Dare To Dream: How Lightning Star Brandon Hagel Broke Through Closed Doors To Become Great

By Jared Clinton, Features writer 

The puck had only just dropped in the round-robin meeting between Canada and the U.S. at the 4 Nations Face-Off, and there was Brandon Hagel, mitts off, fists cocked, standing toe-to-toe with Matthew Tkachuk. And in that moment, any thoughts about Tampa Bay drifted free from Jon Cooper’s mind.

As Cooper watched on, the Lightning bench boss could have been concerned about Tampa’s second-highest scorer. He could have been chewing his hand off worrying about Hagel getting dinged up in what some had decried as a meaningless mid-season cash grab disguised as an international competition. Against a backdrop of political agitation and in his then-role as coach of Canada’s club, though, it was all Cooper could do to contain his own emotions. “When we were in it,” he said, “it was all flag waving.”

For his part, Hagel never had any intention of becoming the on-ice avatar for a nation. Even with a fistful of NHL scraps under his belt and several dustups in major junior, Hagel insisted fighting isn’t part of his game, at least not really. He wasn’t even thinking about fighting until he lined up across from Tkachuk. But when the offer came, Hagel was all too happy to oblige. Then, in the 45 seconds that followed, from the clutching and grabbing on through the first flurry of punches and all the way to his arm-raising, crowd-pumping cries after the combatants were separated, Hagel etched his way into the memory of hockey-mad Canadians the world over. “He had the weight of 20,000 people in that Bell Centre on his shoulders, and he fought like it,” Cooper said. “I’ve told ‘Hags,’ ‘If nobody knew you going into this tournament, pretty sure you won’t have to buy a beer in this country for quite some time now.’”

Hagel puts it another way: “It’ll probably be one of the biggest moments in my life.”

And one made bigger, perhaps, by virtue of the number of times it seemed that it was the exact type of moment that would never come.

Like any number of talented kids from Western Canada, Hagel viewed the WHL bantam draft as a rite of passage. In some ways, even, the draft had its way of feeling less like one step toward achieving the NHL dream than it did the dream itself. The major-junior circuit has been the breeding ground for a great many big-league stars, and whether you’re growing up in a Prairie town or west of the Rockies, if you’re among the best players in your age group, it’s seen as the most-direct route to The Show.

Matthew Tkachuk and Brandon Hagel fight in the first period during a 4 Nations Face-Off game. (Eric Bolte-Imagn Images)

That’s why it was just about all Hagel could think about as his draft year drew near. There was chatter about peers starting to find advisors and agents. There was a personal desire to follow in the footsteps of friends and competitors who had made the leap to ‘The Dub.’ And there was a foreboding sense that everything – his entire future – hinged on taking that next step. It made the 2013 WHL draft feel not just important but monumental.

So, when it came and went without Hagel’s name getting called, he felt as though the ground beneath his feet had suddenly disappeared. He was 15, sitting in class and starting to question his NHL dream. “It has the feeling that it’s slipping away,” he said.

"He had the weight of 20,000 people in that Bell Centre on his shoulders, and he fought like it."
- Jon Cooper

There was nothing for Hagel to do, really, other than get back to work. For him, that took the form of another two seasons in the same Fort Saskatchewan Rangers system in which he’d been playing during his WHL draft year and then a brief turn with the AJHL’s Whitecourt Wolverines. And it was in Whitecourt, only a few games into 2015-16, where he caught the eye of Red Deer Rebels scouts. That opened the door for him to practice with the Rebels, where he turned coach-GM-owner Brent Sutter’s head and earned a spot on the roster.

While Hagel was not a standout, his first season in Red Deer saw him assert himself as a possible NHL-caliber talent. He finished with 47 points in 72 games, and his performance gave him enough cachet that the Buffalo Sabres decided to take a flyer. He was scooped up with the 159th overall pick in the 2016 NHL draft.

Now, if this were about almost any other top NHL scorer, you could chart the pathway from there: he would’ve headed off to Sabres camp, landed on the radar of Buffalo’s higher-ups, eventually earned an AHL spot, turned that into an NHL opportunity and gone on to cement himself as a lineup regular. But that wasn’t the case. Over the next two off-seasons, Hagel spent time in upstate New York in hopes he would ingratiate himself to the organization and earn an entry-level contract. Instead, after Hagel wrapped up his third season with the Rebels, the Sabres relinquished his rights.

The first phone call Hagel remembers receiving after Buffalo gave him the news was from Sutter. “He basically said, ‘I am going to do everything I can to try and get you to that next level. You just have to continue putting your head down and try to get better and try to get yourself there,’” Hagel said.

