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Why James Hagens dropped down NHL draft boards, and the Islanders’ unique predicament at No. 1

James Hagens entered the 2025 draft cycle coming off an MVP performance at the 2024 U18 World Championships and a dominant season in the USHL. He was projected by many — including myself and several NHL scouts I spoke to — as the No. 1 prospect for this class. He had a very good draft […]

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James Hagens entered the 2025 draft cycle coming off an MVP performance at the 2024 U18 World Championships and a dominant season in the USHL. He was projected by many — including myself and several NHL scouts I spoke to — as the No. 1 prospect for this class.

He had a very good draft season. Hagens posted a point per game as a freshman at Boston College, playing major minutes on one of the top teams in college hockey. He centered the top line for Team USA at the World Juniors, where they won gold. He has a rich history of prolific scoring and being one of the very best players in his age group. He is among the very best skaters and puck handlers in this draft.

We’ve been spoiled recently with the years Macklin Celebrini and Adam Fantilli had in college in their draft seasons. Hagens didn’t do what they did, but his season compares to what Matty Beniers and Kent Johnson did at Michigan when they were top-five picks in 2021.

Hagens has outplayed several top draft prospects he’s being compared to — or has apparently been surpassed by — at various events. He was way better than Porter Martone at this year’s World Juniors and arguably just as good or better than him at the U18 Worlds last spring. At that tournament, where Hagens was a top player, Caleb Desnoyers was a fourth-line forward for Canada. Hagens also outplayed Michael Misa at their U17 Challenge two years ago.

So why isn’t he considered in the conversation for the best player in the draft anymore?

There are a few variables. While he played very well this season, evaluators have minor questions about how Hagens’ game would translate to the NHL. At BC, he had stretches this season where he was hard to notice at even strength and had too many games where he was invisible. He struggled to consistently get to the inside against bigger college defenders. He also struggled to score goals this season.

At barely 5-foot-11 and without a physical edge, his profile becomes harder to project as a top-line NHL center who you can win with. His compete level is decent and looked good at the World Juniors, but I wouldn’t call it a standout trait.

If Hagens turns into the most offensively productive player from this class, I wouldn’t be shocked, and frankly, I would call him the most purely talented offensive player in the class. But winning in the NHL is about more than scoring. Several players — such as Misa and potentially Anton Frondell, Desnoyers or Martone — may go ahead of Hagens simply because the profile they project as (bigger, two-way players, most as centers) is more valuable to NHL teams than a dynamic, scoring small player who may or may not be an NHL center.

The scouts who are bullish on Hagens, though, would argue that if he were playing junior hockey instead of college, he would have lapped some of those other players.

The Islanders’ predicament

Which brings us to the New York Islanders, who now face a fascinating decision.

As soon as they won the draft lottery, buzz around Hagens started up among a vocal part of the fan base. Hagens is from Long Island. He grew up an Islanders fan. For a franchise that lost their last No. 1 pick when John Tavares signed with Toronto as a free agent, the idea of drafting one of their own carries real emotional weight, especially given his profile as a projected No. 1 pick at some point.

That, however, is not the state of the draft currently. Right now, there’s one player most teams believe is fitting of the No. 1 pick: Matthew Schaefer. A minority leans toward Misa, but that is the extent of it. Frankly, from the scouts I’ve talked to, there are as many who feel Hagens isn’t a top-five player in the draft than who feel there’s a meaningful challenger to Schaefer at No. 1.

“Schaefer is the only truly special player in this draft,” said one NHL scout, with an executive we talked to stating, “Other than maybe Misa, Schaefer is in a tier of his own.”

Schaefer is a 6-foot-2 defenseman with tremendous skating ability who makes a lot of plays, competes hard and has the ability to control games from the back end. He projects as a star 25-minute-per-game NHL defenseman who helps you win playoff games. He dominated almost every game he suited up in this season, even if his playing time was limited due to injury. His offensive upside isn’t elite, but the total package is. Even if he wasn’t clearly ahead of Hagens a year ago at this time, Schaefer is nearly a full year younger than Hagens, and as he continued to develop this season, the separation became clear.

