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Matheson '08 Named to Canada Soccer Hall of Fame

One of the most decorated players in Princeton women’s soccer history is joining her country’s national Soccer Hall of Fame. Diana Matheson ’08, who helped Canada to two Olympic bronze medals after helping Princeton to the NCAA College Cup, is part of the 2025 Canada Soccer Hall of Fame, the organization has announced. Matheson will […]

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Matheson '08 Named to Canada Soccer Hall of Fame

One of the most decorated players in Princeton women’s soccer history is joining her country’s national Soccer Hall of Fame.

Diana Matheson ’08, who helped Canada to two Olympic bronze medals after helping Princeton to the NCAA College Cup, is part of the 2025 Canada Soccer Hall of Fame, the organization has announced.

Matheson will be recognized at an upcoming Canada Women’s National Team game to be determined.

Among her 206 games with Canada’s top squad, Matheson played in three Olympic Games and four FIFA World Cups, scoring the goal that delivered Canada the bronze medal at the 2012 Olympic Games, the second of three Olympics in which Matheson competed. Matheson and the Canadians followed up the 2012 bronze with another in 2016. Matheson’s 2015 FIFA Women’s World Cup team won the tournament title on home soil. 

At Princeton, Matheson earned first-team All-American recognition and was the 2004 Ivy League Rookie of the Year while helping Princeton to the NCAA College Cup semifinals. That was the first of four first-team All-Ivy honors for Matheson, who finished her career as the 2007 Ivy League Player of the Year. 

Matheson graduated fourth on Princeton’s all-time points list, scoring 26 goals and adding 26 assists. The 26 goals were fifth all-time when Matheson graduated while she graduated as Princeton’s all-time assist leader. 

Matheson was part of the inaugural NWSL season in 2013, playing for the Washington Spirit, and went on to play with Seattle and then Utah before retiring from soccer in 2021.

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Boston College commit William Moore headlines Bruins’ Day 2 picks

All seven picks, including one each from Sweden, Czechia, and Russia, are expected to be on the ice Monday in Brighton for the start of the club’s four-day development camp at Warrior Arena. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. “It’s been a long time […]

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All seven picks, including one each from Sweden, Czechia, and Russia, are expected to be on the ice Monday in Brighton for the start of the club’s four-day development camp at Warrior Arena.

“It’s been a long time since we’ve had a little bit of volume,” said general manager Don Sweeney. “It didn’t stop us from trying to move back or up in the draft to target some players we felt we might be in position to take rather than just the volume of things. But the excitement’s there. You could tell our scouting staff in general, with such a disappointing season, there was energy in realizing that we have to take advantage of the missteps the club had.”

A lanky (180 pounds) center with smooth hands, Moore played last season with the US National Team Development Program.

“Over the past couple of years, I gained a lot of strength,” Moore told the Globe Saturday. “I still have a lot of room to grow, but I think overall that’s translated to puck protection, more power in my stride — just going to keep going, keep building and hopefully develop into the player that I know I can be.”

An accomplished piano player, Moore won the Little Mozarts International Competition, playing “Polonaise in G Minor.”

Is there a correlation between hockey and piano?

“I think there is,” said Moore, noting he played piano for years before taking up pucks. “It brings a lot of creativity to my game. I think hands-wise, I am very skilled with the puck. And I think I have a lot of finesse, and have that on the keys, too.”

As a toddler, an acute lymph node infection rendered Moore temporarily deaf.

“It makes it seem like I was dealing with severe adversity, when I don’t even remember it — I was like 2 or 3,” Moore told the Athletic this spring. “I was deaf at some point but that got fixed pretty quickly.”

“I’m so excited,” added Moore, noting the idea of going to BC was his reason to choose college as a path to the NHL. “I’m sure, as you know, the BC campus is next level, the coaching staff is unbelievable. The players, the whole group there in general is next to none, and their development plan is perfect for me. I’m just going to be happier. Awesome.”

With their second pick in Round 2, No. 61 overall, the Bruins grabbed Liam Pettersson, a free-wheeling Swedish defenseman (6-2/175) whose game is centered on the puck.

“A treat to watch when he has the puck on his stick,” per eliteprospects.com. Played junior (Vaxjo Lakers) last season, with a line of 6-15–21 in 39 games.

Pettersson, talking with the Globe by phone from Sweden, said he was unaware the Bruins had interest in him, adding that he was thrilled to be coming to Boston. He is also an avid golfer, with a four handicap.

After dishing their No. 69 slot to the Canadiens, for picks 79 and 108, the Bruins used the first of those choices to take Minnesota high schooler Cooper Simpson, a left wing who split last season with between his hometown Shakopee High School and USHL Tri-Cty.

Simpson is an “explosive skater” with strong stick skills, according to eliteprospects.com. As a senior, he led the Sabers with better than 2 points per game (49-34–83 in 31 games).

Vashek Blanar, a 6-4 defenseman who played last season in Sweden, was the Bruins pick at No. 100.

Blanar, who originally used the family name Richards (his mother’s maiden name), played junior hockey the last two seasons in Sweden, most recently with Troja-Ljungby. He was born in Eagle, Colo., and moved to Czechia at age 4, his parents eager to return to family and friends.

Blanar, who has committed to play at least one more season in Sweden, will fly to Boston on Sunday. Growing up, he was a big Milan Lucic fan.

“Loved his game … power forward, and you know, kind of rat,” said Blanar, speaking to the Globe from home via phone.

He said the Bruins played in the first NHL game he ever watched and remain his favorite team.

