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Boston University ‘just focused on Thursday’ as Terriers shooting for sixth NCAA championship, first since 2009

Quinn Hutson has again been a key player this season for BU (Photo: Kyle Prudhomme)

This is the fourth of four previews for teams playing in the 2025 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four this week in St. Louis. Click here for all of USCHO’s Frozen Four coverage.

Boston University Terriers

Season record: 23-13-2

How they got to St. Louis: Won the Toledo Regional, beating Ohio State 8-3 and Cornell 3-2 (OT)

Top players: D Cole Hutson (14-32-46), F Quinn Hutson (23-27-50), F Ryan Greene (13-27-37), F Cole Eiserman (23-11-34)

Top goalie: Mikhail Yegorov (10-5-1, 2.04 goals-against average, .931 save percentage).

Why they’ll win the national championship: Of the participants in St. Louis, BU is the only club playing in its third straight Frozen Four. That experience should help the Terriers. The Hutson brothers have proven time and again that they can score, and mid-season acquisition Mikhail Yegorov in net has provided a reliable backstop that gives BU a chance every time he takes the ice.

Why they won’t win the national championship: Penn State may be playing in its first Frozen Four in only its fourth NCAA tournament appearance in program history, but the Nittany Lions are no also-ran. In Penn State, the Terriers will face a team on a roll, including a dominant finish to the regular season and four impressive postseason victories, including a pair of NCAA tournament wins over Hockey East teams. Should Denver await in the championship game, the Pioneers will be salivating at the chance to dispatch another Hockey East opponent (which they’ve done five times already in the last two tournaments) on the way to an 11th national championship.

All season long, Boston University has proven its resilience. It will have to do it one more time to win its first NCAA tournament in 16 years.

The Terriers didn’t exactly get to their third straight Frozen Four by the skin of their teeth, but they did have to overcome a lukewarm February (4-3-1, no winning streaks) and a 5-2 loss to Connecticut in the Hockey East semifinals, a clunker that had coach Jay Pandolfo publicly criticizing his team in the aftermath.

“We’re not going to be able to get away with playing like that,” Pandolfo said about the loss to UConn. “(The) effort that night, for whatever reason, wasn’t there. But it wasn’t the first time our team had an effort like that over the course of the season. I think we’ve had a lot of lessons, as a team, on how we need to play. There’s no more lessons. That was really the lesson to our group.”

BU didn’t exactly set the world on fire in the first period of its NCAA Toledo Regional opener, when it fell behind 1-0 to Ohio State in the first period, then struggled until finally pouring it on with five unanswered goals in the third to eventually win 8-3. Two nights later, the Terriers needed overtime to dispatch Cornell 3-2.

“It’s pretty simple — it’s win or go home from that point on,” said BU sophomore forward Shane Lachance. “That was our last chance to learn a lesson that, you can’t come out and play like this or else your season is going to be done earlier than you want to. I think we did a good job in Toledo — obviously, that start to the Ohio State game wasn’t great, but we found our way and I think good teams find a way.”

BU will be looking for its sixth NCAA championship and first since 2009, but to even have a shot at it, the Terriers will first have to get through to the championship game, which they failed to do in their previous two trips to the Frozen Four.

Lying in wait is Penn State, which is 14-5-4 since January and is playing in its first Frozen Four since becoming a Division I program in 2012.

“They got a lot of speed,” Pandolfo said. “Their top two lines are really dangerous. They’re going to be a handful, for sure. (They’re) believing in themselves right now too. They’ve got a lot of confidence. They’ve come from a long way back to get where they are. It’s going to be a really tough matchup for us.”

BU junior forward Ryan Greene, one of the players making his third trip to the Frozen Four, said the Terriers can’t get too caught up ruminating about past Frozen Fours that ended sooner than they would have liked.

“You can’t think about it too much,” Greene said. “You win two games you get a national championship, but, you know, you try to erase that from your mind a little bit and just kind of focus on yourself and the team and what you guys have to do as a collective to win. That’s where we’re at right now. We’re just focused on Thursday and excited to hop on the plane here and get going.”

The Terriers enter the national semifinals with considerable weapons, including the Hutson brothers — junior forward Quinn and freshman defenseman Cole — who have combined for 37 goals this season. Throw in freshman goalie Mikhail Yegorov, a midseason acquisition who has posted a .931 save percentage since joining the team in January, and the Terriers should be a tough out.

“The standard here is to win national championships,” Lachance said. “It’s a great accomplishment to get to the Frozen Four, but if you come out empty handed, it’s no different than losing last week in Toledo. (If) you come home empty handed, it’s a disappointment.”

Oswego’s Burke and Aurora’s Schmuck co-winners of USCHO D-III Rookie of the Year honors

 

 

Aurora’s Landry Schmuck shares USCHO D-III Rookie of the Year honors with Oswego’s Ryan Burke following two exceptional seasons of play (Photo by Aurora Athletics)

Among the many outstanding first-year players at the D-III level this season, two clearly rose to the top of the list with their exceptional play on the ice and helping their teams to both conference and NCA tournament success. Ryan Burke from Oswego and Landry Schmuck from Aurora are this year’s winners of the USCHO D-III Rookie of the Year Award.

Oswego’s Ryan Burke led the Lakers in assists and points in leading the team to their fist SUNYAC title since 2011 (Photo by Oswego State Athletics)

Burke, a first-year forward for Oswego led the Lakers in assists and points while being named the SUNYAC Rookie of the Year. The youthful Lakers won their first conference title since 2011 and Burke was a big part of the team’s resurgence to the top of the standings. Burke finished the season with eleven goals, twenty-eight assists, thirty-nine points and a plus twenty rating while being named a first-team All-Star for the SUNYAC and an AHCA All-American.

“Ryan is a game-changer for us,” noted head coach Ed Gosek. “Ryan possesses a high skill set and hockey IQ but his compete level and willingness to put the team first is what makes hi a special player.”

Sharing this year’s USCHO Rookie of the Year award is Aurora’s Landry Schmuck. Schmuck was also named his conference’s (NCHA) Rookie of the Year having recorded an astounding thirty-one goals and thirteen assists for forty-four points and a plus twenty-five rating. He was particularly effective on the power play where he scored ten goals and provided eight game-winning goals for the Spartans who played in their first national tournament, bowing out in the quarterfinals to Geneseo. Schmuck was named and NEHC All-Star as well as an AHCA All- American.

“Landry is a relentless competitor who is an elite talent,” stated head coach Jason Bloomingburg. “He is absolutely electric every time he touches the ice. For me it all starts with Landry’s love for the game and how much he enjoys being around the rink – it’s contagious. The level of work ethic he brings every day is remarkable, you would never know he is a first-year player. With thirty-one goals this year he can change a game at any time and has been a huge factor for our team’s success throughout the season. I’m very impressed with the consistent level of maturity that Landry has shown every day on the ice but ultimately more impressed with how he carries himself day-to-day off the ice.”

Both Burke and Schmuck are expected to return to their teams next season and build on the incredible first-year performances that have earned them this year’s USCHO rookie of the Year recognition.