If the Islanders had the No. 2 pick, the Hagens conversation would make sense. He’s not my No. 2 ranked player, or that of almost any NHL scout I’ve talked to, but it’s perfectly within the realm of possibilities that Hagens ends up the pure best player in the class, surpassing Schaefer, and even more reasonable that he could end up the best forward in the draft. This isn’t a Connor Bedard or Macklin Celebrini draft where the difference from 1 to 5 is gigantic. But Hagens becoming the best player in the draft is not the likely outcome, and taking Hagens over Schaefer would be the move of an organization that is unserious about winning the Stanley Cup and putting a priority on other variables.

“They’d be going way off the board in the eyes of most teams if they took Hagens,” said one NHL scout.

The Tavares situation looms in the background, but it’s not the same. It’s understandable the organization feels overshadowed at times by the Rangers, but the Islanders aren’t the team they were in 2018. They have stable ownership. They have a permanent home in UBS Arena and have had reasonable playoff success in recent years. The idea that Hagens would stay just because he’s local isn’t enough to make up for passing on the better player.


Hagens is a fantastic NHL prospect with the potential to be an impact offensive player. He has the tools to be a consistent 60-80 point forward in the league or better. My NHL comparison for him is William Nylander. He’s a legitimate top-five talent and would be a perfectly reasonable pick at No. 2 or 3.

But as tends to be the case in many drafts, there is typically a distinction between the No. 1 prospect and the next best player. The gap isn’t as wide this year, but in the mind of most evaluators, and I tend to agree, the pick is clear-cut. As difficult as it may be, the Islanders have only one correct decision to make, and that is drafting Schaefer.

(Photo: Minas Panagiotakis / Getty Images)



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Field Hockey announces class of 2029

Story Links WORCESTER, Mass. – Holy Cross field hockey head coach Lindsay Jackson is excited to announce the addition of six student-athletes that will comprise the class of 2028. The slate of new Crusaders includes Alexa Birch, Ainsley Clough, Rachel Egan, Martina di Gregorio Giralt, Maeve Kiernan, and Hadley Rand.   Take […]

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WORCESTER, Mass. – Holy Cross field hockey head coach Lindsay Jackson is excited to announce the addition of six student-athletes that will comprise the class of 2028. The slate of new Crusaders includes Alexa Birch, Ainsley Clough, Rachel Egan, Martina di Gregorio Giralt, Maeve Kiernan, and Hadley Rand.
 
Take a closer look at the six newcomers below:
 
Alexa Birch | F/M | 5-6 | Upper Saddle River, N.J. | Northern Highlands

  • Played four seasons of varsity field hockey at Northern Highlands under head coach Ali Ege.
  • Served as a team captain as a senior.
  • Helped team to a State Sectional Championship in 2024 and four-straight County Championships (2021-2024), as well as a Team of the Year honor in 2022.
  • Finished Northern Highlands career with 145 points on 48 goals and 49 assists.
  • Was named to the NEFHL All-Division First Team, BCWCA All-Bergen County First Team in 2023 and 2024.
  • Also earned North Jersey All-Star Team Group III, Top Junior Field Hockey Player NJ, All-New Jersey Second Team in 2023, and First Team All-County, First Team NEFHL All-Division honors in 2022.
  • Also ran track at Northern Highlands.
  • Played club field hockey for the New Heights field hockey club under head coach Ali Good, helping the team to No. 9 on the USAFH U19 Club Team rankings.
  • Played in the national NIT in 2023 and 2025, and NCC in 2021 and 2024.
  • Was on the honor roll all four years at Vestal.

 
Ainsley Clough | M | 5-6 | New Canaan, Conn. | Sacred Heart Greenwich

  • Played four seasons of varsity field hockey at Sacred Heart Greenwich under head coach Alexandru Gheorghe.
  • Served as a team captain as a senior.
  • Earned team’s Most Improved Player Award as a sophomore and Honor Heart & Hustle Award as a senior.
  • Named 2023 Second Team FAA All-League and Western New England Prep School All-Star and 2024 First Team FAA All-League and Western New England Prep School All-Star.
  • Helped team to four FAA Regular Season Championships, two FAA Tournament Championships (2021 & 2024), a 2021 NEPSAC Regular Season Championship, and the NEPSAC Tournament finals in 2021.
  • Earned 2024 NFHCA High School Impact Senior Team, NFHCA Southern New England All-Region Team, Max Field Hockey All-Northeast Region Second Team, and 2023 & 2024 NFHCA Southern New England All-Region Team honors.
  • Also played three seasons of varsity lacrosse and four seasons of ice hockey at Sacred Heart.
  • Earned the 2024 and 2025 Fairchester Athletic Association Scholar-Athlete Award, the 2025 Upperclassman Athletic Award, and the 2025 Four Year Three Sport Award.
  • Played club field hockey for AGH under head coach Alexandru Gheorghe.
  • Helped team to first place at the 2023 Regional Club Championship and fifth place at the 2023 U16 National Club Championships.