“Pretty sure I still have a Bruins hat,” he said, “from when I was 4 years old.

The Bruins opted to wheel their No. 108 pick, gained in the swap with the Habs, to Tampa Bay for the Lightning’s fourth-round pick next June.

Cole Chandler was the Bruins pick at No. 133. A left-shot center, (6-2/176), from Bedford, Nova Scotia, he played last season in the Quebec League (Shawinigan) and figures he’ll return there for at least one more season.

“I’m just trying to live in the moment,” said Chandler, asked what he felt was a reasonable career path in his pursuit to play in the NHL. “Stay present and get better each day — I don’t think there is a certain time I expect to make that jump.”

Nova Scotia in recent years has delivered a number of elite players to the NHL, including the likes of Sidney Crosby, Brad Marchand, and Nathan MacKinnon.

“I think it’s just being a kid from the Maritimes,” Chandler offered when asked about Nova Scotia developing such elite talent. “We’re a different breed over here.”

The Bruins’ final pick (No. 165) was another left-shot center, Kirill Yemelyanov, from the Yaroslavl Lokomotiv junior team. Yemelyanov collected 13 goals and 23 points in 35 games last season.

Jim McBride of the Globe Staff contributed to this report from Los Angeles.


Kevin Paul Dupont can be reached at kevin.dupont@globe.com.





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Bruins add another Eagle to pipeline

After years of sacrificing first- and second-round draft picks in pursuit of the elusive Stanley Cup, the Bruins believe they’ve now taken a big step toward replenishing their prospect coffers in this weekend’s NHL draft, in which the haul was four centers, a pair of defensemen, and a left wing. It’s been a long time […]

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After years of sacrificing first- and second-round draft picks in pursuit of the elusive Stanley Cup, the Bruins believe they’ve now taken a big step toward replenishing their prospect coffers in this weekend’s NHL draft, in which the haul was four centers, a pair of defensemen, and a left wing.

It’s been a long time coming, but after the team finally slipped out of contention for the first time in nine years, it had to be done. While GM Don Sweeney explored using some picks to pick up a roster player, they kept their No. 7 pick, choosing James Hagens on Friday, and then used both their second-round picks on center William Moore and defenseman Liam Pettersson.

“It’s been a long time since we’ve gone with a little bit of volume,” said Sweeney. “It didn’t stop us from trying to move back or going up in the draft to target some players we felt we might get in position to take rather that just the volume aspect of things. But the excitement is there. You get that with our scouting staff in general, with the disappointing season we had, there was energy in realizing we have to take advantage of missteps the club had.”

There was also an emphasis on high-end skill and competitiveness, which was made possible by their better drafting positions, according to director of amateur scouting Ryan Nadeau.

“I think having more picks and some higher picks allowed us to probably look at some players with a little more offensive ability and upside that sometimes in the areas that we tended to be picking, we didn’t have some of those players available, or some of those players that were (available), there’s a lot of risk associated sometimes with that player, whether they’re undersized or there’s a major lack of detail in their game, where there are other players sitting at the same spot that you really appreciate their attention to detail, their heaviness, their hardness,” said Nadeau. “We didn’t shy away from that, but I just think we ended up in a spot where we could really take some swings at some higher-upside offensive players that maybe in the past we hadn’t had as many swings on that style of player.”

To start the day on Saturday, the Bruins added another prospect into the Chestnut Hill-to-Causeway Street pipeline with the 51st pick.

In the second round, the B’s selected Moore, a 6-2, 175-pound center who played for the U.S. National Team Development program. From Mississauga, Ontario, he is a dual citizen of the Canada and the U.S. and will be headed to Boston College in the fall.

Moore is known for his intelligence, on and off the ice. If there’s such a thing as an 18-year-old Renaissance man, Moore is that. He is also an accomplished pianist and violinist while, in the athletic realm, he’s played soccer (thanks in part to his Brazilian mother), tennis and lacrosse before zeroing on his hockey.

“(Piano) was the first thing I tried, hockey was one of the last,” said the personable Moore. “It brings a lot of creativity to my game. Hands-wise, I think I’m very skilled with the puck and I think I have a lot of finesse and I have that on the keys, too. I think there’s a lot of translation. I played a lot earlier on but nowadays its more of a leisure thing. It’s tough to fit into a busy hockey schedule. But it’s been a big part of my life and I’ve still got it.”

Moore called being selected by the Bruins “incredible” after he had already chosen Boston for his college choice. Moore, whose family moved around a lot before laying down some roots in the hockey-mad Toronto area, gave his own self-scout.

“I think I have a very unique play-style,” said Moore, the first person in his family to play hockey. “I have a big frame that’s still filling out but I think I have a sort of high IQ and a creative aspect to my game, a lot of offensive skill and creativity and a lot of finesse. Big frame, very dynamic offensively and I’m just looking to bring that 200-foot game but also my offensive game. I’m super-excited.”

He joins Hagens, Dean Letourneau Oskar Jellvik, Andre Gasseau and Kristian Kostadinski, selected by the B’s last year, and will be an incoming freshman, as current or future Eagles in the B’s prospect pool.

Moore posted 27-32-59 totals in 54 games.

With their second pick in the second round (61st), the B’s chose Swedish defenseman Pettersson. At 6-2, 170 pounds, Pettersson clearly needs to fill out a bit and, as a left shot, he doesn’t address an organizational need at right D, though Sweeney pointed out that many left shots can play the right side. While he may not project to be a high-end prospect, his strength is in his transition game. He had 6-15-21 totals for the Vaxjo Lakers junior team.