Wednesday’s announcements will close out the D-III USCHO awards with both the Player of the Year and Coach of the Year recognitions.

Thanks to Brian Lester for Aurora photo and Coach Bloomingburg’s quote for the column.

Women’s Division I College Hockey: NCAA players at 2025 Women’s World Championships

Nearly 50 women who played NCAA women’s hockey this season or are committed to play in the future are rostered with the 10 nations competing at the top level IIHF Women’s World Championships that start Thursday in České Budějovice, Czechia. Every woman on the US and Canadian rosters is a current or former NCAA players. In total nearly half of all the women skating in the tournament are future, current or former NCAA players.

Listed below are the the current and committed players for each of the 10 teams competing. Schools listed are the program the player was with in the 2024-25 season or are committed to. Players that are currently in the transfer portal are marked with an asterisk*.

USA
Kirsten Simms, Wisconsin
Laila Edwards, Wisconsin
KK Harvey, Wisconsin
Ava McNaughton, Wisconsin
Lacey Eden, Wisconsin
Tessa Janecke, Penn State
Abbey Murphy, Minnesota
Haley Winn, Clarkson
Joy Dunne, Ohio State

Canada
Ève Gascon, Minnesota Duluth
Chloe Primerano, Minnesota

Finland
Sofianna Sundelin, St. Cloud State
Siiri Yrjölä, St. Cloud State
Julia Schalin, Mercyhurst
Krista Parkkonen, Minnesota
Nelli Laitinen, Minnesota
Sanni Ahola, St. Cloud State
Emilia Kyrkkö, St. Cloud State
Sanni Vanhanen, OSU commit

Czechia
Kristýna Kaltounková, Colgate
Tereza Plosová, Minnesota commit
Adéla Šapovalivová, Wisconsin commit
Andrea Trnková, RPI*
Michaela Hesová, Dartmouth
Natálie Mlýnková, Minnesota

Switzerland
Nicole Vallario, St. Thomas
Monja Wagner, Union
Laura Zimmermann, St. Cloud State
Naemi Herzig, Holy Cross commit
Ivana Wey, Northeastern commit

Sweden
Hilda Svensson, Ohio State commit
Josefin Bouveng, Minnesota
Jenna Raunio, Ohio State commit
Mira Jungåker, Ohio State
Ida Karlsson, Minnesota Duluth
Thea Johansson, Mercyhurst *

Germany
Nina Jobst-Smith, Minnesota Duluth
Lilli Welcke, Boston University
Luisa Welcke, Boston University
Svenja Voigt, St. Cloud State
Nina Christof, RPI

Norway
Millie Sirium, Providence
Thea Reiermark Jørgensen, Lindenwood
Silje Gundersen, Lindenwood

Hungary
Emma Kreisz, Minnesota
Mira Seregély, Maine
Zsófia Pázmándi, Lindenwood
Regina Metzler, Mercyhurst
Boglárka Báhiczki-Tóth, Brown Commit

 

 

 

Defending national champion Denver has ‘taken a real growth mindset’ during 2024-25 season as Pioneers look to repeat

Jack Devine has been an offensive catalyst this season for DU (photo: Denver Athletics).

This is the third of four previews for teams playing in the 2025 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four this week in St. Louis. Click here for all of USCHO’s Frozen Four coverage.

Denver Pioneers

Season record: 31-11-1

How they got to St. Louis: Won the Manchester Regional, defeating Providence 5-1 and Boston College 3-1

Top players: F Jack Devine (13-44-57), F Aidan Thompson (20-34-54), D Zeev Buium (13-35-48)

Top goalie: Matt Davis (29-9-1, 2.07 goals-against average, .923 save percentage).

Why they’ll win the national championship: You can bet against Denver in the Frozen Four if you want to, but I won’t. There isn’t a single program in college hockey that matches the Pioneers’ postseason pedigree.

Why they won’t win the national championship: As good as this Denver team is and can be, its season could be done Thursday. Western Michigan is a very, very good team, and that semifinal could easily end up being the best game of the entire NCAA tournament.

What do you get for a college hockey program that has done it all?

A year ago, Denver became the first team to win its 10th national title, and the Pioneers hoisted the NCAA championship trophy for the second time in three seasons. Head coach David Carle has been there that whole time and then some, and in his seventh year with the team, they look like making history yet again.

There isn’t a better scoring offense in the country than what Denver has. The Pioneers also have a Hobey Hat Trick finalist in defenseman Zeev Buium, and goaltender Matt Davis has been tremendous between the pipes. He, Buium and their DU teammates keep pushing ahead, not overly weighed down by the targets on their backs.

“You look at the year we had, there’s certainly other teams that maybe had better regular seasons than we did, and certainly we’re playing another one of those teams,” Carle said in previewing Thursday’s semifinal matchup with Western Michigan, which has the No. 2 offense in the nation. “Western has won every championship and trophy available to them (in the NCHC), and to me, them and probably BC, Michigan State, the (Minnesota) Gophers to some extent, they really separated themselves throughout the season as being kind of the premier programs top to bottom, bringing that level of consistency every night.

“For us, we turned over five underclassmen that signed (professional contracts) early, had to deal with the expectation of being the defending champions and we’ve gotten everyone’s best game, and we haven’t maybe necessarily handled that perfectly throughout the year, but I think our guys have taken a real growth mindset. We’ve learned and grown through every challenging experience we’ve had this year, and that was on full display in our (regional tournament) victories against Providence and Boston College.”

In some ways, this is Denver’s tournament to lose. The top two teams from the regular season (Michigan State and Boston College) will be watching the Frozen Four from home, and of the teams remaining, DU has the freshest muscle memory with regards to how to play in April. Not everything has come easily lately for Carle’s squad, but two regional wins against Hockey East powers suggest that national title No. 11 could be coming up fast.

“We’re obviously really excited,” Carle said. “It’s been a challenging year. In the second half, I think we’ve faced a lot of bumps in the road, but I give our guys a lot of credit. They handled themselves extremely well, and we found a way to really turn on our urgency, peak at the right time and secure two victories in a tough environment, in tough logistics, all of the above. I’m proud of the group, and we get to continue fighting and get another game.”

NCAA Division II-III players tabbed AHCA All-Americans for ’24-25 season as 31 outstanding men’s hockey performers earn honors

Austin Mourar was a key player up front for Hobart as the Statesmen won another national title (photo: Adam Farid).

NCAA Division II-III men’s hockey head coaches have recognized the top 31 hockey players in their division by selecting them as CCM Hockey/AHCA All-Americans for 2024-25.