 
Rachel Egan | F/M | 5-5 | Watertown, Mass. | Watertown

  • Played four seasons of varsity field hockey at Watertown under head coach Eileen Donahue.
  • Served as a team captain as a senior.
  • Helped team to a 92-0 record over the four years, winning four-straight MIAA D3 State Championships.
  • In 2023 and 2024, was named a Middlesex League All-Star, Middlesex League All-League honoree, MAX Field Hockey All-Region First Team, NFHCA Massachusetts All-Region First Team, Boston Globe All-Scholastic, and Boston Herald All-Scholastic.
  • Was also named the Middlesex League Most Valuable Player, Boston Globe D3 Player of the Year, and Massachusetts Field Hockey Coaches Association Best of 60 Senior All-Star in 2024.
  • Led Massachusetts and ranked fourth in the nation with 58 goals as a senior.
  • Finished Watertown career with 96 goals and 48 assists.
  • Also ran indoor and outdoor track at Watertown, serving as a team captain as a senior in both seasons.
  • Played club field hockey for Wizards Field Hockey under head coach Susan Caples.
  • Helped team qualify for NCC’s each year and placed second at RCC’s each year.

 
Martina di Gregorio Giralt | F | 5-5 | Buenos Aires, Argentina | Colegio Santa Hilda

  • Played varsity field hockey at Colegio Santa Hilda.
  • Helped team to win the 2024 Interschool Tournament and place second in the ADE 11 Tournament.
  • Was selected for the 2018 and 2024 Norte Sur Tournament and the 2023 ADE Team that traveled to New Zealand.
  • Also ran track at Santa Hilda.
  • Played club field hockey for Hurling Club under head coach Ariel Montagnaro.
  • Helped team to win the Asociacion Amateur de Hockey Sobre Cesped de Buenos Aires league in 2024 and qualify for the playoffs in 2022.

     

Maeve Kiernan | M | 5-3 | East Greenwich, R.I. | East Greenwich

  • Played four seasons of varsity field hockey at East Greenwich High School under head coach Debra McMullen.
  • Served as a team captain as a senior.
  • Helped team to four Division I State Championships, winning twice (2021, 2023).
  • Finished East Greenwich career with 79 points on 24 goals and 31 assists.
  • Was named to the All-Tournament Team four times, and the
  • Named RIIL First Team All-Division, Providence Journal First Team All-State, Max Field Hockey Preseason Player to Watch, and Max Field Hockey All-Region in 2022, 2023, and 2024.
  • Also named to the NFHCA All-Region Team in 2023 and 2024 and Max Field Hockey Senior Impact Team in 2024.
  • Played in the Nexus National Championship and Nexus Region 3 Selection Camp in 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024, was an AAU Junior Olympic Selectant and silver medalist in 2022, and was named to the Max Field Hockey Top 150 Players to Watch Class of 2025 in 2022.
  • Also played four seasons of varsity lacrosse and three seasons of varsity basketball at East Greenwich.
  • Played club field hockey for Patriot Field Hockey under head coach Patti Bossio.

 
Hadley Rand | F/M | 5-5 | Mendham, N.J. | Oak Knoll School

  • Played three seasons of varsity field hockey at Oak Knoll under head coach Ali Good.
  • Helped team to the 2022 and 2023 state finals.
  • Won the 2024 State Championship and 2022, 2023, and 2024 Union County Championships.
  • Was named to the 2024 All-County Second Team and a 2023 All-County Honorable Mention, as well as the 2023 and 2024 NFHCA High School National Academic Squad.
  • Finished career at Oak Knoll with 40 points on 16 goals and eight assists.
  • Also played for the New Heights Field Hockey Club under head coaches Ali Good, Jackie Fusco, and Tarek Kouta.
  • Helped team qualify for the National Indoor Tournament and National Club Championships from 2022-2025.