The B’s then moved their third-round pick (69th) to Montreal for the 79th and 108th picks.

With the 79th pick, the B’s chose American left wing Cooper Simpson, who played Minnesota high school hockey, ripping it up for Shakopee High with 49 goals and 34 assists in 31 games. His shoot-first mindset was apparent with the Tri-City Storm of the USHL, when he had seven goals and one assist in nine games.

“I think I’m a very offensively talented guy. I think I make plays other people can’t see and I shoot the puck very well,” said Simpson. “I stayed at Shakopee because I’m born and raised here. I had a goal of making the state tournament and winning it all and I came up a little short. But I think I left Shakopee a better place than I found it, so that’s the ultimate goal there. At Tri-City, I knew a lot of the guys going there so I had a confidence boost there, and being able to score goals at a high level helps you be confident and it went well there, so it’s good.”

The 6-1, 179-pound Simpson is committed to go to North Dakota, though it sounded like the B’s want him to do another year of development in junior before going to Grand Forks after the club had watched last year’s first-rounder Letourneau struggle in taking a big leap from Canadian prep school St. Andrew’s and going directly to BC.

With the 100th pick, the B’s took 6-foot-4, 183-pound left shot defenseman Vashek Blanar, a Czechia-produced player who played in Sweden, and then traded the 108th pick to the Lightning for a fourth-rounder in 2026.

The B’s selected center Cole Chandler, a 6-foot-2, 176-pound center who had 13-19-32 totals in 64 games for Shawinigan of the QMJHL, with the 133rd pick. Chandler’s regular season totals were modest but he then heated up in the Q playoffs, notching 5-7-12 totals in 16 games.

Finally, with the 165th pick, the B’s chose 6-foot, 170-pound Russian centerman Kirill Yemelyanov, billed by Elite Prospects as a smart two-way centerman.

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Who did the Chicago Blackhawks select? Meet the class.

Whenever you get ready to take a red marker to the Chicago Blackhawks’ 2025 draft sheet, just remember defenseman Sam Rinzel. Rinzel was labeled a first-round “reach” in 2022 but has been praised as a probable keeper after his nine-game NHL debut late last season. “You really feel you get your chest out a little […]

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Whenever you get ready to take a red marker to the Chicago Blackhawks’ 2025 draft sheet, just remember defenseman Sam Rinzel.

Rinzel was labeled a first-round “reach” in 2022 but has been praised as a probable keeper after his nine-game NHL debut late last season.

“You really feel you get your chest out a little bit, especially when you’re part of it,” Hawks amateur scouting director Mike Doneghey said Saturday at Fifth Third Arena. “And I read all the same stuff. No one ever says, ‘Geez, let’s give him an A-plus now for Sam Rinzel.’ No one ever does that.”

Yet the Hawks have another batch of potential head-scratchers after the two-day draft.

A first-round forward who doubles as a quarterback.

A fourth-round forward who seems to be allergic to goals.

A defenseman whose main trait seems to be punching people.

“If (Minnesota high school QB) Mason West was just a hockey player coming out of Fargo, he’s gone by (No.) 20,” Doneghey shot back about the forward whom the Hawks traded back into the first round to select 29th.

This draft, the Hawks decided to do things a little differently. They surveyed their pipeline, full of smallish, skilled players such as Frank Nazar and Oliver Moore, and realized they have deficits in other areas.

“You start seeing them come through the door here and how they play, then you can be like, ‘OK, we need a little bit bigger wingers, we need a little bit more hardness,’” Doneghey said. “Skating has always been a trait of ours. So maybe we don’t need a burner as much. We need a powerful skater but a different skater.”

“We want to get harder and usually the harder guys are the bigger guys.”—Blackhawks scouting chief Mike Doneghey on the majority of the Hawks’ draft picks standing between 6-foot-2 and 6-6

— Phil Thompson (@philthompsontrib.bsky.social) 2025-06-28T22:51:33.347Z

The Hawks made three first-round selections Friday. They drafted the top-ranked international player, Swedish forward Anton Frondell, with the No. 3 pick and selected Czech winger Vaclav Nestrasil at No. 25.

Shortly after choosing Nestrasil, the Hawks traded with the Carolina Hurricanes to acquire the No. 29 pick they used on West. They gave up two second-round picks, Nos. 34 and 62, plus a fifth-rounder in 2027.

All told, the Hawks have had 11 first-round picks over the last four years. General manager Kyle Davidson said that’s intentional.

“The more you pick early … you’re more likely to succeed,” Davidson said. “And so we’ve taken that philosophy and tried to hit it with volume.

“But I also believe that some of these players are getting to the NHL, some of them are on their path. But from our assessment, an objective assessment, we feel their development so far, we are ahead of the odds in some way. I think we are beating the odds and getting a few more players out of drafts than the odds may dictate.”

The Hawks made five more picks on Day 2 of the draft Saturday, trading the No. 197 pick in the seventh round to the Florida Panthers for a 2026 seventh-rounder. Here’s a look at all eight of their selections.