That didn’t stop him from feeling, though, that he was reliving the WHL draft nightmare all over again. As a 20-year-old entering his fourth WHL campaign, there was a cold, creeping feeling of doubt. He felt like an unfortunate reality was beginning to set in – that a life in hockey wasn’t going be in the cards. So, Hagel gave himself an ultimatum. “If this isn’t going to work, I need to go to school,” he said. “That was my assumption, that I’d give it to Christmas.”

With that in his mind, Hagel started to think about his future. While putting in some serious off-season work, he made time to sign up to head back to school. If hockey wasn’t going to work out, he wanted to improve his grades so he could go to college. But when he got back to Red Deer to start 2018-19, he looked like a different player. The season prior, before Buffalo had let him walk, his offense was inconsistent. Now, seemingly out of nowhere, he was uncontainable. He had 10 points through his first five games and was pushing 20 by his 10th. And by his 15th game, he was tied for third in WHL scoring, with 28 points. Hagel’s hard work was shining through.

"It’ll probably be one of the biggest moments in my life."
- Brandon Hagel on his fight at the 4 Nations

More importantly, NHL clubs were circling. Now, his self-imposed deadline didn’t seem so worrisome. And by the end of October 2018, days after his fifth three-point game of the WHL season, Hagel put pen to paper on a three-year, entry-level deal with the Chicago Blackhawks.

Sutter had encouraged him, pressed him to work even harder and told Hagel he could still make his NHL dream come true. “I couldn’t give more credit, and I give a lot of credit, to Brent Sutter,” Hagel said. “He was the best thing that’s probably ever happened to me in hockey.”

Brandon Hagel (Sergei Belski-Imagn Images)
"Brent Sutter was the best thing that’s probably ever happened to me in hockey." 
- Brandon Hagel

If the pandemic didn’t nearly shutter one NHL campaign and change the landscape of another, it’s worth wondering how enamored the Lightning would have become with Hagel. The 2020-21 season brought with it a temporary divisional realignment that made Chicago and Tampa – normally in opposite conferences – regular foes. Eight times the Blackhawks squared off with the Lightning that season, and it was during the third of those meetings, the first for which a rookie Hagel was in the lineup, that Cooper couldn’t shake him. “I just remember I was like, ‘Who is this kid, whose name I don’t know, who is flying all over the place and being a pest?’” Cooper said. “It’s like, ‘Oh my God, this kid is always involved.’”

Cooper was all too familiar with Hagel by season’s end, as was the Lightning front office. What they had seen was soon apparent to the rest of the NHL, too. During his sophomore season, Hagel worked his way up Chicago’s lineup, and as the trade deadline approached, with the Blackhawks in full rebuild mode, there were rumblings he was a sought-after trade chip. Hagel, though, didn’t think anything of it. “A couple days before, the (Blackhawks) coach at the time (Derek King) came out and said something along the lines of, ‘If we trade Hagel, I don’t know what type of rebuild we’re doing here,’” Hagel said. “Rumors were going around, questions were being asked, and in my mind, I don’t think I’m going anywhere.”

Then came the news. On a road trip to Minnesota, Hagel was pulled aside by a Chicago staff member and sent to meet with the Hawks’ brass. He was told he’d been traded, learning soon thereafter his destination was Tampa Bay. Initially, he couldn’t believe it. His head was “in a blender.” But disbelief soon became a realization: he was going to get an opportunity to compete for a Stanley Cup with the back-to-back champions.

Brandon Hagel (Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images)

It wasn’t long, however, before his elation dissipated. On the bottom-feeding Blackhawks, Hagel was seeing big minutes. He was proving himself a capable top-six player. But a similar role with the Lightning was blocked by Nikita Kucherov, Brayden Point, Steven Stamkos and a cadre of veteran talent on a Cup-contending club. “I’m coming over from Chicago, I have 21 goals already, and there’s still however many games,” Hagel said. “I’ve been playing 18 minutes a game when I was in Chicago, and now I’m playing 12 or 13.”

Frustration was setting in. Hagel had been used to working his way up the lineup, not slipping helplessly down it. But Cooper preached patience.

So, Hagel did as he’d done prior: he put his head down and went to work. The result, as always, was a breakthrough. Against the New York Rangers in the third round of the 2022 post-season, Hagel landed on a line with Alex Killorn and Anthony Cirelli. It was a defensive role, and he bought in. Ultimately, Hagel played an important part in helping the Lightning to a third-straight Cup final, and while the Bolts left empty-handed, Hagel’s commitment to doing the little things well wasn’t lost on Cooper.

Brandon Hagel (James Guillory-Imagn Images)

Indeed, Hagel’s work ethic and attitude were the very things that landed him on the wing alongside Kucherov and Point just two games into the following season. It wasn’t some dalliance with the Lightning top six, either. Hagel became a fixture of the unit, authoring a breakout 30-goal, 64-point campaign. “Everyone thinks, ‘Oh, just throw me on the line, and I’ll get points and be able to do this.’ But that’s not how it works,” Cooper said. “These guys, they think the game at such a high level, they play the game at such an incredibly fast pace. That it’s why it’s hard to play with really, really good players. Good players also want guys who are going to do some of the work that they’re not going to do.”