First Team East

Shane Soderwall, SO, Curry College
(Algonquin, IL) Goalie

Austin Mourar, GR, Hobart College
(Spring City, PA) Defense

James Philpott, SR, Hamilton College^
(Calgary, AB) Defense

Nate Berke, GR, SUNY Cortland
(Williamsville, NY) Forward

Tanner Daniels, JR, Hobart College
(Edinboro, PA) Forward

Luke Tchor, SO, Hamilton College
(Toronto, ON) Forward

First Team West

Jacob Mucitelli, SR, Aurora University
(Woodgate, NY) Goalie

Connor Kalthoff, SR, St. Olaf College*
(Sartell, MN) Defense

Juliano Santalucia, JR, Aurora University
(Burnaby, BC) Defense

Hassan Aki, JR, Aurora University
(Chestermere, AB) Forward

Fletcher Anderson, SR, UW-Stevens Point#
(Thunder Bay, ON) Forward

Logan Dombrowsky, SO, St. Norbert College
(Stevens Point, WI) Forward

Second Team East

Damon Beaver, JR, Hobart College
(Whitby, ON) Goalie

Cole Jungwith, GR, Wilkes University^
(Bloomington, MN) Defense

Jack Karlsson, JR, Stevenson University
(Koping, Sweden) Defense

Luke Aquaro, SR, Hobart College%
(Yardley, PA) Forward

Nick Cyprian, JR, Chatham University
(Aledo, TX) Forward

Eelis Laaksonen, JR, Curry College
(Espoo, Finland) Forward

Peter Morgan, SR, SUNY Geneseo@
(Sarasita, FL) Forward

Second Team West

Hunter Garvey, So, St. Norbert College
(San Diego, CA) Goalie

Dayton Deics, JR, St. Norbert College#
(Bismarck, ND) Defense

Wyatt Wurst, FR, College of St. Scholastica
(Edina, MN) Defense

Tyler Braccini, JR, Bethel College
(Hanover, MN) Forward

Liam Fraser, SR, St. Norbert College*
(Calgary, AB) Forward

Landry Schmuck, FR, Aurora University
(Huntsville, AL) Forward

Third Team East

Charlie Archer, SR, Hamilton College
(Belleville, ON) Goalie

Sean Melso, SO, SUNY Geneseo
(Philadelphia, PA) Defense

Kevin Weaver-Vitale, GR, SUNY Plattsburgh
(Toronto, ON) Defense

Ryan Burke, FR, SUNY Oswego
(London, ON) Forward

Landyn Greatorex, JR, Salem State
(Reading, MA) Forward

Dominic Murphy, SO, University of New England
(Worcester, MA) Forward

* 2024 First Team Selection
# 2024 Second Team Selection
^ 2024 Third Team Selection
% 2023 First Team Selection
@ 2022 Second Team Selection

Total of 32 standouts named NCAA Division III women’s hockey AHCA All-Americans for 2024-25 season

Endicott senior forward Samantha Fantasia is the first Gulls women’s player to earn first team All-American honors (photo: Endicott Athletics).

NCAA Division III women’s hockey head coaches have recognized the top 32 hockey players in their division by selecting them as CCM Hockey/AHCA All-Americans for 2024-25.

First Team East

Natalie Stott, JR, Amherst College*^
(Franklin, MA) Goalie

Gretchen Dann, JR, Amherst College
(Hanover, NH) Defense

Sabrina Kim, SR, Middlebury College
(Los Angeles, CA) Defense

Samantha Fantasia, SR, Endicott College
(Billerica, MA) Forward

Erika Goleniak, SR, Elmira College#
(Canton, MI) Forward

Mack Hull, SR, SUNY Oswego
(Watertown, NY) Forward

First Team West

Kayla Simonson, FY, Augsburg University
(Delano, MN) Goalie

Makenna Aure, JR, UW-River Falls*@
(Alexandria, MN) Defense

Nora Stepan, JR, Augsburg University
(Apple Valley, MN) Defense

Megan Goodreau, JR, UW-River Falls#
(Lino Lakes, MN) Forward

Lily Mortenson, JR, Gustavus Adolphus College
(Champlin, MN) Forward

Bailey Olson, SR, UW-River Falls
(Willmar, MN) Forward

Second Team East

Lexi Levy, SR, SUNY Oswego
(St. Louis, MO) Goalie

Mattie Norton, SR, SUNY Plattsburgh
(Glen Carbon, IL) Defense

Breanna Studley, JR, Colby College
(Berkley, MA) Defense

Anna Dale, SO, Lebanon Valley College
(Juneau, AK) Forward

Jordan Kowalski, SR, Utica University
(Chicopee, MA) Forward

Maeve Reynolds, JR, Amherst College
(Plymouth, MA) Forward

Claire Sammons, SR, Connecticut College
(Naperville, IL) Forward

Second Team West

Jordan O’Kane, JR, UW-River Falls
(Alexandria, MN) Goalie

Maya Roy, GR, Adrian College*@
(Clarkston, MI) Defense

Kathryn Truban, GR, Adrian College^
(Hamilton, NJ) Defense

Emily Cronkhite, SR, Augsburg University
(Eagan, MN) Forward

Courtnie Hogan, SR, St. Norbert College
(Hoffman Estates, IL) Forward

Riley Johnson, JR, Adrian College
(Farmington, MI) Forward

Third Team East

Angela Hawthorne, GR, Utica University
(Santa Clara, CA) Goalie

Erin Murray, SR, William Smith College
(Hanover, MA) Goalie

Sydney Bradley, SR, Alvernia College
(Lititz, PA) Defense

Julia Holmes, GR, Nazareth University#@
(Reading, MA) Defense

Livia Brooks, SO, Norwich University*
(Walpole, MA) Forward

Amy Laskowski, FY, Nazareth University
(Clarendon, Hills, IL) Forward

Karahkwenhawe White, SR, Arcadia University
(Akwesasne, NY) Forward

* 2024 First Team Selection
# 2024 Second Team Selection
^ 2023 First Team Selection
@ 2023 Second Team Selection

Western Michigan’s plan for Frozen Four means Broncos ‘going to approach it like we do every other game – that our next game is our most important game’

Hampton Slukynsky has taken the reins as Western Michigan’s No. 1 goaltender (photo: Western Michigan Athletics).

This is the second of four previews for teams playing in the 2025 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four this week in St. Louis. Click here for all of USCHO’s Frozen Four coverage.

Western Michigan Broncos

Season record: 32-7-1

How they got to St. Louis: Won the Fargo Regional, defeating Minnesota State 2-1 and Massachusetts 2-1

Top players: F Alex Bump (23-24-47), F Grant Slukynsky (10-26-36), D Samuel Sjolund (4-25-29)

Top goalie: Hampton Slukynsky (17-5-1, 1.91 goals-against average, .923 save percentage).

Why they’ll win the national championship: Playoff hockey is meant to be tight, and Western’s last three games have each been decided by one goal. But with as loaded as WMU’s lineup is, with 10 players who have each posted at least 20 points this season, the Broncos might be due to not only win two more games, but also beat the brakes off people in the process.

Why they won’t win the national championship: Two sides of the same coin, and all that. Three of WMU’s four goals in the Fargo Regional came on power plays. What if those kinds of bounces don’t go the Broncos’ way in St. Louis?

It’s tempting to say, at this point, that Western Michigan is playing with house money.

This has been a historic season for the Broncos by anyone’s metrics, as most any coach in college hockey would snatch your arm off for a season with 30-plus wins. But this feels different. WMU had been picked sixth in the NCHC’s preseason poll, yet here the Broncos are, playing in their program’s first-ever Frozen Four.