2025 Blackhawks draft picks

  • No. 3 (first round): Forward Anton Frondell
  • No. 25 (first): Forward Vaclav Nestrasil
  • No. 29 (first): Forward Mason West
  • No. 66 (third): Forward Nathan Behm
  • No. 98 (fourth): Forward Julius Sumpf
  • No. 107 (fourth): Forward Parker Holmes
  • No. 162 (sixth): Defenseman Ashton Cumby
  • No. 194 (seventh): Goalie Ilya Kanarsky

No. 3: Forward Anton Frondell

An image of Anton Frondell and his parents being interviewed on ESPN after the Blackhawks selected Frondell with the No. 3 pick in the NHL draft is cast on a screen at the team's official watch party Friday, June 27, 2025, at Recess in Chicago. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)
An image of Anton Frondell and his parents being interviewed on ESPN after the Blackhawks selected Frondell with the No. 3 pick in the NHL draft is cast on a screen at the team’s official watch party Friday, June 27, 2025, at Recess in Chicago. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

It all started with a pair of pink figure skates.

“It was the first time I stepped on the ice,” Frondell, 18, said on Friday’s ESPN broadcast. “Dad just found some pink figure skating skates. I actually skated with them for a year until he (found) out (and said): ‘Oh, Anton, he loves the sport. He wants this.’

“Then he bought me my real first skates. He really wanted me to be a tennis player when I was younger. But I didn’t fall for the sport.”

NHL Central Scouting regards Frondell as a skilled player with strong legs and a quick stick.

“(He) has a nifty wrist shot and his release is solid and accurate. His hockey IQ shines with intelligent moves, with or without the puck. Likes to set up teammates using small moves and tricky passes.”

Frondell said he’d like to play in the NHL next season, but it’s more likely he’ll return to Sweden to play in the men’s league. However, Davidson said Frondell will be able to participate in Hawks training camp.

“He’s a really smart hockey player,” Davidson said. “He uses his body very effectively, especially in battles along the wall. He just has a really projectable game to the NHL.”

Down the road, Frondell’s arrival in Chicago may beg the question of whether he’ll push Connor Bedard to the wing.

“He doesn’t consider himself a center (or a) wing anyway,” Hawks director of amateur scouting Mike Doneghey said of Frondell.

Doneghey said he asked Frondell at the scouting combine which position he preferred, “and he said, ‘Whatever Connor doesn’t play, I’ll play.’ He’s got a real confidence about him.”

“Barkov’s probably a few inches taller. … I would say he’s probably between a Barkov and an Anton Lundell … he’s a big, detail-oriented center with a brain.”—Blackhawks scouting director Mike Doneghey on Anton Frondell and comparisons to Aleksander Barkov

— Phil Thompson (@philthompsontrib.bsky.social) 2025-06-28T04:16:41.753Z

Marcus Krüger, a two-time Stanley Cup winner with the Hawks, is Frondell’s teammate on Djurgårdens IF. Frondell said Krüger told him: “That’s the best team in the league. If you want to win, go to Chicago.”

Davidson said Krüger supplied Frondell with a lot of information, but Frondell is naturally inquisitive.

“This kid called Johnny Oduya out of the blue just to go meet with him to learn about his breathing exercises that he does,” Davidson said.

No. 25: Forward Vaclav Nestrasil

Nestrasil is a 6-foot-5, 187-pound native of Praha, Czechia, who produced 19 goals and 23 assists in 61 games for Muskegon of the USHL en route to this year’s Clark Cup championship.

NHL Central Scouting calls the 18-year-old “a very skilled power forward. Has a nose for the net and when he uses his size, he’s tough to handle. (He) possesses a hard shot and quick release, making him a scoring threat every time he enters the offensive zone.”

Said Davidson: “You like the physical attributes where (he’s a) big, athletic guy that can really move. He’s got some talent and some really good hockey sense. And again, a raw package.”

No. 29: Forward Mason West

Mason West, left, stands with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman after being drafted by the Chicago Blackhawks during the NHL hockey draft Friday, June 27, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
Mason West, left, stands with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman after being drafted by the Chicago Blackhawks during the NHL hockey draft Friday, June 27, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

West is a 6-6, 220-pound rising senior at Edina (Minn.) High School. A Division I college football recruit, he has committed to play college hockey at Michigan State — but not until he finishes his final season as a high school quarterback.

“He’s behind the curve; he’s not quite dedicated himself 100% to hockey,” Davidson said of West, who will turn 18 in August and was one of the youngest players eligible for the 2025 NHL draft.

“But at that size, that athleticism, that skating ability, that talent, the sky is the limit. … I just really wanted to get back into the first round and take what I thought was a grand slam hack. I was swinging for the fences and figured, why not?”

West said he felt “ready right now” to start his Hawks career after hearing his name called.

“It was just super special,” he said. “I have family down in Chicago (an uncle and cousin), and I had a really good relationship with Chicago from the start.”

In actuality, West is far from “ready right now.” He has designs on a championship — in high school football. Last year Edina’s postseason ended in the Class 6A quarterfinals in a rout by Maple Grove, and West considers the matter unfinished business.

Edina quarterback Mason West gets a first down and draws a roughing call on Centennial's Caden Coppersmith during the Minnesota Class 6A championship game Nov. 24, 2023, at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. (Matt Blewett/Special to the St. Paul Pioneer Press)
Edina quarterback Mason West gets a first down and draws a roughing call on Centennial’s Caden Coppersmith during the Minnesota Class 6A championship game Nov. 24, 2023, at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. (Matt Blewett/Special to the St. Paul Pioneer Press)

“I really owed it to my community,” he said. “I really think they need me, and the chance to be able to go back and try to win a state championship would be super special.”

After that, West will play hockey for the USHL’s Fargo Force this season and for Michigan State the following season. Despite the long runway to the NHL, he insists he’s committed to hockey.