That, Cooper said, is Hagel. But it’s not just what he brings to the attack or his ability to thrive alongside elite talents that have led Hagel from being an overlooked 15-year-old to a role player for Team Canada in best-on-best play. From where Cooper is standing, it’s because everything that has been thrown at Hagel, whether an off-ice obstacle, grind-line minutes or the chance to skate in the top six, has been an opportunity he’s accepted, learned from and used to build a bigger, stronger, better foundation for the rest of his game. In his earliest moments with the Lightning, Cooper said, Hagel kept taking bites of the apple. And once he was ready, bit by bit, as with his entire career, the bites just kept getting bigger.

“The cycle just continues,” Cooper said. “Late draft pick. Sixth-rounder. And it’s just never being given a chance. It’s always that a door keeps shutting in his face, and he keeps opening it. It shuts in his face again, and he walks through again, everywhere he’s gone. When you have that much fight in a player, and you watch what he’s done in his career, probably not that surprised at what he’s doing now.”


This article appeared in our 2025 Yearbook and Fantasy Guide. This issue features team reports for all 32 NHL teams heading into the 2025-26 season, including an analysis of their offense, defense and goaltending, as well as our prediction for where we think they will finish in the league standings. We also include features on Oilers center Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Flames defenseman Rasmus Andersson and more. In addition, we take a look at the top skaters and goaltenders ahead of the coming season.

You can get it in print for free when you subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/Free today. All subscriptions include complete access to more than 76 years of articles at The Hockey News Archive.

The Hockey News Yearbook Ranks The Ottawa Senators Top 10 Prospects

As part of The Hockey News 2025-6 Yearbook and Fantasy Guide, the writers at the main site have come up with their view of the Ottawa Senators' top prospects. According to THN's list, just in time for rookie camp, they believe Yakemchuk will arrive in the NHL at some point this season and that this year's first-rounder, Logan Hensler, will need three more years at Wisconsin. 

We differ with the main site in a few places, but fun debates like this are what help make the hockey world go 'round. Let us know what you think about the list in the comments below. 

Future WATCH

TOP 10 PROSPECTS

1. Carter Yakemchuk

Pos D Age 20

2024-25 Calgary (WHL)

Positively brilliant with the puck on his stick. Power-play quarterback. Will hone ‘D’ with time.

Expected NHL Arrival ’25-26

Related: Yakemchuk shines as Sens win rookie tournament opener

2. Logan Hensler

Pos D Age 18

2024-25 Wisconsin (Big Ten)

Inconsistent draft year, but the upside is apparent. He’ll grow into bigger role at NCAA Wisconsin.

Expected NHL Arrival ’28-29

3. Leevi Merilainen

Pos G Age 23

2024-25 Belleville (AHL)

AHL numbers? Good. NHL performance? Excellent. Cool customer uses athleticism to his advantage.

Expected NHL Arrival ’25-26 (edit)

4. Stephen Halliday

Pos C Age 23

2024-25 Belleville (AHL)

Led Baby Sens in scoring as AHL rookie. Patience with the puck is hard to teach. Halliday has it.

Expected NHL Arrival ’26-27

5. Mads Sogaard

Pos G Age 24

2024-25 Belleville (AHL)

Fewer starts last season, and his stats regressed. But the big keeper can intimidate shooters.

Expected NHL Arrival ’26-27

6. Blake Vanek

Pos RW Age 18

2024-25 Chicago (USHL)

Strong high-school output but modest USHL numbers. Move to WHL will aid big winger’s growth.

Expected NHL Arrival ’30-31

7. Xavier Bourgault

Pos RW Age 22

2024-25 Belleville (AHL)

Has shown a commitment to refining game. QMJHL scorer has become a two-way talent as pro.

Expected NHL Arrival ’26-27

Coach Describes Xavier Bourgault As The Coach Describes Xavier Bourgault As The "Best Player At Senators Rookie Camp So Far"As the Ottawa Senators enter the final day of rookie camp with a game against the Winnipeg Jets on Sunday night, the top prospects have stepped up, as you might expect. For example, defenseman Carter Yakemchuk and forward Stephen Halliday were seen as the two rookies at this camp most likely to have a long stay at main camp this month, and they combined for a tidy five points in a 4–3 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs rookies on Saturday.

8. Jorian Donovan

Pos D Age 21

2024-25 Belleville (AHL)

Skating gets him out of trouble and limits opposition chances. Modest upside but steady game.