 
FOLLOW THE CRUSADERS
Be sure to follow the Holy Cross field hockey team — and all things Crusader Athletics — on social media!
Twitter – @HCrossFH | @goholycross
Instagram – @hcrossfh | @goholycross
Facebook – Holy Cross Field Hockey | Holy Cross Athletics
YouTube – GoHolyCross





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Atlanta Gladiators Sign Forward Isak Walther | National

The Atlanta Gladiators announced Tuesday that the ECHL ice hockey club has signed forward Isak Walther for the 2025-26 season. Walther, a native of Södertälje, Sweden, was selected by the Nashville Predators in the 6th round (179th overall) of the 2019 NHL Draft. The 23-year-old forward joins the Gladiators after four seasons playing NCAA Division […]

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The Atlanta Gladiators announced Tuesday that the ECHL ice hockey club has signed forward Isak Walther for the 2025-26 season.

Walther, a native of Södertälje, Sweden, was selected by the Nashville Predators in the 6th round (179th overall) of the 2019 NHL Draft. The 23-year-old forward joins the Gladiators after four seasons playing NCAA Division I hockey at the University of Vermont, where he scored 23 goals and 33 assists for 56 points in 128 career games with the Catamounts.

The 6-foot-4, 205-pound forward scored 6 goals and 11 assists for 17 points in 33 games with the University of Vermont last season and is now entering his first season of professional hockey.

“Isak is a big body coming off a successful college career at Vermont,” Gladiators director of hockey operations and head coach Matt Ginn said. “He has very good hands and a good shot. Isak uses his size and strength effectively to get to the dirty areas on the ice. He is a very driven player, and we are excited to work with Isak this season.”



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Hagens continuing to put in work despite hectic schedule

MINNEAPOLIS — James Hagens has had quite a year. The 18-year-old helped the United States win its second straight gold medal as the top-line center at the 2025 IIHF World Junior Championship in January before following that up with a workmanlike performance as the No. 1 pivot at Boston College as a freshman last season. […]

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MINNEAPOLIS — James Hagens has had quite a year.

The 18-year-old helped the United States win its second straight gold medal as the top-line center at the 2025 IIHF World Junior Championship in January before following that up with a workmanlike performance as the No. 1 pivot at Boston College as a freshman last season.

He was starry-eyed watching actor Adam Sandler announce him as the No. 7 pick to the Boston Bruins during the 2025 NHL Draft at L.A. Live’s Peacock Theater on June 27, gained great experience at Bruins development camp earlier in July, and then attended the premier of Sandler’s “Happy Gilmore 2,” where he met and conversed with the famed actor at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York on July 21.

Whew!

“You’re going from place to place, state to state, so it’s crazy but it’s just something you have to let soak in because it only happens once,” Hagens said.

He’s one of 42 U.S. players attending the World Junior Summer Showcase this week at Ridder Arena, looking to lead and make a difference as the Americans prepare for a possible three-peat at the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship in St. Paul and Minneapolis from Dec. 26-Jan. 5.

“To have the whole thing behind him probably feels good and then to be drafted by Boston, in the same city that he’s playing college hockey, was probably exciting for him,” said Boston College coach Greg Brown, who is also serving as the assistant coach for the U.S. “I know it just seemed to be a lot … you’d see all the interviews he went through for the draft, and he’s trying to play well and do as well as he can for BC.

“I think now that the whole draft is behind him, he knows where he’ll be to start his pro career. He can concentrate on just playing hockey and that’ll probably be much easier.”

He looks laser focused on helping the U.S. win a third straight gold and do it on home ice for the first time. He has four assists in two exhibition games, playing center on a line with BC teammate Teddy Stiga (Nashville Predators) and right wing Brodie Ziemer (Buffalo Sabres).

“Creating culture is a huge part of this, you don’t want a divided locker room,” Hagens said. “Everyone here knows each other well. I think that’s something that really is helpful. It carries over a ton when you’re able to trust the guy off the ice, when you’re able to just go out there and play freely.”

Hagens tied for the U.S. lead with five goals in seven games to help his country win the championship at the 2025 WJC as the top center between Gabe Perreault (New York Rangers) and Ryan Leonard (Washington Capitals).

He also centered Perreault and Leonard at Boston College, where he had 37 points (11 goals, 26 assists) in 37 games.