“I chose before to play hockey,” West said. “I kind of knew after the first game after Fargo, having that experience, and (I) looked into the next step and the path for me.”

Doneghey added, “He was one of the highest risers in the rankings once he went to Fargo and started playing hockey more than training for football.”

Mason West reacts after being drafted by the Blackhawks with the 29th pick during the first round of the NHL draft Friday, June 27, 2025 in Los Angeles. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)
Mason West reacts after being drafted by the Blackhawks with the 29th pick during the first round of the NHL draft Friday, June 27, 2025 in Los Angeles. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

West likened his playing style to rangy Buffalo Sabres forward Tage Thompson.

“Just because of how big he is,” he said. “I try to implement my game from him a ton, just the way he shoots the puck and passes the puck and plays the game.”

Doneghey said West isn’t just big and athletic. He brings another element as a two-sport star.

“He brings that quarterback mentality to the ice when he’s entering the zone,” he said. “He’s always scanning the zone on what plays to make. And he’s comfortable with contact.

“It’ll be a longer road with both him and Nestrasil, but they’re just starting in their process. Three years and then we’ll see where it goes with those.”

No. 66: Forward Nathan Behm

Nathan Behm poses after being drafted by the Blackhawks with the 66th pick of the NHL draft Saturday, June 28, 2025, in Los Angeles. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)
Nathan Behm poses after being drafted by the Blackhawks with the 66th pick of the NHL draft Saturday, June 28, 2025, in Los Angeles. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

The 6-2, 202-pound winger finished his season with 31 goals and 35 assists, good for fifth in scoring in the WHL.

Doneghey said that like last year’s third-round picks, “we knew there was a value (but) we weren’t going to chase (it) in the second round. But if he was there, it was worth a shot.”

Behm isn’t as strong a skater as, say, Oliver Moore, but “he can score — that’s his calling card,” Doneghey said. “I wouldn’t’ be surprised if he gets 45, 50 (goals) in Kamloops this year. He’s got a brain, so he can play with smart players. Sometimes it goes in and out a little bit. That’s why he was in the third round.”

Like West, Behm stands out in another sport. In August, he won the under-17 division at the Amateur Long Drive Canadian Championships in Edmonton at 327.9 yards.

“I guess (it) translated pretty good (to hockey) with the power aspect,” Behm told Chicago reporters via Zoom on Saturday. “I’m not really too into it. It’s just something I do on the side and don’t really train for it. But I’m just naturally gifted at that part.”

NHL Central Scouting said Behm’s “skating has improved over last year (and he) carries the puck more than a season ago and shows some speed and quickness to elude checkers. … The puck follows him around, particularly close to the net where he manufactures chances.”

Behm sees himself as a smart, skilled winger, though he plans to work on being more explosive.

“I bring a dual threat, goal scoring and playmaking,” he said. “So I have a lot of offensive upside, and I’m big as well.”

No. 98: Forward Julius Sumpf

The Moncton Wildcats' Julius Sumpf dives for the puck during a Memorial Cup semifinal against the London Knights on May 30, 2025, in Rimouski, Quebec. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press via AP)
The Moncton Wildcats’ Julius Sumpf dives for the puck during a Memorial Cup semifinal against the London Knights on May 30, 2025, in Rimouski, Quebec. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press via AP)

The Hawks went for size again early in the fourth round with the 6-1, 190-pound German. Sumpf, 20, was No. 4 pick Caleb Desnoyers’ linemate with the Moncton Wildcats and played center for Germany in the world juniors.

“Big guy, can skate well,” Doneghey said.

Sumpf put up 26 goals and 39 assists in the regular season for Moncton and exploded for 10 goals and six assists in six playoff games to help the Wildcats win the QMJHL championship, ending a 15-year drought.

“He just plays a power, hard game,” Doneghey said. “I love the fact that he’s going to Providence (College). The way Nate Leaman coaches, they’re a match made in heaven. He plays that direct, hard game.”

No. 98: Forward Parker Holmes

Rinse and repeat: The Hawks picked up a winger who checks in at 6-3 and 222 pounds from the OHL’s Brantford Bulldogs, where he’s a teammate of Hawks prospect Nick Lardis.

Holmes, 18, is a left-handed shot with a scant resume. He had just one goal and no assists and a minus-8 rating in 21 games for the Bulldogs and just three goals and seven assists in 51 games the previous season with the Central Canada Hockey League’s Kemptville 73’s.

“It still goes back to our traits, right? … I say it till I’m blue in the face, guys are sick of hearing it: ‘Stick to the traits, stick to the traits, stick to the traits.’”—Blackhawks Mike Doneghey on some of the drafts picks being raw in terms of development

— Phil Thompson (@philthompsontrib.bsky.social) 2025-06-28T23:01:53.825Z

“We set the world on fire, I guess, because everyone was looking at his stat line,” Doneghey joked. “He had a shoulder surgery in November, same surgery that (Hawks prospects Roman) Kantserov and (Marek) Vanacker had.”

The Hawks won’t be looking for Holmes to light the net ablaze as long as he brings the heat in other ways.

“We wanted to continue to get bigger and we wanted some guys who had an element — hardness, toughness — and Parker certainly fills that role,” Doneghey said.

No. 162: Defenseman Ashton Cumby

The 6-5, 216-pound native of Bonnyville, Alberta, has the markings of an enforcer from the back end. He had 102 penalty minutes in 68 regular-season games for the WHL’s Seattle Thunderbirds and averaged 2.2 penalties in the playoffs.