Expected NHL Arrival ’27-28

9. Blake Montgomery

Pos LW Age 20

2024-25 London (OHL)

Deceptive speed for a 6-foot-4 frame. Especially adept at finding passing lanes and attacking space.

Expected NHL Arrival ’28-29

10. Gabriel Eliasson

Pos D Age 19

2024-25 Barrie (OHL)

An out-and-out bruiser on the blueline. A physical specimen who lives to punish attacking forwards.

Expected NHL Arrival ’29-30

You can order The Hockey News 2025-26 Yearbook and Fantasy Guide at the link below:

2025-2026 YEARBOOK & FANTASY GUIDE | 79012025-2026 YEARBOOK & FANTASY GUIDE | 7901Get absolutely everything you need to know about the upcoming NHL season in one book with our XXL-sized Yearbook + Fantasy Guide. Over 228 pages, you'll find four-page previews for each of the 32 teams – including top prospects and full rosters – and predictions. Plus, you get features on Connor Hellebuyck, Lane Hutson

This article first appeared at The Hockey News-Ottawa

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World's Shortest, Concise Rangers Preview Ever

Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

Patrick Hoffman is a superior journalist with an Argus eye for the Rangers.

The Man was asked for the shortest possible Rangers X-Ray and Hoffman delivered: Here's his September Song:

1. "Examining the Rangers, I find that there are more questions than answers:"

2. "One of the major questions is, do the Blueshirts have enough defensive depth? Frankly, I don't think so."

3. "What kind of impact will Mike Sullivan have on the team? History shows that – with Pittsburgh – he had trouble making the playoffs with Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang and Erik Karlsson in his lineup."

4. "My estimation is that Igor Shesterkin will bounce back, but I'm not sure about Jonathan Quick. He's getting up there in age and proved to be leaky throughout last season."

5. "Conclusion: "As of this writing, I see them as a bubble team!" Kudos to Pal Patrick for being fast, furious and – unlike the Rangers –  infallible!

Giants miss chance to make up wild-card ground with aces on mound vs. Dodgers

Giants miss chance to make up wild-card ground with aces on mound vs. Dodgers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — At about 6:45 p.m. on Saturday evening, the Giants were feeling pretty good about their situation. 

They took the field knowing the New York Mets had lost an eighth straight game then immediately went out and put four runs on Clayton Kershaw, whose path to Cooperstown is paved in part by years of dominance at Oracle Park. With their own ace on the mound, the Giants had a real opportunity to take control of the NL wild-card race. 

Life, however, can come at you pretty fast this time of year. 

At 4:15 p.m. on Sunday, the Giants walked off the field having lost a second straight game. Their two co-aces, moved up a day so that they both could face the Los Angeles Dodgers, combined to give up 11 runs over the weekend. Across the country on Sunday, the Mets got a walk-off homer from Pete Alonso, the type of swing they have been missing for weeks. 

After a 10-2 loss to the Dodgers on Sunday, the Giants are 1.5 games back of the Mets, who hold the tiebreaker. They once again are chasing, hoping for a little bit of help, and also a lot more success next weekend at Dodger Stadium.

“It’s disappointing,” manager Bob Melvin said. “We were just talking about that [in the clubhouse]. We win the first game, we score four runs in the first inning yesterday — it feels pretty good. To be where we are today, it’s disappointing. It got away from us in a hurry.

“We gave up a lot of hits and a lot of runs to a team that makes you work. If you don’t throw it over the plate, they end up wearing you out.”

The Dodgers had 35 hits and 23 runs over the final two games of the series, and it appears they finally have flipped the switch after an inconsistent summer. That would be bad news for a Giants team that has four games at Dodger Stadium next weekend and once again will have to find a way to get to what right now is the hottest starting staff in the game.

Tyler Glasnow had allowed just one hit until the seventh on Sunday and ended up giving up one run on three hits. On Friday, Yoshinobu Yamamoto gave up one hit and struck out seven over 10 innings. His dominance wasn’t rewarded because Justin Verlander matched him and Patrick Bailey hit a walk-off grand slam

The Giants used Thursday’s day off to move Logan Webb and Robbie Ray up a day to follow Verlander, and it didn’t pay off at all. Like Webb a day earlier, Ray was knocked out after allowing the first three runners to reach in the fifth inning. 

Ray said he feels great physically and noted his fastball was as firm as it’s been all year. But he sprayed the ball around early, and the Dodgers will always make you pay for a lack of command. 

“I felt, out of the stretch, a little bit like my front side was getting a little too quick. I was missing a lot arm-side,” Ray said. “I just wasn’t able to really get on top of it like I was out of the windup. I was just kind of fighting that all day, really.”

