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In his first day with the Bruins, James Hagens basks in the responsibility to represent his ‘second home’

James Hagens, the Boston College player taken seventh in this year's NHL Draft, skated for the first time as a Bruin on Monday morning.Ken McGagh for The Boston Globe

James Hagens had to do a double take.

Tucked away in the corner of the Bruins’ Heritage Hall, one glass-encased collection of artifacts centers around the NHL Draft — and the hope that builds when a franchise adds a fortune-shifting prospect.

Photos of a baby-faced David Pastrnak — well before he was uncorking howitzers from the left circle — and a clean-shaven Joe Thornton were first to catch Hagens’ eyes, but in an exhibit tasked with documenting the first 100 years of the Original Six franchise, a new addition looks to the future.

A photo of Hagens — donning a spoked-B sweater for the first time during Friday’s NHL Draft — joined the likes of Pastrnak, Thornton, Charlie McAvoy, and other Bruins franchise fixtures in that shadow box.

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Such are the expectations placed on Hagens, a teenager whose sky-high potential is feeling the weight of being a franchise savior.

But as the seventh pick in the 2025 NHL Draft toured TD Garden on Monday evening, talk of that pressure quickly shifted toward opportunity — and the reward that awaits when he makes the trek from Chestnut Hill to Causeway Street.

“It makes you want to make the team,” Hagens said following his first day of development camp. “It makes you want to work as hard as possible so that you can be the guy that can call this home. You could be on that ice playing for these fans.”

Monday was not the first time Hagens has paid a visit to the Bruins’ home barn. Frequent hockey tournaments brought Hagens and his family up over the years, and he’s more than found his bearings since first arriving at BC last fall.

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In February, he etched his skates into the frozen sheet at TD Garden with a pair of games at the Beanpot, then joined his Eagles teammates along the glass to see Ryan Leonard make his NHL debut in April.

Hagens is looking to follow in Leonard’s footsteps in 2025-26 — be it during the fall or after the Eagles’ season comes to a close in March or April.

As he toured the Bruins’ dressing room and stepped on the floor where his dangles and dekes could cause nearly 20,000 to rise as one, Hagens felt reassurance. It was as though fate had once again brought the Long Island native back to Boston.

“The fans are so passionate about this team,” Hagens said. “They’re so passionate about their sports here. I wanted to go to school here — so I was fortunate enough to be picked by the Bruins. It’s a dream come true, to be able to stay in Boston. It’s like a second home.”

The ice won’t be set down on Causeway for at least another few months, but as Hagens and the rest of the Bruins’ Development Camp roster toured the arena, the message remained resolute.

“If things aren’t going your way and you need a push, this is something to think back on,” former Bruins blueliner and current team player development coordinator Adam McQuaid told Boston’s camp roster as they sat in the team’s dressing room. “It’s something to work toward.”

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Who needs sleep?

It hasn’t taken very long for Hagens to put his best foot forward.

The day after he was drafted, Hagens and Bruins’ second-round pick Will Moore were set to board a flight on Saturday night from Los Angeles to Boston. After an extended delay, the flight was cancelled.

“Definitely build a deeper connection when you’re sleeping together on the floor of the airport,” Moore joked.

By the time the duo finally boarded a plane, it was 10 p.m. on the East Coast. They arrived at the team hotel at 4 a.m. — with departure for Warrior Ice Arena scheduled for 6:45.

Hagens’ top concern at the time? Not waking up his hotel roommate, BC teammate Andre Gasseau.

“I had my earplugs in,” Gasseau said. “He told me he was tiptoeing around the room.”

After both Hagens and Moore passed their physicals, the Bruins announced both would sit out of the first day of camp.

Hagens and Moore had other plans, and took the ice.

“When you have a chance to put on the Bruin jersey, you can’t say no,” Hagens said after practice. “It doesn’t matter what flight delay or how much sleep you get. This is a dream come true, and it’s the first time you’re able to put on the jersey.

“You’d have to cut off my leg to tell me I couldn’t get on that ice.”

Showing his stuff

Hagens was no worse for wear as he separated himself from the pack during edge-work drills. At least, he didn’t show it to McQuaid and the rest of Boston’s development personnel.

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“He didn’t seem to miss a beat after going through a busy couple days,” McQuaid said. “You can tell how smooth he is out there, and confident with the puck. … It seems like he’s excited to be out there.

“He came down one end and got to shoot and it was like, ‘All right, here we go.’ Driven to score some goals. So yeah, it was a great first day and great first impression, on and off the ice.”

Hours after, Hagens planted himself at the front of the auditorium at Heritage Hall. The usual hits played out on the screen.

No. 4 sailing through the sky. Wensink challenging Minnesota’s bench. Thomas stonewalling the Canucks. Bergeron’s OT winner against Toronto. Chara — his shattered jaw held in place by wiring — showered by cheers.

For a New York native who once had a poster of Matt Martin on his bedroom wall, some of those videos may not have resonated. At least, not until now.

In Hagens, a Bruins team short on elite talent and a fanbase yearning for hope has seemingly found its man. And in return, Hagens has found a new home — and a team and city worth fighting for as he sets his sights on a black-and-gold sweater.

“It comes with a lot of pride,” said Boston’s first top-10 pick in 14 years. “A lot of honor to be able to be a part of something like this — to be able to even get picked and to say you’re picked by the Boston Bruins. It doesn’t really hit you until you’re up on that stage.

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“But you know it’s going to come with a lot of hard work. I know how hard it’s going to be, and that’s just, it’s just a big step. I’m willing to do it. I’m willing to give everything I possibly have into this game and this organization, to the fan base.

“I’m just excited to get it going.”


Conor Ryan can be reached at [email protected].