He totaled three goals and 11 assists in the regular season and postseason and didn’t score a goal in three previous WHL seasons with three teams.

Doneghey said Cumby had nine fights this past season and 13 the season before. During a fight in March, Cumby knocked Tri-City Americans defenseman Terrell Goldsmith unconscious, causing the game to be suspended and Goldsmith to be hospitalized, then released.

Doneghey acknowledged that Cumby “has holes” in his games, but asked, “Did you watch him on video?”

“We felt the need to get a little bit harder, tougher, maybe to protect some of our skill guys,” he continued. “You ask a couple of players, ‘Who’s the toughest guy in the Western Hockey League?’ … Every kid in the Western League was, ‘Cumby, Cumby, Cumby.’”

No. 194: Goalie Ilya Kanarsky

The 20-year-old Russian checks in at 6-3, 192 pounds and had a 22-8-1 record, .938 save percentage, 2.24 goals-against average and four shutouts in 34 games for AKM Tula.

Hawks goaltending scout Dan Ellis kept watch of Kirill Zarubin, a 2024 third-round pick by the Calgary Flames and Kanarsky’s competition, and noticed that “Kanarsky kept outplaying him this year.”

“Again, with the Russian, you have his rights forever,” Doneghey said. “So a 6-3 goalie, that size, just kind of see where it falls.”

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Blackhawks draft pick West also star high school quarterback

Lee, a forward who has played the past 13 seasons for New York and has been captain since the start of 2018-19, told West to follow his heart. Lee was recruited to play college football for schools such as Northern Illinois University but opted to play hockey at Notre Dame for three seasons (2010-13) before […]

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Lee, a forward who has played the past 13 seasons for New York and has been captain since the start of 2018-19, told West to follow his heart. Lee was recruited to play college football for schools such as Northern Illinois University but opted to play hockey at Notre Dame for three seasons (2010-13) before turning pro.

“You’ve got to love what you end up doing, whether that’s four years in college and then some,” Lee said earlier this year. “I think it’s tough when you love both sports.”

West is good at football; at 6-foot-6, 218 pounds, he can see over the line of scrimmage and is durable enough to survive the pounding of the position he plays.

Last season, he completed 178 of 244 passes for 2,592 yards, with 37 touchdowns and four interceptions. He finished with a 139.9 passer rating and received recruiting interest from Marshall University, Kent State University, Miami (Ohio) University and South Dakota State University.

West believes he can be great at hockey.

In three seasons of high school hockey, he has 114 points (51 goals, 63 assists) in 91 games. Two seasons ago, he had 38 points (15 goals, 23 assists) in 30 games and won a state championship.

He believes his athletic skill set translates best to the ice instead of the gridiron.

That’s where Thompson enters the conversation.

He has yet to speak to the Sabres star, but West studies the game of the power forward regularly.

Like West, Thompson is 6-foot-6.

Thompson played college hockey for two seasons at the University of Connecticut (2015-17), during which time he was selected by the St. Louis Blues in the first round (No. 26) of the 2016 NHL Draft.

He then struggled to find his game early in his pro career and has talked about how he needed to let his brain catch up to what his growing body could do.

Thompson scored 18 goals in his first 100 NHL games. But the 27-year-old has 158 goals in his past four seasons, figuring out the mechanics of his shot.

West knows that transition awaits him. He says he doesn’t believe he is done growing and said he has added almost an inch to his frame since last football season. He plans to put on another 10 pounds before arriving in Fargo in December.

“It’s hard to find a player like me, I guess, because I a think I’m a unique player,” West said. “I think I want to be like Tage Thompson, but I also want to be my own player and be unique in that way and try to do things that a lot of tall players can’t.”

The Blackhawks believe that will be the case, trading with the Carolina Hurricanes to get into the first round for a third time and get a player who was ranked No. 27 on the final list of North American skaters released by NHL Central Scouting.

“It’s just the tools — the raw tools are just something you don’t see that often,” Chicago general manager Kyle Davidson said. “He’s probably available at that point because he’s behind the curve. He’s not quite dedicated himself 100 percent to hockey, but at that size, that athleticism, that skating ability, that talent, the sky’s the limit.

“I’m swinging for the fences and figured, why not? Let’s go for a big one here, and so that’s kind of what I did.”



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Live Blog: Day 2 of the 2025 NHL Draft – Seattle Kraken

Welcome to the Sound Of Hockey NHL Draft Live Blog! The Seattle Kraken enter Day 2 of the NHL Draft with four picks—barring any trades, that’s the fewest selections they’ve had in any draft in their five-year history. We’ll be updating this post throughout the day as the Kraken make their picks. The most recent […]

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Welcome to the Sound Of Hockey NHL Draft Live Blog! The Seattle Kraken enter Day 2 of the NHL Draft with four picks—barring any trades, that’s the fewest selections they’ve had in any draft in their five-year history.

We’ll be updating this post throughout the day as the Kraken make their picks. The most recent updates will appear at the top, so scroll down if you want to catch up on earlier news.

If you missed Seattle’s first-round selection of Jake O’Brien on Friday, you can check out our profile on him here.


2:06 PM: Round 7 is complete and the draft is done

1:59 PM: The Seattle Kraken draft Loke Krantz

With their final pick in the NHL Draft, the Seattle Kraken selected another Swede, this time, it was Loke Krantz from the Linköping HC junior team. He tallied 12 goals and 5 assists in 44 games with the J20 squad.