The Giants hoped that moving Webb and Ray up could lead to a huge weekend. Instead, they’ll now try to figure out how to get through a series at Chase Field, where the Arizona Diamondbacks are still very much alive. They were the only team in the jumbled wild-card mess to win their weekend series, and they’ll enter this week just half a game behind the Giants. 

None of this will be easy, at least until the Giants get to their final series against the Colorado Rockies. To make sure that one counts, they’ll need to fare better against Dodger pitching. They’re going to see Yamamoto, Kershaw and Glasnow again next weekend, and also could face young right-hander Emmet Sheehan, who is throwing well and has had plenty of success against the Giants early in his career. 

Melvin said the staff would get together and discuss whether a change is needed next weekend. There’s not much you can do when Yamamoto is hitting his spots, but Glasnow was wild in the early innings on Sunday and the Giants couldn’t take advantage.

“You’re always in between, whether or not you want to make him work or try to get that fastball early in the count. Nothing really worked today,” Melvin said. “We’ll talk about changing our approach. We have to do something different.”

It goes without saying that the Giants also will have to pitch a lot better next weekend. Webb and Ray will get another shot at the Dodgers, and the latter didn’t think there would be any carryover. He has been in this division a long time and had good starts at Dodger Stadium as well as rough ones. 

Next week’s games were always going to be huge, but there’s a bit of added pressure after a rough 48 hours at Oracle Park. The Giants didn’t lose any ground to the Mets this weekend, but they did lose three days on the calendar, and right now that’s just as important. 

“It’s frustrating obviously, but we’re still in it,” Ray said. “We’re a resilient team. We’ve shown that we’re able to bounce back from stuff like this. We’ve just got to put this behind us, go on the road and win one game at a time.”

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What Does The Flyers’ Goaltending Picture Look Like After Fedotov Trade?

The Philadelphia Flyers’ decision to trade Ivan Fedotov to the Columbus Blue Jackets for a 2026 sixth-round pick on Sunday provided clarity in a position that’s been anything but straightforward in Philadelphia.

The goaltending depth chart is now a little more streamlined, but it still leaves questions about whether the Flyers will stay committed to that structure and the players currently in it.

The NHL Tandem: Ersson and Vladar

The most likely outcome is that Sam Ersson and Dan Vladar split the crease at the NHL level. (And no, the Fedotov trade does not open up considerations for the Flyers to reunite with Carter Hart. Every credible report that has come out clearly suggests that Hart will not be signing in Philadelphia.)

Ersson, 25, already has a reputation as calm and dependable, even though his numbers have not been where he has said he wants them to be. He's shouldered a large majority of the starter responsibilities, often while the team in front of him was inconsistent, and has not had a consistent backup to take some of that load off (whether that be because of coaching decisions or lack of available talent).

Vladar, 28, acquired from Calgary this summer, represents a different profile. At 6-foot-5, he brings size and NHL experience but also carries the need for a reset after uneven years with the Flames.

If the Flyers are disciplined, this tandem can work well. Ersson can have a more manageable workload and have space to properly evolve, while Vladar has the chance to reestablish himself without the pressure of being a true No. 1.

What cannot happen, though, is the stop-start rhythm of a three-goalie system that plagued last year. Goalies need continuity, and both Ersson and Vladar deserve the opportunity to build it.

The Wild Card: Another Three-Goalie System?

Even with Fedotov gone, it’s not out of the question that the Flyers experiment with another three-goalie setup. Injuries, waiver considerations, and management’s desire to keep as many options as possible sometimes push teams in that direction.

But if last season proved anything, it’s that such an approach comes at a cost.

Carrying three goaltenders may sound like depth, but it often results in none of them finding a rhythm. Ersson, Fedotov, and Aleksei Kolosov all experienced stretches where they sat too long between starts or were thrown into games without consistent preparation. It created uncertainty for the coaching staff and frustration for the players. If the Flyers want progress, they’ll need to avoid repeating that cycle.

The AHL Tandem: Bjarnason and Kolosov

In Lehigh Valley, the focus shifts from stability to development. Carson Bjarnason’s transition to the professional game will be closely monitored. The 20-year-old has impressed with his composure, and that mental steadiness will serve him well in the AHL. The priority for him isn’t just wins and losses but learning the pace, traffic, and grind of pro hockey.

Aleksei Kolosov enters his second year in North America with his own ambitions. Athletic and aggressive by nature, he has made it clear that he wants to be an NHL goalie, but the reality is that he still needs to refine his game to the smaller rink and faster decision-making of the AHL.

Balancing Bjarnason’s need for heavy reps with Kolosov’s ever-precarious situation will be one of the Phantoms’ biggest tasks this season.

The Outlook

Trading Fedotov simplifies the Flyers' goaltending picture, which has too often featured clashing colors, messy brushstrokes, and drawn intense criticism from museum-goers.

