International Hockey

James Hagens in his own words

James Hagens in his own words

“Generational talent” is a term that gets thrown around a lot in hockey circles. However, James Hagens is doing everything he can to merit that description.

Consider that it has taken the 17-year-old U.S. centre just five games to accumulate a tournament-high nine goals and 10 assists here in Finland.

It took Jack Hughes – the all-time U.S. National Team Development Program scoring leader (228 points) – seven games to total a U.S.-record nine goals and 11 assists with the 2019 bronze-medal winning team in Sweden. Ditto for Will Smith with the 2023 gold medal-winning team in Switzerland.

This year, Hagens could easily surpass their numbers as well as Nikita Kucherov’s single-tournament U18 Worlds points record (21, 2011).

From his dazzling skating to his shifty puckhandling to his elite goal-scoring to his competitive nature, the Long Island native has few holes in his game. Standing 177 cm and 76 kg, he’s only going to get stronger.

Teammates like assistant captain Max Plante sing his praises: “The goal he scored the other day [against Latvia], from the goal line, like, I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a shot that good! And it’s just been consistently like that throughout the whole tournament. He’s just been our best player.”

Bottom line: whichever NHL club gets to draft Hagens #1 overall in 2025 should consider itself incredibly fortunate.

As coach Nick Fohr’s undefeated Americans gear up to battle Slovakia in the semi-finals, here are some of the interesting comments Hagens has made post-game to reporters.

On the NHL stars that inspire his style

You have Jack Hughes. I grew up watching Patrick Kane and John Tavares. [Tavares] was part of my hometown team, the Islanders, and then he he went over to the Maple Leafs, which kind of hurt a little bit! But I still love him to death. And Mat Barzal, too.

On his love of analyzing the game

It’s funny. When I’m back home, me and my brother, who’s a defenceman, will be sitting on the couch [watching hockey]. And my dad will be calling out if that’s a good angle, if that’s a good reset. Whatever it is, he’ll be sure to let us know. That’s just something that you just pick up on, being around the game for so long. You point out those things when someone turns the puck over, what he could have done better. You sit there and learn and watch what the best do and try to take that and add as much as you can into your game.

On the key to the top-ranked U.S. power play at this tournament

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