Where did it all go right? Ask Broncos coach Pat Ferschweiler, and he’ll tell you a lot of it starts between the ears.

“We’re going to approach it like we do every other game — that our next game is our most important game,” Ferschweiler said of his team’s mental plan of attack for the Frozen Four, beginning with Thursday’s semifinal with defending national champion Denver. “We haven’t lost that focus all year, and we’re not going to lose it now.

“We know the quality that Denver has. We know that they’re well coached, they’re extremely well organized and they’re an extremely talented team, but we’ll focus on us, our success, our path to success against Denver. We won’t vary on that at all.”

And they’ve done well not to.

WMU’s last four games have all been close-run things, with the last three each decided by one goal. The Broncos’ road to St. Louis has been anything but easy, especially lately, and getting there speaks to the fast-growing maturity of Ferschweiler’s group.

“It always, to me, starts with the leadership in the locker room, and for this group to come together as quickly as it did, and as well as it did, that’s on (WMU captain) Tim Washe and our leadership corps of Alex Bump, Matteo Costantini and Cam Knuble,” Ferschweiler said. “They’ve helped everyone feel comfortable, and I don’t think you can play at your best unless you’re comfortable, so certainly that’s a big piece of them starting well and ending well.

“We have 16 new hockey players on this squad that have had this kind of success. I think it’s pretty phenomenal, and that’s our locker room, but our D-core is totally revamped. Two returning players. Last year, we were kind of a big, heavy, harder D-core, but this year, we have six extremely mobile guys. We play a different style: we use our feet to defend, we use our sticks to defend, more than our bodies, but I think it also allows us to separate teams from pucks earlier, it allows us to break out cleaner. I think that has been a big key to our defensive numbers this year, simply not playing in our own end.”

Freshman goaltender Hampton Slukynsky has been exceptional whenever the Broncos have been. He vied for playing time all through the regular season with graduate student Cameron Rowe, but eventually, the youngster stood out most.

“As we inched toward the playoffs, as a staff, we talked about wanting one of them to take the reins and one of them to be the starter, but neither would give up that time,” Ferschweiler said. “They were both playing quality games, and the last couple starts of Cam’s, there might have been some cracks in the foundation there a little bit, and not that he played poorly, but Hampton seemed to be edging ahead there, so we just made the decision to go with Hampton.

“I’m comfortable with both our goaltenders, but I’m certainly happy that we have one that’s taking charge and demanding the net, and that’s Hampton.”

Now it’s time for the Broncos to try and put it all together, but that won’t be easy. Next up on WMU’s plate is a Denver team that the Broncos beat in double overtime in the NCHC playoff final.

“Obviously we’re familiar with Denver, and we’re also familiar with the quality of a hockey team that Denver is,” Ferschweiler said.

“We’ve faced them three times this year, there’s been two overtime games and a very tight 3-2 contest, I believe, so we know that, at times, they can be overwhelming, at times their big-time talent can really make some special plays, but our job is to be as consistent as possible, play the best brand of Bronco hockey as possible, and to make sure we represent ourselves well.”

2024-2025 D-III All-USCHO Teams

NEHC Player of the Year and All-American Tanner Daniels from Hobart leads an outstanding list of players being recognized for this year’s All-USCHO teams (Photo by Kevin Colton – HWS Athletics)

We all just needed to take a little breather after that amazing season and sensational national tournament, but no worries the intrepid East/West duo of myself and Brian Lester have come up with this season’s All-USCHO teams and the representation of talent on the ice is nothing short of spectacular. This year we have fifteen institutions represented with twenty-eight players being recognized. Three-time national champion Hobart, St. Norbert and Aurora each have four representatives while Hamilton has three and Curry and Geneseo have two each showing strong talent from this year’s NCAA quarterfinal teams.

Here are this year’s All-USCHO selections:

 First Team

Goaltender –     Shane Soderwall  – SO  – Curry

Defense –          Austin Mourar – GR –  Hobart

Defense –          Juliano Santalucia– SR  – Aurora

Forward –           Logan Dombrowsky – SO – St. Norbert

Forward –           Tanner Daniels – JR – Hobart

Forward –          Luke Tchor – SO – Hamilton

Second Team

Goaltender –     Damon Beaver – JR – Hobart

Defense –          James Philpott – SR – Hamilton

Defense –          Connor Kalthoff – SR – St. Olaf

Forward –          Nate Berke – SR – Cortland

Forward –          Hassan Akl – JR – Aurora

Forward –          Fletcher Anderson – SR – Wisconsin – Stevens Point

Third Team

Goaltender –    JaCob Mucitelli – SO – Aurora

Defense –          Dayton Deics – SR – St. Norbert

Defense –          Cole Jungwirth – GR – Wilkes

Forward –          Nick Cyprian – SR – Chatham

Forward –          Eelis Laaksonen – SR – Curry

Forward –          Liam Fraser – SR – St. Norbert

Honorable Mention

Goaltender –     Hunter Garvey – SO – St. Norbert

Goaltender –     Charlie Archer – SR – Hamilton

Defense –          Sean Melso – SR – Geneseo

Defense –          Jack Karlsson – JR – Stevenson

Defense –          Kevin Weaver-Vitale – GR – Plattsburgh

Forward –          Landyn Greatorex – JR – Salem State

Forward –          Luke Aquaro – SR – Hobart

Forward –          Peter Morgan – SR – Geneseo

Forward –          Landry Schmuck – FY – Aurora

Forward –          Ryan Burke – FY – Oswego

There are so many players represented here who have already received both conference recognitions as well as national awards or All-American honors and are part of this year’s All-USCHO representatives. Congratulations to all the players along with their teammates and coaches who provided the teamwork and support for their excellence on the ice.

Look for the USCHO D-III Rookie of the Year announcement on Tuesday.

Penn State in first-ever Frozen Four after Nittany Lions decided on ‘absolutely refusing to let anybody get negative’

Aiden Fink has led the Penn State offense this season (photo: Penn State Athletics).

This is the first of four previews for teams playing in the 2025 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four this week in St. Louis. Click here for all of USCHO’s Frozen Four coverage.

Penn State Nittany Lions

Season record: 22-13-4

How they got to St. Louis: Won the Allentown Regional, beating Maine 5-1 and Connecticut 3-2 (OT)

Top players: F Aiden Fink (23-30-53), F Charlie Cerrato (15-27-42), F JJ Wiebusch (14-19-33), F Matt DiMarsico (17-13-32), F Danny Dzhaniyev (12-19-31), F Reese Laubach (15-15-30), D Simon Mack (3-26-29)

Top goalie: Arsenii Sergeev (19-8-4, 2.56 goals-against average, .918 save percentage)

Why they’ll win the national championship: Because why not? The Nittany Lions didn’t win their first Big Ten game until Jan. 3 and didn’t have more wins than losses on the season until Jan. 25. As newcomers to the Frozen Four and the lowest seed in the field, no one expects Penn State to advance past the semifinals, let alone contend for the national title. In their run to the Frozen Four, they delivered a lopsided defeat to a top seed and won their regional title game in overtime. They’re fast, they can score, and they haven’t peaked yet.