“James had an unreal year. I can’t speak to the pressure he faced as a top pick in the draft, but I know it’s got to be a lot,” Stiga said. “I was his roommate, so I know what he was going through. It’s hard but I think he handled it well.

“He was a point per game player in college, and that’s hard to do playing with guys like Perreault and Leonard, who are really high skilled. Sometimes you saw him deferring to ‘Lenny,’ but you know he can score with the puck, he can pass the puck, do everything.”



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Ryan Swanson's 'A Beautiful Shame' captures New Mexico's final season and underscores …

AFC Richmond had Trent Crimm.  Unlock immediate access to every story, as well as exclusive newsletters like Soccer America Daily and Soccer on TV. CHECK OUT MORE STORIES Not ready to subscribe? Sign up here for our free newsletter. Already have an account? Sign in here. 0

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Ryan Swanson's 'A Beautiful Shame' captures New Mexico's final season and underscores ...

AFC Richmond had Trent Crimm

Unlock immediate access to every story, as well as exclusive newsletters like Soccer America Daily and Soccer on TV.

CHECK OUT MORE STORIES

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Sharks Foundation + Tech CU Provide $15,000 Grant

sjsharks.com is the official website of the San Jose Sharks. San Jose Sharks name and primary logo are registered trademarks of San Jose Sharks, LLC. NHL, the NHL Shield, the word mark and image of the Stanley Cup and NHL Conference logos are registered trademarks of the National Hockey League. NHL All-Star logo and NHL […]

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San Jose Sharks logo

sjsharks.com is the official website of the San Jose Sharks. San Jose Sharks name and primary logo are registered trademarks of San Jose Sharks, LLC. NHL, the NHL Shield, the word mark and image of the Stanley Cup and NHL Conference logos are registered trademarks of the National Hockey League. NHL All-Star logo and NHL All-Star Skills Competition name and logo are trademarks of the National Hockey League. All NHL logos and marks and NHL team logos and marks as well as all other proprietary materials depicted herein are the property of the NHL and the respective NHL teams and may not be reproduced without the prior written consent of NHL Enterprises, L.P. Copyright © 1999-2025 San Jose Sharks, LLC and the National Hockey League. All Rights Reserved. If you are using a screen reader and are having problems using this website, please call (408) 287-7070 for assistance.



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Tech trio named All-America Scholars

NORMAN, Okla. – Texas Tech’s Charlie DeLong, Ben Gregg and Calum Scott were named 2024-25 Cobalt Golf All-America Scholars, revealed Tuesday by the Golf Coaches Association of America. To be eligible for a Cobalt Golf All-America Scholar nomination: An individual must be a sophomore, junior, or senior both academically and athletically must participate in 50 […]

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NORMAN, Okla. – Texas Tech’s Charlie DeLong, Ben Gregg and Calum Scott were named 2024-25 Cobalt Golf All-America Scholars, revealed Tuesday by the Golf Coaches Association of America.
To be eligible for a Cobalt Golf All-America Scholar nomination:

  • An individual must be a sophomore, junior, or senior both academically and athletically
  • must participate in 50 percent of their team’s competitive rounds
  • own a stroke average under 76.0 in NCAA Division I, and maintain a minimum cumulative career grade-point average of 3.2
  • must also be of high moral character and be in good standing at their college or university.

Scott, a senior in 2024-25, finishes his Texas Tech career earning the All-America Scholar honor all three years of his career. DeLong, also a senior, took home the honor both seasons as a Red Raider while Gregg, a sophomore in 2024-25, earned the honor after his first year eligible.

In total, 556 NCAA Division I athletes from 190 schools earned 2024-25 Cobalt Golf All-America Scholar honors.

About Cobalt Golf

Cobalt is a direct-to-consumer golf brand focused on developing premium laser rangefinders for golfers who demand the best out of their gear. We take pride in producing highly accurate, durable, easy-to-use products and delivering high-performance optical quality at a better price. For more information, please visit www.cobalt-golf.com.

About GCAA

Established in 1958, the Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA) is the professional organization of men’s collegiate golf coaches. The GCAA’s mission is to support its member coaches from six divisions, including the NCAA, NAIA and NJCAA, by creating educational opportunities, providing resources, and promoting its members with the purpose of enhancing their overall performance as coaches, mentors, and teachers. The GCAA also recognizes the excellence and achievements of its members and their student-athletes in academic, athletic, and civic endeavors.

– TECH –



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