1:36 PM: The Seattle Kraken draft Karl Annborn

With their first newly acquired draft pick, the Kraken selected defenseman Karl Annborn from the HV71 junior team. Annborn is considered a balanced defenseman with a broad set of skills. He recorded 3 goals and 21 assists last season while playing for the HV71 J20 team.

1:25 PM: Seattle Kraken trade their 7th round pick

The Kraken traded the 198th overall pick to the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for the 205th and 218th picks, both seventh-rounders in this year’s draft.

1:18 PM: Round 6 is complete

Draft is flying right now. Here are the picks from Round 6.

12:48 PM: Round 5 is complete

12:18 PM The Seattle Kraken draft Russian defender Maxim Agafonov

For only the second time in franchise history, the Seattle Kraken selected a Russian player, taking Maxim Agafonov with the 134th overall pick (goalie Semyon Vyazovoy was the other one in 2021). He’s currently playing for Ufa’s junior team in the Russian junior league, where he posted 14 points in 35 games this past season.

12:22 AM: Round 4 is complete

11:22 AM: Round 3 is complete

The Spokane Chiefs made their first pick of the 2025 Draft when Owen Martin was selected 92nd overall by Winnipeg. Here is the rest of Round 4.

11:02 AM: Kraken second-round selection Blake Fiddler speaks to the media

Blake Fiddler spoke to the Seattle media via Zoom after being selected 36th overall. Here are a few quotes from his media availability.

“It’s an unbelievable feeling, such a great organization. I couldn’t be happier to go to a team that seems like they wanted me, and I couldn’t be more thankful.

“A little bit emotional the past couple days, but it’s awesome to finally be picked.”

“I’m a rangy, two-way D-man that skates really well, especially for my size. I think that I use my legs all over the ice, I defend, good gaps, I can play heavy minutes, shut down top teams, and I have skills, so I’m able to use it offensively.”

10:31 AM: The Kraken select Will Reynolds

Will Reynolds is one of the younger players in this draft class, with an August birthday. He’s considered a shutdown defenseman with plenty of upside. He currently plays for the Acadie-Bathurst Titan in the QMJHL, though the team is relocating to Newfoundland next season. He had 4 goals and 14 assists last season.

10:15 AM: Round 2 in the books….on to round 3

Here are the results of round 3.

9:56 AM: The draft is flying by, especially compared to Friday night

Kraken will not pick until early in the third but here are some bits and pieces of the action since the Kraken selected Fiddler.

  • Two goalies have been selected in the second round. That’s four total in the draft so far.
  • The Portland Winterhawks had their first player selected in Max Psenicka.

9:28 AM: Seattle Kraken draft defenseman Blake Fiddler

Fiddler is a big defenseman for the Edmonton Oil Kings. He is the son of former NHLer Vernon Fiddler. Most analysts had Fiddler ranked late in the first round.

9:26 AM: We have a Seattle Kraken trade!!!

The Seattle Kraken traded the 36th and the 68th overall pick to the Philadelphia Flyers for the 36th and 38th pick. All picks are part of this draft.

9:16 AM: The draft has officially started

As of now, the Kraken have four picks to start the day. Here is how they are distributed.

8:50 AM: T-minus 10 minutes until the start of Day 2

We’re back for Rounds 2 through 7 of the 2025 NHL Draft! If you missed last night’s four-hour-plus production, here are a few quick tidbits to get you up to speed.

  • The Seattle Kraken selected Jake O’Brien, marking the fourth time they’ve drafted a center in the first round in their five-year history. I’m sure I wasn’t the only one scouring the internet for highlight reels of O’Brien—here’s one of my favorites:

  • The Seattle Thunderbirds had a big night with two players taken in the first round: Radim Mrtka (9th overall) and Braeden Cootes (15th). The last time Seattle had two first-rounders was back in 2022, when Kevin Korchinski (7) and Reid Schaefer (32) were picked.
  • The CHL led the way with 21 players selected in the first round, the league’s strongest showing since 2013.
  • Canada was well represented too, with 20 Canadian-born players drafted in the opening round, the most in a first round since all the way back in 1987.
  • As for surprises? There weren’t many. Most players went right around where public rankings had them pegged.
  • Not draft related, but another piece of big news was that Philipp Grubauer will not be bought out.

Here’s a look back at all the Round 1 results:





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In James Hagens, Bruins have hope that a franchise talent is on the way

Bruins “You just got to go out there next year and prove everyone that passed on you wrong.” James Hagens has the potential to be a top-line center. (AP Photo/Greg M. Cooper, file) By Conor Ryan June 28, 2025 | 8:50 AM 5 minutes to read COMMENTARY Don Sweeney had heard all of the noise […]

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Bruins

“You just got to go out there next year and prove everyone that passed on you wrong.”

Boston College forward James Hagens (10) reacts after scoring a goal during the third period of an NCAA hockey regionals game against Bentley on March 28, 2025, in Manchester, N.H.
James Hagens has the potential to be a top-line center. (AP Photo/Greg M. Cooper, file)

COMMENTARY

Don Sweeney had heard all of the noise at this point when it came to James Hagens and his slipping draft stock. 

Anointed as the crown jewel of the 2025 NHL Draft class in the fall, the skilled Boston College forward opened his tenure at Chestnut Hill as a projected franchise center. 

Nine months later, the talk of Hagens’ game has shifted — with the narrative centered more around his shortcomings than the damage that he’s routinely doled out against opposing defenses over the last few years.