Why they won’t win the national championship: In their first-ever Frozen Four contest, the Nittany Lions will play Boston University, a team making its third consecutive Frozen Four appearance. If the difference in experience between these semifinal opponents isn’t enough to sink Penn State, the Nittany Lions’ own shortcomings will be. Like the other teams in this field, Penn State averages a lot of goals per game, but the Nittany Lions struggle to win when opponents keep them to two or fewer goals, with a record of 1-5-2 in those contests. They win when they can play their game. In the Frozen Four, they may not have that advantage.

The Nittany Lions are one of two teams making their first-ever trip to the Frozen Four. Penn State does so in just its 12th season of Division I play, too. That’s a journey that took Western Michigan, the other newcomer, a few more decades to travel.

Another difference between the Nittany Lions and the Broncos can be traced to much more recent history. At the start of this calendar year, Western Michigan was already contending for the NCHC title while Penn State had yet to earn its first Big Ten win.

What a difference three months make.

“We started out very slow,” said Guy Gadowsky, the only head coach Penn State’s ever known. “We were winless in the Big Ten our first nine games and I think at that time we were 40th or something like that in the PairWise after Christmas, and I don’t think anybody gave us a chance.”

Since their 7-9-0 first half, the Nittany Lions have gone 15-4-4, giving them a .773 win percentage since Jan. 3. Gadowsky said that there’s no “watershed” moment for when things began to turn around, but he credits captain Carson Dyck and the other veteran leaders on the team for something they said in December.

“It came from Carson and the leadership group,” said Gadowsky. “It was basically that we were absolutely refusing to let anybody get negative.”

At that point in the season, said Gadowsky, it would have been easy to succumb to negative thinking when “a lot of Big Ten teams [were] doing extremely well and you looked up the mountain and it could seem insurmountable to get out of the basement.”

When the Nittany Lions returned to play following the midseason break, they did so with Arsenii Sergeev in net. The junior transfer from Connecticut had been out of with an injury since Nov. 16. In his first game back, he made 43 saves in a tie game against Notre Dame in Wrigley Field. Two nights later, he backstopped the Nittany Lions to a 3-0 win against the Fighting Irish in South bend, his second shutout of the season and Penn State’s first B1G win of 2024-25. Sergeev has been in net ever since.

“His competitiveness is at the highest level I think I’ve ever seen,” said Gadowsky. “It just matches our locker room so well, and he’s such a good person, such a good, grateful, wonderful teammate.

“The guys just love him. Yes, he’s been great on the ice. He’s been awesome, but his play on the ice isn’t close to the impact he’s had on this program. The impact he’s had on this program is way beyond how great he’s been on the ice.”

Heading into St. Louis, Gadowsky said that the Nittany Lions will be focusing on their own game first. “No matter what happens,” said Gadowsky, “you’re going to be playing a great team that’s playing extremely well, no matter how you slice it. We’re certainly prepared for that.”

Gadowsky said that the Nittany Lions will savor “every aspect” their first trip to the Frozen Four. “We feel very honored and privileged and blessed to be able to be going to St. Louis,” said Gadowsky. “It’s certainly a business trip for us, but it’s one we’re going to enjoy.”

And how this season began and what the Nittany Lions did to turn things around, said Gadowsky, may make this trip to the Frozen Four a little more special.

“This group, it doesn’t really matter where they go together,” said Gadowsky. “They have a pretty good time.”

Fowler leaves Boston College crease after sophomore season, signs NHL contract with Canadiens

Jacob Fowler was a wall in net the past two seasons for Boston College (photo: Brody Hannon).

The NHL’s Montreal Canadiens announced on Friday that the team has agreed to terms on a three-year, entry-level contract with Boston College sophomore goaltender Jacob Fowler.

Fowler also signed a one-year, one-way AHL contract for the remainder of the 2024-25 season with the Laval Rocket.

The Melbourne, Fla., native played 35 games with Boston College in 2024-25, compiling a 25-7-2 record, along with a .940 save percentage and a 1.63 goals-against average. Fowler, who also recorded seven shutouts, ranked second among all NCAA goaltenders in GAA and shutouts, as well as third in wins and save percentage.

Fowler was named Hockey East goaltender of the year for the second straight season, in addition to being named among the finalists for the Mike Richter Award, awarded annually to the NCAA’s most outstanding goaltender, for the second year in a row.

He also helped the Americans to a gold medal at the 2024 IIHF World Junior Championship, where he played seven games.

Fowler was selected by the Canadiens in the third round (69th overall) of the 2023 NHL Draft.

Hockey Humanitarian Award Finalist Feature: Cornell’s Kempf all about giving back to local community with memory of late mother the catalyst for volunteering, helping, assisting others

Hank Kempf has long been about helping out in the local Ithaca, N.Y., community (photo: provided by Hank Kempf)..

Thousands of hockey players rotated through Cornell’s New York-based campus over Mike Schafer’s three decades of head coaching.

From an on/ice perspective, their legacy is long entrenched as a piece of the Big Red’s history of building successful champions. Even in this last year, raising the Whitelaw Cup for a second straight season handed the program its second consecutive postseason ECAC Hockey championship.

Yet the true lasting memory of Cornell hockey isn’t something ingrained in an on-ice shot or check for a player like Hank Kempf. It’s not a sprint in practice or a postgame film session. It might not even land in the Ivy League education and life-changing degree from one of the world’s best universities.

The lasting image, the lasting thought of a Cornell hockey player, is a second straight year as a finalist for the Hockey Humanitarian Award.

“Coach Schafer always talks about how important service is,” said Kempf after being nominated for the first time in 2024. “Playing for Cornell and being under him has really been a great learning lesson into the value of service. It’s been a big thing for me, and it’s influenced me to branch out. Being in the Cornell hockey program is such an incredible place in so many areas, but it’s developed me as a person because you get to do so much away from the rink.”

Kempf is serving as an alternate captain this season for the Big Red (photo: Caroline Sherman/Cornell Athletics).

Kempf was the second member of the Cornell hockey program to be named a finalist for the award given to college hockey’s finest citizen. He is attempting to join Sam Paolini as the only Big Red players to ever win the award after Alyssa Gagliardi and Morgan Richardson became finalists during their time on Cornell’s women’s program, and his nomination is the 10th time that someone from the Ivy League and ECAC-based school appeared on the list of nominees.

Becoming the first Cornell player nominated multiple times to the award, though, is only part of the story for Kempf, who has built a sustainable model of charitable contributions to the greater Cornell and Ithaca communities. His efforts to organize “Big Red Blocks for Healing” stemmed from a tragedy in his own personal life after his mother passed away from a bout with breast cancer, and it’s gotten teammates involved by raising money based on the team’s desire to block shots during games.

Kempf is all about community service (photo: provided by Hank Kempf).

The money raised went directly to Kesem, an organization that supports children affected by a cancer diagnosis to a parent by providing programs and services at no cost. In the first year, Cornell’s efforts exceeded the team’s initial expectations, and Kempf recruited Ryan Walsh and Jack O’Brien from the Cornell team to organize a second year alongside the entire coaching staff.

