

He compiled 12 points, splitting time between Blackfalds and Nanaimo.

James Johnson (Courtesy photo)
James Johnson (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “Big kid. He has to put some weight on. This kid is a true 6-foot-6. For his size his skating his good. He’s a wonderful kid and a competitive guy. I hope his best hockey is ahead of him.”

August Classon: A native of Stockholm, Sweden, the 6-foot, 185-pound Classon played in his native country before travelling to the U.S. and skating in the North American Hockey League last season.

In 45 regular-season games, he registered a 8-21-29 line and then added six points in 10 playoff games for the Lone Star Brahmas.

August Classon (Courtesy photo)
August Classon (Courtesy photo)

Bazin: “He had a good year. He’s a skater. He’s a contributor on both sides of the ice. His skating his strong, really strong. He almost had a point a game. That’s pretty good. He’ll be interesting to watch.”



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Kenzie Kent will carry ‘physicality’ and ‘fast-paced’ nature from hockey career into the WLL All-Star Game

Sitting across from Boston College head coach Acacia Walker-Weinstein, a high school recruit in Kenzie Kent was intrigued. Walker-Weinstein explained how no women’s sports program at Boston College had ever won a national championship, and the lacrosse team was looking to change that. And Kent, despite feeling some reserve to join a program with her […]

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Sitting across from Boston College head coach Acacia Walker-Weinstein, a high school recruit in Kenzie Kent was intrigued. Walker-Weinstein explained how no women’s sports program at Boston College had ever won a national championship, and the lacrosse team was looking to change that.

And Kent, despite feeling some reserve to join a program with her mom Jen Kent on staff, wanted to help.

“You could be a part of the first and do something no one has ever done before and that’s really what stuck with me immediately,” Kent said. “That’s what I really wanted. I really wanted to win a national championship and it really enticed me just how the team hadn’t been a top-level team yet and I thought it’d be really cool to help build something.”

Kent had double the chance to help bring the Eagles their first women’s national title. The Norwell, Mass., native arrived at BC as a freshman in 2014, but the first uniform she donned wasn’t for the lacrosse team. It was for the women’s ice hockey team.

Kent first helped the Eagles reach the championship stage in 2016, when the hockey team fell short against Minnesota. It was BC’s first-ever appearance in the title game, coming in its sixth trip to the Frozen Four. That season as a sophomore, Kent played in every game, posting 43 points and scoring five game-winning goals.

The next year, Kent — after missing the first 12 games of the lacrosse season as the hockey team advanced to the Frozen Four semifinals again — set career highs in lacrosse in points (77), goals (39) and assists (38) in just 12 games to again help facilitate a title run. The Eagles lacrosse team made it to their first-ever championship in 2017, losing to Maryland, while Kent became the first player from a losing team in a national title game to be named the championship’s most outstanding player.

Kent played in five Final Fours (three in hockey, two in lacrosse) over her collegiate career. She never claimed a national championship, but was a key contributor helping establish both programs for future success. The hockey team has not reached the championship stage since its lone 2016 appearance, but — after 13 years at BC for Jen and 10 for Walker-Weinstein — the lacrosse team broke through for the school’s first-ever women’s title in 2021. It was victorious again in 2024.

“Obviously I’m biased, but it is just the most special program and I think a lot of it attests to the coaching staff,” Kent said. “They’ve been together for so long.”

As Kent, now an assistant women’s lacrosse coach at Harvard, turns to the Maybelline Women’s Lacrosse League All-Star Game on July 4, she’ll continue to tap into her hockey skills.

“I guess there’s not a ton of similarities but hockey helped me a lot with lacrosse in terms of — I feel like in lacrosse I’m able to see a play happen before it happens and that’s because hockey is such a fast-paced sport and it’s really up and down and you don’t have a lot of time to make a decision so I think that helped me a ton,” she said. “And the physicality of hockey definitely allowed me to be physical in lacrosse and not shy away from the checks.”

Kent’s grandfather played hockey in high school and college and introduced the popular local sport to her and her family. Five of the six Kent children ended up playing hockey in some capacity, with four of them playing throughout high school, Kent said.

Kent, the fifth pick during the WLL All-Star Selection Show, is one of six BC alum on Team North alongside Charlotte North, Cassidy Weeks, Dempsey Arsenault, Sydney Scales and Rachel Clark.