But with the ceiling of Boston’s next contention window stunted for however long the Bruins trudge forward without a proven talent down the middle, Sweeney wasn’t going to overthink things at pick No. 7. 

Hagens may not present the same imposing profile as 6-foot-5 Roger McQueen, nor is he as pugnacious as Brady Martin. 

There’s no guarantee that Hagens’s triple-digit scoring totals with the U.S. National Team Development Program (USNTDP) will lead to him being a point-per-game regular at hockey’s highest level. 

But for all of the discourse regarding Hagens and his potential at the NHL level, Sweeney pushed back against talk of Hagens’s slide down to No. 7 on Friday. 

For Boston, Hagens represents more than just high value at where he was on the 2025 draft order. 

On a Bruins team in desperate need of talent, the Long Island native offers hope that reinforcements are on the way — and sooner rather than later. 

“He’s been that way his whole life — in terms of what he’s done,” Sweeney said of Hagens’ track record. “So we just hope the natural progression is you’ll be able to do at the NHL level.

“Again, it’s a tough league. You find that out when you get in. You realize that you’re in a much deeper pool of players and he’ll have his own challenges. But I think he’s driven to be that top player and wants to be a difference maker.” 

Despite his smaller frame at 5-foot-11 and 190 pounds, it doesn’t take very long to notice Hagens out on the ice. 

Be it his time with the USNTDP or at Boston College, Hagens uses his high-end speed and slick hands to gain clean entries and put opposing defenses on their heels.

A poised playmaker who likes to have the puck on his stick, Hagens can do damage from the perimeter by orchestrating Grade-A looks — or can cut toward inside ice and capitalize on the chaos that spills out in and around the crease. 

Hagens’ point production as an 18-year-old player at Boston College (11 goals, 37 points in 37 games) may not leap off the page — especially when compared to other freshman phenoms in Hockey East like like Jack Eichel (71 points in 40 games) and Macklin Celebrini (64 points in 38 games).

But Sweeney acknowledged that Hagens’ body of work against Hockey East competition didn’t stand as an outlier from his previous production with the USNTDP. 

“I think that’s a little unfair in terms of players going in as a freshman,” Sweeney said of Hagens’ first year at BC and whether it hurt his draft stock. “You look back at James’ track record, he’s been a prolific point producer. If you’d seen him in the World Juniors — again, against his peer group, he was on the upper echelon on the production side of things. 

“There’s been a few players, you’re right, that have gone into college hockey at that age and done better overall. But there’s no shade in the type of year he had — playing on the top line, one of the top teams in the country. So there’s no concern on our part in terms of thinking he took a step back from a production standpoint. 

“He’ll be perfectly fine moving forward. And that’s why we drafted him. We feel he’s a guy that can help generate offensively and continue to round out his 200-foot game, but wants to play it at every single situation and has produced at every level that he’s been at.”

Hagens shared a similar sentiment about his performance in Hockey East — especially when measured against the higher scoring totals that he would have inevitably racked up had he dominated against fellow teenagers in the Canadian junior leagues. 

“I think next year you’ll be able to hopefully see,” Hagens said of proving doubters wrong after his first year of college hockey. “I thought this year was really good. You just got to go out there next year and prove everyone that passed on you wrong. 

“But hey — I’m in a spot where I want to be. I wanted to be, I want to be a Boston Bruno. I’m really excited to get things going.”

Despite Hagens’s hope of making the jump to the pro game right away, Sweeney stressed that Boston won’t “fast-track” its new top prospect if he’s not ready in 2025-26. 

As the top returning talent at BC, Hagens could build off his promising freshman year on an Eagles team that will feature four other Bruins draft picks (Oskar Jellvik, Dean Letourneau, Andre Gasseau, and Kristian Kostadinski). 

And if Hagens takes another step forward with the Eagles, there’s a tangible scenario where Boston’s blue-chip prospect is ready to make the jump to the NHL ranks by late March 2026 — following the same path as his former BC teammate, Ryan Leonard. 

Hagens is not the perfect prospect, nor is it a guarantee that the former No. 1 prospect in his draft year will be the next Jack Hughes — or even a tier below, like the 5-10 Logan Cooley. 

But some things are indisputable with a player like James Hagens. 

The playmaking center racked up 102 points in 58 games with the U.S. U18 national team  —  outscoring the likes of Leonard (94), Phil Kessel (98 points), and Matthew Tkachuk (95 points) during their respective U18 campaigns.  Only Patrick Kane, Cole Eiserman, Clayton Keller, Jack Hughes, Auston Matthews, Will Smith, and Gabe Perreault matched or equaled those scoring totals with the NTDP.

His 22-point showing (nine goals, 13 assists) across seven games during the 2024 World U18 Championships set a new tournament record — surpassing the previous mark set by Nikita Kucherov. 

And now, that playmaking talent will be donning a spoked-B in the coming years — potentially feeding David Pastrnak one-timers as soon as next spring. 

For Bruins fans, that should stand as a breath of fresh air for a team awaiting for another franchise talent to step on the ice at TD Garden. 

“I wanted to be at a spot that wanted me the most,” Hagens said. “I’m so lucky that I ended up being a Boston Bruin. It’s the best spot in the world. It’s a dream come true for me and for my whole entire family.

“So I’m just so excited right now. I’m really excited to be able to say that I’m a Boston Bruin, and I take a lot of pride in that.” 

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Conor Ryan is a staff writer covering the Bruins, Celtics, Patriots, and Red Sox for Boston.com, a role he has held since 2023.





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