“A bunch of returners stayed [on campus] over the summer,” he said. “Before the [2023-2024 season], we got together and met with some staff. We all kind of decided that it would be a great thing, this year, to do a service project with the team and have it be something that speaks to the team. I was a little hesitant to do something out of the gate in honor of my mom, but after I talked to my family, we all [decided] it was something she would want me to do. From there, it was a no-brainer to do something to honor her and to do something for breast cancer.

“We really looked at something that spoke to us as a shutdown, defensive team, and we love blocking shots. Blocking shots is a thing that’s really big in our program, so it was something that we said would be cool to make [the program] performance-based specifically for using shot blocks to raise money for breast cancer.”

Kempf has also been involved with the Portal de Belen Foundation service trip that took Cornell to poor and needy areas within the Dominican Republic, and he led a service trip to Monte Plata, where the Big Red built a community service center for the area. They later provided goods, services and sports equipment to the children of the area while continuing to lift the spirits of a developing nation with a poverty rate exceeding 27 percent.

He’s additionally worked with the Racker Center, a support center for people with disabilities in the greater Ithaca, N.Y., area, and the Newfield Schools Mentor Program, which hosted children groups on campus at Cornell.

NHL’s Bruins sign Cornell forward Bancroft, who forgoes last season of NCAA eligibility

Dalton Bancroft played a key role up front over three seasons for Cornell (photo: Adam Sheehan/Cornell Athletics).

Cornell junior forward Dalton Bancroft has signed a one-year, entry-level contract with the NHL’s Boston Bruins.

Bancroft will report to the AHL’s Providence Bruins for the remainder of the season on an amateur tryout contract.

Ending the 2024-25 season with 27 points (15 goals, 12 assists), Bancroft led the Big Red in short-handed goals (2) and game-winning goals (4), and was one of three players to register three game-winning goals (sophomore Ryan Walsh and senior Ondrej Psenicka).

Concluding his Big Red career with 79 points (36 goals, 43 assists), Bancroft scored at least 20 points in his first three seasons with the Big Red to become the 49th player in program history to reach the milestone.

Connors leaves UMass after three seasons, inks NHL contract with Los Angeles

Kenny Connors was a standout player up front for three seasons with UMass (photo: Thom Kendall/UMass Athletics),

Massachusetts junior forward Kenny Connors has signed a two-year, entry-level contract with the NHL’s Los Angeles Kings.

Connors, who forgoes his final season of collegiate eligibility, was originally taken by the Kings in the fourth round (103rd overall) of the 2022 NHL Draft.

“Kenny has been a top-line player for us since the day he stepped on campus,” said UMass coach Greg Carvel in a statement. “After three years of playing a significant role, both offensively and defensively, Kenny has earned a contract with the LA Kings and becomes the fifth forward from this year’s team to sign an NHL contract. Kenny also did an excellent job serving as a leader on this year’s team, was a selfless teammate, and was instrumental in UMass returning to the NCAA tournament again. Kenny is the definition of a power forward and his battle level on the ice always had an impact on the game.”

“I’m so grateful to everyone who made my time at UMass so special,” added Connors. “Thank you to all my teammates for the unforgettable memories we’ve created together that will last a lifetime. To the coaches and staff, thank you for helping me grow as a person, for believing in me, and for teaching me lessons that will extend far beyond the ice. UMass will always hold a special place in my heart and I couldn’t be more proud to be a Minuteman.”

Connors logged 77 points over 109 games on 26 goals and 51 assists over three seasons at UMass and was plus-2 with five power-play goals, one short-handed tally and nine game winners. His nine game-winning goals ranks second all-time for a career in program history.

As a freshman in 2022-23, the Glen Mills, Pa., native was selected to the Hockey East all-rookie team.

This season, Connors put up career highs in goals (10), assists (19) and points (29) over 40 games. He was plus-4 with two power-play goals and four game winners.

Women’s Division I College Hockey: Wisconsin’s Mark Johnson named 2025 USCHO Coach of the Year

Sometimes the choice for these awards comes from detailed and nuanced viewing of the season as a whole and we pick a coach whose team made massive strides. Boston University’s Tara Watchorn and Cornell’s Doug Derraugh both would have been worthy choices this season. They certainly deserve and receive an honorable mention here.

But sometimes the the choice is more obvious.

It might even be boiled down to what may be the indelible and lasting image of this season for years to come. When Wisconsin coach Mark Johnson, appearing relaxed and confident, looked out over this team as they awaited a coach’s challenge review with 18.9 seconds left in the national championship game where his team was down 3-2 and their fate hung in the balance and asked them, “Who wants it?” about the upcoming penaly shot he solidified a choice that his peers had already made when they named him CCM/AHCA Coach of the Year prior to the Frozen Four.

With that one question he displayed the trust and composure that were hallmarks of his team this season. All while make a call and trusting his players in a situation he said he himself wouldn’t have wanted to be in as a player. The play was so crucial Johnson didn’t even watch Kirsten Simms take the penalty shot. But you wouldn’t have known it from his composed and simple question.

In the immediate aftermath of the game, seemed so stunned by his team’s come-from-behind OT win that he was asking everyone he encountered during the on-ice celebration, “Would you have wanted to take that?”

Sophomore goalie Ava McNaughton summed up Johnson’s impact in the championship post-game press conference saying, “He instills confidence within every single one of our players, every single day, every single practice, every single game, since day one of the season. We’re the ones who have to go out and execute it, but his his ability to just have such a driving force on the bench and just have such a presence, yet be so calm is something that I think it’s hard to come by.”

Wisconsin went into the season as a team with a stacked roster full of potential, but seeing that potential to fruition wasn’t a given. The team had to stay focused and disciplined whether they were eking out overitme wins in Duluth or cruising to an 11-1 win over St. Thomas. That they weren’t rattled when they went down in games throughout in the postseason showed their resilence, their composure and their unshakeable belief in each other and the work they’d put in to get to that point.

In the end, they had just one loss and set a new program record for wins in a season. They were scored on first and had to come from behind in each of their NCAA Tournament games and pulled off one of the most spectacular ends to a title game the sport has ever seen.

On a team full of stars, including all three Patty Kazmaier top three finalists, four First Team All-Americans, the national Goalie of the Year and five women playing for Team USA in the World Championships less than a month after the season, Johnson had complete buy-in. No player felt more important than any other and every one of them trusted the others to pick her up if she made a mistake. The result was a group that found a new level of playing free that elevated each individual’s game and created a whole that was greater than the sum of its parts.

Along the way, Johnson led the Badgers to their 10th WCHA Regular Season title, finishing with the most points (77) in school history. Their regular season title was Johnson’s 10th, the most of any head coach in WCHA history. Wisconsin led the nation in goals, assists, power-play and penalty-killing percentage, scoring offense, scoring defense and scoring margin.

This was the team’s 16th Frozen Four Appearance, which is tied with Minnesota for the most of any program. Wisconsin is making their 19th overall NCAA tournament appearance, the second-most in NCAA history.