Ersson and Vladar deserve to get the consistency they need at the NHL level, while Bjarnason and Kolosov gain meaningful minutes to develop in the AHL. Whether the Flyers stick to this structure or experiment with another three-goalie system will be worth watching, but for now, the organization seems to be taking steps toward a clearer framework.

It’s not a flashy setup, and it doesn’t come with guarantees. But compared to the uncertainty that has long defined Philadelphia’s crease, a season of clarity might be exactly what the Flyers need.

Ime Udoka says Rockets' fifth starter to be decided during training camp

Fred VanVleet. Amen Thompson. Kevin Durant. Alperen Sengun.

Four of the starting five for the Houston Rockets are locked in, but coach Ime Udoka has a deep roster and can go a lot of other directions with that fifth spot — and it's something he could change game-to-game depending upon matchups. Udoka told Ben DuBose of RocketsWire that he wanted this to play out in training camp, then make his call (hat tip Hoops Rumors).

"It's to be determined. I do think Jabari (Smith Jr.) showed tremendous growth this offseason, and obviously he started the majority of his time here, before the injury. But we'll take a look at everything. We feel we have incredible depth this year and a lot of versatility, so we could go a number of different ways, as far as that. I think some of that will be proven in training camp."

Smith is the most logical person to be the fifth starter, giving the Rockets both size and shooting. Smith averaged 11.8 points and 6.7 rebounds a game, shooting 34.6% from beyond the arc, in 39 games as a starter last season. Then Smith fractured his hand, Thompson was moved into the starting lineup to replace him, and by the time Smith was healthy, there was no way Thompson was coming out of the starting lineup. That said, Smith thrived in a bench role averaging 13.2 points and 7.7 rebounds a game in fewer minutes.

If he wants to go with size, Udoka could start Steven Adams at the five next to Sengun, they played well off each other last season. If Udoka wants a more traditional wing in that mix, Dorian Finney-Smith is a strong two-way player, plus there is Jeff Green on the roster.

This is what training camp is for — nobody goes in with all the answers, the best teams are open to possibilities. In the end, Smith likely gets the job, but there will be some interesting things to watch in Rockets training camp beyond Kevin Durant.

Haaland doubles up as City sweep United aside in Manchester derby

Erling Haaland urged Manchester City to “get our asses going”, then showed how with the second and third goals that sealed the 197th Manchester derby for Pep Guardiola’s side, and ended a run of two defeats.

This is no vintage City iteration – currently, at least – but witnessing how the prolific Norwegian took his opportunities, and performed throughout, suggests their main man is up for leading the revival.

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Coach Describes Xavier Bourgault As The "Best Player At Senators Rookie Camp So Far"

As the Ottawa Senators enter the final day of rookie camp with a game against the Winnipeg Jets on Sunday night, some of the top prospects have stepped up, as you might expect.

For example, defenseman Carter Yakemchuk and forward Stephen Halliday were seen as the two rookies at this camp most likely to have a long stay at main camp this month, and they combined for a tidy five points in a 4–3 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs rookies on Saturday.

That said, neither of those top prospects has been the best player at this rookie camp so far. That title, according to B-Sens head coach David Bell, goes to winger Xavier Bourgault. After the first skate on Thursday, Bourgault's name was the first one Bell mentioned when asked which players stood out on day one. Following Saturday’s victory, when asked about "Borgy," Bell again couldn’t say enough good things about him.

"He's been really good since the start of camp," Bell said. "  I think he put a lot of work in this summer. He's finally healthy, he's stronger, and he's probably been the best player at camp for this group so far. He's been really strong this year."

In fairness, Bourgault has a serious advantage in an event like this. At 22, it's not his first rookie camp rodeo. With his draft pedigree and experience, he's supposed to be a top player at this level, the same way overaged players tend to thrive in the junior ranks. But that doesn't affect Bell's belief in Bourgault's ability and "very high" hockey IQ.

"Like I've said before to people, offensive guys come into my office and they ask to play with Xavier because he's very, very good at distributing the puck. I absolutely see him as a guy that's going to come in this year confident, healthy, with familiarity. Being traded as a young guy is always tough. I think he's going to have a big year."

Yakemchuk Shines as Senators Rookies Edge Leafs in Prospects Showdown OpenerYakemchuk Shines as Senators Rookies Edge Leafs in Prospects Showdown OpenerOttawa Senators prospect Carter Yakemchuk wasted no time making his presence felt at the 2025 Prospects Showdown in Montreal. The 19-year-old defenseman scored twice and added an assist as the Senators opened the four-game rookie event with a 4–3 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday afternoon at the Bell Centre in Montreal.

Bourgault was the Edmonton Oilers' first-round draft pick at the 2021 NHL Draft, then returned to junior that season and dominated, putting up 75 points in 43 games with Shawinigan. He spent the next two years in the AHL before being traded last summer, along with Jake Chiasson, for winger Roby Jarventie.