“A lot of us have played together so hopefully that chemistry can show on the field and for whoever’s watching,” Kent said.

“I’m excited to just put on a WLL uniform. It’s the start of something incredible and it’s really special to be able to be a part of it in the early stages and hopefully [help] promote lacrosse in the best way that I can.”





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Lightning make eight picks during Day 2 of 2025 NHL Draft

TAMPA BAY – The Tampa Bay Lightning made eight picks during Day 2 of the 2025 NHL Draft today at Peacock Theater in Los Angeles, California. The Lightning’s 2025 draft is presented by Florida Blue. With the 56th overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, the Lightning selected forward Ethan Czata from the Niagara Ice […]

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TAMPA BAY – The Tampa Bay Lightning made eight picks during Day 2 of the 2025 NHL Draft today at Peacock Theater in Los Angeles, California. The Lightning’s 2025 draft is presented by Florida Blue.

With the 56th overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, the Lightning selected forward Ethan Czata from the Niagara Ice Dogs of the Ontario Hockey League. A native of Brampton, Ontario, Czata ranked fourth for scoring among Ice Dogs skaters last season, posting 21 goals and 55 points in 68 games. Czata, 18, also saw action in five playoff games and recorded two assists. The 6-foot-2, 178-pound forward represented Team Canada in the 2025 IIHF U18 World Championship, posting four assists and five points.

In the fourth round, Tampa Bay traded its own 2026 fourth-round pick to the Boston Bruins in exchange for the 108th pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, which it used to select forward Benjamin Rautiainen (ROW-tee-eye-nen) from Tappara of the Finnish Liiga. A native of Tampere, Finland, Rautiainen led all Tappara rookies in scoring (10-23—33 pts.) and ranked sixth among all Tappara skaters. The 20-year-old forward skated in seven games for Team Finland at the 2025 IIHF World Junior Championship and recorded two goals and four points.

With the 127th overall pick, the Lightning selected forward Aiden Foster from the Prince George Cougars of the Western Hockey League. Foster, 18, appeared in 68 games with the Cougars in 2024-25, tallying 11 goals and 20 points in addition to logging 136 penalty minutes, the third most in the WHL last season. The 6-foot-2, 182-pound forward also appeared in seven playoff games for Prince George and registered six assists, tied for the most among all Cougars skaters.

The Lightning selected defenseman Everett Baldwin, 151st overall, with its lone pick in the fifth round of the 2025 NHL Draft. Baldwin, 18, spent the majority of his 2024-25 season with St. George’s School of the United States High School Prep League, accumulating 10 goals and 20 points in 22 games. The right-shot defenseman also saw action in seven United States Hockey League games, split between the USNTDP Juniors and Cedar Rapids RoughRiders, registering three assists. Baldwin is committed to play college hockey at Providence College in 2025-26.

Tampa Bay selected goaltender Caleb Heil 193rd overall with its first of four picks in the seventh round. A native of Victoria, Minnesota, Heil spent the 2024-25 season with the Madison Capitols of the USHL and posted a 25-10-4 record with a .896 save percentage and a 2.85 goals-against average. The 6-foot-2, 196-pound netminder also appeared in six playoff contests with the Capitols going 3-3 with one shutout. Heil is committed to play college hockey at the University of North Dakota, beginning in 2026-27.

With its second pick in the seventh round, Tampa Bay selected forward Roman Luttsev, 206th overall, from Loko Yaroslavl of the MHL. Luttsev, 19, skated in 50 games for Yaroslavl as alternate captain last season and led the team in goals (30), assists (33) and points (63). The 6-foot-0, 170-pound Russian forward also appeared in eight MHL playoff games and posted two goals and three points.

The Lightning selected defenseman Grant Spada with the 212th overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft. Spada, 18, appeared in 58 games for the Guelph Storm of the OHL in 2024-25 and recorded six assists, while leading all OHL rookies for penalty minutes (85).

With the 215th pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, Tampa Bay used its final pick to select forward Marco Mignosa from the Soo Greyhounds of the OHL. Mignosa, 20, led Soo in goals (36), assists (49) and points (85) in his fourth OHL season. A native of Vaughn, Ontario, Mignosa has played a total of 238 regular season OHL games and has tallied 81 goals and 200 points. The Toronto, Ontario native has also played in 26 career OHL playoff games and owns five goals and 13 points.



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