For his unwavering faith in his team, for his calmness and ability to impart it on his players, for his success, and for, as Casey O’Brien put it in her Patty Kazmaier Award acceptance speech, “assembling this ridiculous roster” and guiding it to a historic and memorable national championship, for all these reasons and more, Wisconsin’s Mark Johnson is the 2025 USCHO Coach of the Year.

Women’s Division I College Hockey: The PodKaz Episode 45 – Wrapping up the 2024-25 season with USCHO’s awards and storylines we’ll remember

Nicole Haase and Todd Milewski from USCHO.com wrap up the 2024-25 NCAA women’s hockey season on this episode of the PodKaz.

The All-USCHO teams and individual awards are out, and Nicole explains the process and how this year’s winners were chosen.

Then we take a look back at some big storylines from the season, including Wisconsin winning its eighth NCAA championship, Boston University going from unranked at the start of the season to Hockey East playoff champion, Cornell getting back to the Frozen Four and more.

And we wrap up with a look at some of the entries in the transfer portal, where teams can remake their roster in the offseason.

The PodKaz is a production of USCHO.com. Have a question for our mailbag? Reach out to Nicole (@NicoleHaase) or Todd (@ToddMilewski) on social media or email [email protected].

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Women’s Division I College Hockey: 2024-25 All-USCHO Teams

Twelve different programs are represented on the All-USCHO Women’s Division I teams this year. Congratulations to all the players on their spectacular season

First Team
F: Casey O’Brien – Wisconsin
F: Kirsten Simms – Wisconsin
F: Laila Edwards – Wisconsin
D: Caroline Harvey – Wisconsin
D: Haley Winn – Clarkson
G: Ève Gascon – Minnesota Duluth

Second Team
F: Abbey Murphy – Minnesota
F: Tessa Janecke – Penn State
F: Joy Dunne – Ohio State
D: Nicole Gosling – Clarkson
D: Emma Peschel – Ohio State
G: Ava McNaughton – Wisconsin

Third Team
F: Jocelyn Amos – Ohio State
F: Elyssa Biederman – Colgate
F: Issy Wunder – Princeton
D: Kendall Cooper – Quinnipiac
D: Casey Borgiel – Colgate
G: Kaley Doyle – Quinnipiac

Rookie Team
F: Caitlin Kraemer – Minnesota Duluth
F: Lindzi Avar – Cornell
F: Monique Lyons – Brown
D: Tuva Kandell – Northeastern
D: Chloe Primerano – Minnesota
G: Lisa Jönsson – Northeastern

Buium, Howard, Leonard announced as 2025 Hobey Hat Trick

Denver’s Zeev Buium, Michigan State’s Isaac Howard, and Boston College’s Ryan Leonard are the 2025 Hobey Hat Trick (photo: Hobey Baker Award Foundation).

The Hobey Baker Memorial Award Foundation announced the three Hobey Baker Hat Trick finalists for the 2025 award on Thursday.

Named were Denver sophomore defenseman Zeev Buium, Michigan State junior forward Isaac Howard, and Boston College sophomore forward Ryan Leonard.

The Hobey Baker Award honors college hockey’s top player. Criteria for the award include displaying outstanding skills in all phases of the game, strength of character on and off the ice, sportsmanship, and scholastic achievements.

The three were selected from the list of Top Ten candidates by the 30-member selection committee and an additional round of online fan balloting to determine this year’s Hobey Baker Award recipient.

The winner will be announced Fri., April 11, 2025 during the Frozen Four weekend in St. Louis, Mo.

A one-hour live production will feature the Hobey Baker Award, the Mike Richter Award (top goalie in college hockey), the Hockey Humanitarian Award (college hockey’s finest citizen), and the East and West All-American teams, along with other national awards. The event will be televised live from the Stifel Theatre on the NHL Network and streamed on the Hobey Baker website at 6:00 p.m. ET.

Hockey Humanitarian Award Finalist Feature: By spearheading organ donor awareness events, Fortin’s ‘desire to make an impact to help others is a really great legacy that she leaves here at Bemidji State’

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Like innumerable kids, Kendra Fortin grew up with a list of ideas as to what she may want to do for a profession once she was out of school.

What separates the Bemidji State senior defenseman in that regard is how her ultimately chosen career route tied into something that happened to her family when she was growing up.

When Kendra was nine years old, her father, Cory, was diagnosed with end-stage kidney failure and was told he would need a kidney transplant to live. It wasn’t until 2021 that he received a transplant from a deceased donor, but thankfully, all’s well now. At the time that Kendra was contacted for this story, her parents were flying to Barbados on vacation, and they did not miss a single BSU home series throughout this season.

And it’s her father’s ordeal that set Kendra on course for a nursing career, most importantly, and also helped make her one of this year’s five finalists for the Hockey Humanitarian Award.

“My train of thought with what I wanted to be started as a hairdresser,” Kendra said. “My mom, my grandmother and my aunt are all hairdressers, and I originally wanted to do that, but then I went on to want to be a teacher, because I like kids, then I wanted to be a dietician.

“I had a lot of patient-nurse interactions, including with my dad’s nurses, and so I declared my nursing major right when I came in here (to Bemidji State). Once things started to unfold, I became a little more curious. I was 13 when I started setting up my dad’s dialysis machine at home, so I definitely had the knowledge of that and it was something very interesting to me, how a machine that beeps really loudly in the middle of the night and could probably wake up our whole house can save someone’s life and keep them from passing away.

“I grew that interest until I was 17, when I started my dad’s campaign to help him find a kidney. Everything just snowballed from there, and now I’m 22 years old, finishing nursing school and I’ll be back in a dialysis clinic (this semester, as part of her pre-graduation placements). It’s pretty incredible how time has changed.”

Kendra originally started a “Kidney for Cory” campaign in her hometown of Thunder Bay, Ontario, and her efforts have carried over into her time in college. As a freshman at BSU, she began planting seeds for organ donor awareness. And over the past three years, she has spearheaded Organ Donor Awareness weekends for both Bemidji State men’s and women’s hockey home games.

Fortin shows what it’s all about when it comes to organ donor awareness.

“It’s been incredible to see how it has gotten bigger every year, where we’ve done something one year and would see how we could do it differently,” Kendra said. “We’ve done interviews and done a lot more with social media, and that’s the best way to get the awareness out there, just putting it out for people to see.

“Within this past year, I had four different people come up to me and say something to the effect of, ‘I wasn’t a donor before this, but I am now,’ and some people just weren’t aware they weren’t donors, then after a game, after a puck drop or after seeing videos, they would make sure they’re donors, and that’s one more chance of saving a life that we wouldn’t have had if we weren’t doing this stuff.

“This past year, I made pamphlets with QR codes for both Canada and the U.S. for how you can sign up to be a donor, and I asked someone who wasn’t a donor at the time how long it took them to sign up, and they said it was under two minutes,” Kendra continued. “Things like that have kept spreading the right way, and hopefully it comes to a point where people don’t have to wait nearly a decade for a life-saving organ.”

Kendra’s work ethic has made admirers out of her college teammates and coaches.