Sens GM Steve Staios knew Bourgault fairly well as a player before either of them landed in Ottawa. Staios worked in the Oilers' hockey operations department in 2022-23, Bourgault's first year as a pro. And his Hamilton Bulldogs faced off twice against Bourgault and the Cataractes at the 2022 Memorial Cup, where Bourgault finished fourth in tournament scoring.

In his first year in the Sens organization, Bourgault certainly wasn't at his best, posting just 26 points in 61 games in Belleville. But according to Bell, there was a good reason for that.

"I think part of it last year, which is what he struggled with, was that he was hurt," Bell said. "He had a hip flexor that was sore. He had a wrist that was sore.

"He's very dynamic and can shift east-west when he's healthy, and he wasn't able to do that last year. And as a shooter and passer with a sore wrist, he couldn’t do that. He was handcuffed quite a bit. Now he’s healthy, and you’re seeing a little bit more of what he was in junior — a dynamic, game-breaking type of player."

Staios still hasn't lost belief in the player either. Despite Bourgault's modest production last season, the Sens re-signed him to a one-year deal over the summer. But with Ottawa's roster of forwards all but carved in stone for opening night, it's unlikely that Bourgault will displace anyone in the top 12. But Bell thinks Bourgault will give the club a lot to think about. 

"I think right now he has his confidence. So if he can keep going with that in these games, and then have a good start to the season, he’ll get some consideration."

By Steve Warne
This article first appeared at The Hockey News-Ottawa

More Sens Headlines From The Hockey News Ottawa:
Report: Alex Formenton's NHL Eligibility To Be Restored On December 1st
Sens Unveil Rookie Camp Roster For Games This Weekend
Senators GM Steve Staios On Why He Brought Back The Same Group
Can The Senators Still Avoid Losing Their 2026 First Round Pick?
Ottawa Senators Radio Play-By-Play Team Won't Travel To Road Games This Season

Vingegaard wins Vuelta after final stage cancelled amid pro-Palestinian protests in Madrid

  • Organisers cancel stage and declare Vingegaard winner

  • Protesters threw barricades into the street on Gran Vía

The final stage of the Vuelta a España was abandoned in chaotic and violent scenes, after groups of pro-Palestine protesters swamped the finish line area and presentation podium in central Madrid on Sunday.

As huge crowds engulfed the finish area, the race leader Jonas Vingegaard, his Visma Lease-a-bike team and the rest of the peloton were forced to turn back from the city centre, with more than 55km still to race on stage 21. In an official statement, the Vuelta organisers said: “For security reasons, stage 21 of La Vuelta has been ended early. There will be no podium ceremony.”

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Tanner Molendyk absent from Nashville Predators lineup at NHL Prospect Tournament

The Nashville Predators are 2-0 in the NHL Prospect Tournament down in Tampa, but have been without one of their top players. 

Defenseman Tanner Molendyk has not played in either of the Predators' games against the Tampa Bay Lightning on Friday or the Carolina Hurricanes on Saturday.

He was reportedly injured during Predators pre-tournament practice on Thursday, leaving the ice and not returning. 

After a dominant season in the Western Hockey League, making it all the way to the Memorial Cup championship game, Molendyk has the potential to make the Predators roster at the upcoming training camp. 

 He played with the Saskatoon Blades for 21 games, scoring 21 points. Midway through the season, he was traded to the Medicine Hat Tigers and scored 26 points in 28 regular-season games with the Tigers.

Medicine Hat went on a run in the playoffs, winning the Western Hockey League championship and making it all the way to the Memorial Cup title game. Molendyk had 20 points in 18 playoff games and was named to the Memorial Cup All-Star team. 

While it's reported that Molendyk is "day-to-day," it is more likely he will sit out the prospects tournament in order to be fully healthy for the start of training camp on Sept. 18. 

Predators undefeated in NHL Prospect Tournament 

The Predators' prospects have shone bright in Tampa this weekend, remaining perfect through their first two games. 

On Friday, it dispatched the host Tampa Bay Lightning, 2-1. Joakim Kemell (2022, 17th overall) scored off a long-range snapshot to tie the game at 1-1 in the second period. In the third period, Brady Martin (2025, 5th overall) scored the game-winning goal on a penalty shot. 

The Predators returned to the ice on Saturday to face the Carolina Hurricanes. After going down 1-0 early, Cole O'Hara (2022, 114th overall) redirected a shot from the point into the net to tie the game late in the second period.

Carolina took the lead back in the third period, but a nice move by Kalan Lind from the forehand to the backhand tied the game up. In the final minute, Reid Schaefer tapped in a pass from Ryan Ufko (2021, 115th overall) to give the Predators a green light to a 3-2 win.

Nashville will play its final game of the NHL Prospect Tournament on Monday against the Florida Panthers at 11 a.m. CST. The game can be watched on the Nashville Predators website. 

Before Lidstrom, No. 5 Belonged to Detroit’s Forgotten Legend: Ebbie Goodfellow

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One Fine Goodfellow - Sept. 25 2017 - Collector's Edition - Ken Campbell

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(LE STUDIO DU HOCKEY/HHOF IMAGES)

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WHEN THE DETROIT Red Wings retired Nicklas Lidstrom’s No. 5 three years ago, they ensured no player would ever wear that digit on the back of their sweater while wearing the winged wheel on the front. But there are some who insist Lidstrom shouldn’t have been wearing that number in the first place.

That’s because it once belonged to a player by the name of Ebbie Goodfellow, the forgotten superstar in a pantheon of alltime Red Wings greats. Before there was Steve Yzerman and Pavel Datsyuk, or even Gordie Howe and Ted Lindsay, there was Goodfellow, who not only starred for Detroit but did so at two positions. In fact, Goodfellow goes back so far with the franchise that he played in the last season that the team was known as the Cougars and the two seasons it went by the Falcons.

Goodfellow was a big, scoring center for the Red Wings who led the Canadian Professional League (the precursor to the AHL) in scoring in 1928-29. Two years later, he finished second in NHL scoring to Montreal superstar Howie Morenz. But when Wings GM Jack Adams asked him to move back to defense in the middle of 1934-35, Goodfellow did so without complaint and without missing a beat. As a defenseman, he helped Detroit to back-to-back Cups in 1936 and ’37 and was a first-team allstar twice, including in 1939-40 when he became the first Wings player to win the Hart Trophy. “He wasn’t a really flashy player,” said hockey historian Bob Duff, author of several books on the Red Wings. “It was the same with guys like Alex Delvecchio and Marcel Pronovost and even Red Kelly, who didn’t get the same kind of recognition Howe, Lindsay and (Terry) Sawchuk got.”

Goodfellow put up some impressive offensive numbers on a weak team through the first five seasons of his career, but Adams noticed he was beginning to slow down. The Wings already had some homegrown scoring stars in Larry Aurie and Herbie Lewis and had added established NHL marksmen when they acquired Cooney Weiland in 1933-34 and Syd Howe the following season. With plenty of firepower already up front, Adams approached Goodfellow with the idea of moving to the blueline. “I once read the newspaper story about the game when he moved back to defense, and they just talked about how seamless it was,” Duff said. “He went back there and played like he had been doing it for years. And he was one of those guys who didn’t get a lot of attention. It was almost like Lidstrom. He didn’t get a lot of attention for the first half of his career because he was a guy who went out there and played really steady and never made any mistakes.”

HE WENT BACK THERE AND PLAYED LIKE HE’D BEEN DOING IT FOR YEARS – Bob Duff, hockey historian

The character and sacrifice Goodfellow showed in the move to the blueline convinced Adams of his leadership qualities and he was named the Wings captain.

In his final NHL season, Goodfellow served as a player-coach for the team and became the last player-coach to win the Stanley Cup when the Red Wings captured it in 1943. Reports at the time indicated that it was assumed Goodfellow would take over as the Wings coach, but that never materialized. Instead, he went on to coach the AHL’s St. Louis Flyers for three-plus seasons in the late 1940s before taking over the Chicago Black Hawks for two moribund seasons in the early 1950s.

Lest you think him too good a fellow, it should be noted Goodfellow was once fined $100 by referee Bill Stewart. The first $50 was for “calling (Stewart) a bald-headed so-and-so and then emphasizing it by calling him a such-and-such,” according to newspaper reports of the day. The other half of the fine was levied for sticking his tongue out at the referee. “That’s $50 more,” Stewart reportedly told Goodfellow. “Nobody can stick their tongue out at me.”

For his part, Goodfellow was quoted as saying, “That’s the way it is with referees. When they can’t think of an answer, they fine you.”

Goodfellow was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1963. He died in 1985 at age 78. Sportswriter Baz O’Meara had this to say about his nomination: “Ebbie was a fine good-looking fellow, a hard checker, a clean player and a fine ice general. He could be classified as a gentlemanly type though he was no namby-pamby hockey player. He was a beautiful skater and a fine stickhandler. As a center he rated right up with the top talent, and he was a standout defenseman.”

A Goodfellow and a great player, to be sure.

Sandin Pellikka Ranked 21st in Controversial NHL Network Top 25 Prospects ListSandin Pellikka Ranked 21st in Controversial NHL Network Top 25 Prospects ListRed Wings prospect Axel Sandin Pellikka mentioned in controversial prospect rankings list made by NHL Network.