“She does a lot for our hockey program with what she does on the ice, and she’s a nursing major, which is an incredibly challenging thing to be as a Division I student-athlete, and then there’s the work she does in our community, especially around organ donation awareness,” BSU coach Amber Fryklund said. “She has a personal connection to that and has been very passionate about it, and she has really been great about the work to plan all of our events, including her teammates and how her teammates support her in her advocacy. She also does a lot with Bemidji youth hockey and volunteering with our girls hockey program, as well.

“I had a person email me who had some family experience with organ donation with a family member, and she had read about Kendra’s story in terms of her work and her advocacy, and this person was just so grateful for Kendra’s story and how it impacted her, and asked if Kendra had any advice. I had a chance to connect the two of them, and it’s really neat to see that impact she’s having on our community and elsewhere.”

Going forward, Kendra has already accepted a job in the Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre’s labor and delivery department. Her end goal is to become an organ donor coordinator, and Fryklund is pleased to know that Kendra’s awareness work will continue along the way.

Taking part in the ceremonial faceoff has become the norm for Fortin during organ donor awareness weekends on home ice, seen here partaking in a faceoff with the Bemidji State men’s hockey team.

“We’ve had quite a few nursing majors come through our (hockey) program, and it’s extremely challenging,” Fryklund said. “I know she’s inspired by her experiences to become a nurse and help others, and I think what she does with her advocacy goes directly into the passion she has for helping people. The way she manages it all is pretty incredible, and I’m really, really proud of all that she has done on the ice but also in the community and in her organ donation awareness efforts.

“It’s her passion and her dedication, wanting to help others and spread awareness. She truly cares about people and wants to make an impact, whether it’s in her own community or other places. Her desire to make an impact to help others is a really great legacy that she leaves here at Bemidji State, and it’s something that will continue on after she leaves. She wanted to make sure, even though she’s graduating as a student-athlete, she wants to continue her advocacy in her community and beyond.”

Women’s Division I College Hockey: Wisconsin’s Casey O’Brien named USCHO Player of the Year for second straight season

We’re not sure what more we can say about Wisconsin fifth-year forward and co-captain Casey O’Brien.

We thought she was the best player in the country last season and then she came back and had a historic, record-breaking season, won the Patty Kazmaier Award and led her team to its third national championship during her career as a Badger.

In the interest of not just copying and pasting from our Patty Kaz story:

  • 2025 Patty Kazmaier Award winner
  • WCHA Forward of the Year and Player of the Year
  • First-team All-American
  • Led the country with 88 points and 62 assists
  • Only player in the country to average more than 2.0 points per game (2.15)
  • Led the WCHA and was second in the country with 538 faceoff wins
  • Her 88 points tied her for seventh most in NCAA history
  • Her 62 assists are the third-most ever
  • Set a new Wisconsin record for points in a season
  • Set a program record for career points (274)
  • Set a program record career assists (177)
  • Broke her own program record for assists in a season with 62
  • Became the highest point scorer in Badger hockey history – men or women

Beyond the stat line, O’Brien was the leader of her team this season. She was the steady voice that didn’t let her team get carried away as they were undefeated heading into 2025 or finished the regular season with one loss. She wasn’t the loudest voice in the room, but she was the one that commanded everyone’s repect and attention. She helped keep the locker room loose and having fun, but also committed to their goals.

When linemate Kirsten Simms was set to take the penalty shot with 18.9 seconds left in the national championship game that would tie it and keep her team’s hopes alive, it was O’Brien that pulled her into a private conversation that Simms said was crucial to keeping calm, confident and feeling like she could perform in that moment.

“She really just hyped me up in that moment. She’s someone I’ve always looked up to, so it really meant a lot,” said Simms.

After O’Brien won the Kazmaier, Simms said, “I wouldn’t be half of where I am without her… It has been super incredible to play with such a talented player like her, and I’ve gotten to not only play beside her, but learn from her and grow from it. She just an incredible leader and just incredible player overall.”

O’Brien stands out for her consistent pursuit of improvement in every part of her game. She has filled a different role for the Badgers in each of her seasons and takes pride in that adaptability and in being the type of player that makes those around her better.

It has made her into the type of player that can make impact on every inch of the ice. She’s massively well-rounded and while opposing teams might be able to keep some of her skills in check, they find it difficult to shut her down for the entire length of a game. She makes opponents have to worry about her and in doing so, she opens up time and space for her teammates.

She’s as likely to be fighting for a puck along the defensive boards or stepping in front of a shot as she is to be racing through the neutral zone. She’s the kind of 200-foot players coaches dream of, setting an example for all her teammates that will have lasting impacts on future Badger rosters.

In a program with a rich history of outstanding forwards, O’Brien stands out as one of the very best.

For all these reasons and more, Casey O’Brien is the 2025 USCHO Player of the Year

Women’s Division I College Hockey: Minnesota Duluth’s Caitlin Kraemer is USCHO’s 2025 Rookie of the Year

One of the most prolific players internationally at the U18 level, Minnesota Duluth freshman Caitlin Kraemer entered the NCAA having set high standards for herself. She had a tournament-high ten goals in back-to-back U18 World Champinships and owns the all-time scoring record for Canada’s National Women’s Under-18 Team with 37 goals and 53 points in 32 games.

While other rookies came in more hyped, Kraemer set about making a name for herself in the very first weekend of play, scoring two goals and adding an assist in just the second game of the season as she helped lead the Bulldogs to a weekend sweep of Ohio State.

She would go on to lead all freshman nationally with 18 goals, including two short-handed tallies and four game-winning markers. She was third on the Bulldogs in scoring overall and for her efforts was named WCHA Rookie the Year and Hockey Coaches Association Julie Chu Rookie of the Year.

On a team built on solid defense, Kraemer brings needed offense. A strong skater who’s difficult to get off balance, she is at her best through open ice, using her speed and strength to hold off defenders as she angles towards the net. She has great instincts, particularly towards the net and is equally lethal with a soft wrister or more powerful snipe. She excels on the power play where she uses the extra room on the ice to find lanes and get the puck to the net.

Kraemer is big and physical and uses her size to win puck battles and claim space on the ice. At times, she had difficulty staying on the right side of aggressive, but more experience will bring better awareness. Tamping down on the grit and drive she has would change who she is as a player. She just has to fine tune it a bit to stay out of the box.

Even at just 18 years old, Kraemer shows a massive hockey IQ and ability to read the game. She sees the ice well and anticipates plays, as shown in her shorthanded goals and breakaway tallies. She’s self-aware about her strengths and weaknesses and puts in the work to grow her game and improve. This feels like just the beginning for Kraemer, who seems to have a massive ceiling as well as the work ethic and drive to achieve it.

“Caitlin is not only a standout player but also a student of the game, constantly pushing herself to learn and grow. Her speed, power, skill, and deep understanding of the game set her apart as one of the best in NCAA hockey,”  said UMD head coach Laura Schuler after Kraemer won HCA Rookie of the Year.

The Bulldogs have been on the edge of breaking through not just to the top of their conference, but nationally and Kraemer looks poised to lead them there.

In recognition of an outstanding season, Caitlin Kraemer is this year’s USCHO Rookie of the Year.

 

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