Sign up for the Today newsletter
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
LOWELL – The River Hawks couldn’t contain Gabe Perreault from taking flight Friday night.
The Boston College freshman scored a goal and added two assists, to lead the top-ranked Eagles to a 6-1 win over UMass Lowell in front of a standing room only crowd of 6,421 at the Tsongas Center.
With the loss, UMass Lowell falls to 7-17-2, (3-11-1 Hockey East), while Boston College improves to 19-4-1 (12-3-1 Hockey East).
“These guys were too much for us to handle tonight,” said UMass Lowell Coach Norm Bazin. “I thought we were playing pretty, well until we took a penalty in the first period, and things unraveled a little bit. We have to get better in a lot of areas. We had a good week of practice, but sometimes you can’t tell how things will go in those weeks. In any case, these guys were much better than us.”
BC was coming off an emotional sweep last weekend of rival Boston University, which at the time was the nation’s top-ranked squad, but the Eagles didn’t suffer a letdown.
The River Hawks, meanwhile, dropped their fifth straight game, all league contests. Usually a terrific home team, UMass Lowell dropped to 1-8-1 before the home fans at the Tsongas.
Special teams were the difference in the matchup. BC went 2-for-4 on the power play, while UML was 0-for-7 with the man advantage. BC swept the season series 3-0. The Eagles defeated the River Hawks in a pair of 3-2 games earlier in the season.
“There are several things that impress me (about BC),” said Bazin. “Their freshman line is something college hockey hasn’t seen in a while. I think they accounted for 3-4 goals tonight. We knew they were that good. We were hoping to do a better job checking them and it didn’t work out.”
The Eagles came out flying, building a 2-0 cushion within the first 10 minutes of action. Grad student Jack Malone provided the initial spark, scoring an unassisted goal off a two-on-one break at 5:55. Meanwhile, Perreault provided some power play panache less than four minutes later. Camped in right slot, the Eagles’ leading scorer tapped in Will Smith’s cross ice feed, giving BC the early advantage.
UMass Lowell had some decent looks in the opening moments. Filip Fornää Svensson had the best chance, striking the post after gliding down the left lane in the opening minutes. Overall, the River Hawks were outshot by the Eagles 11-7 in the stanza.
Svensson continued to create a stir for the River Hawks in the second period. The 6-foot-4, 216-pound grad student caught a TJ Schweighardt pass before rifling a wrist shot past BC goalie Jacob Fowler at 4:38, cutting BC’s lead to 2-1.
The Eagles responded less than a minute later, however. Senior Eamon Powell potted the power-play goal from Smith and Perreault, maintaining the Eagles two-goal cushion. Cutter Gauthier extended the BC lead, scoring from the left point at 15:16 of the second period. Through two periods of play, the Eagles held the 20-17 shots advantage.
The River Hawks were dealt a tough blow to start the third period. Team captain Ben Meehan was assessed a five-minute major and ejected for a check to the head with 15:00 to play. Meehan was playing in his 100th career game. The 6-foot, 188-pound defenseman has netted 10 goals, 38 assists and 48 points over his tenure with UMass Lowell.
Although they managed to kill off the major, the River Hawks were unable to regain their footing, despite catching up on shots 42-42 attempted with 7:56 to play.
“If you’re looking for positives, I guess the five-minute kill was a positive,” said Bazin. “We keep doing it without giving up many shots. I think the situation was very similar to in Maine. You give up seven on 23 shots. Here you give up six on 24, that’s not a good ratio. So we have to be better in every aspect. I’m certainly not singling out the goaltendering because its team defense. We have to be better. We have to keep prodding guys, pushing guys to be better. Hopefully we can turn the corner in some aspect or another.”
Making his first start since Dec. 30, UMass Lowell goalie Henry Welsch hung tough under fire. The 6-foot-2, 200-pound netminder made 23 saves in his return, including a big pad save off Smith. But Gauthier remained undaunted potting his second goal for the Eagles, chasing Welsch from the game with 6:45 remaining. Ryan Leonard put the game away for BC a little later, scoring with 1:30 remaining, with Perreault picking up his third point of the game.
“It’s a tough team to start off against after not starting for four weeks,” said Bazin, who said he will review the film to get a better assessment. “He only had 3-4 days of practice too. He’s a good goalie in this league, its a tough one to start off with.”
Bazin is still just one win away from his 300th overall as an NCAA collegiate head coach. He currently has 299 wins, dating back to the 2008-09 season, when he became a head coach at Hamilton College.

Alex Bregman is off the free agent board after leaving Boston to sign a five-year, $175 million contract with the Cubs on Saturday.
Who will now play third base for the 2026 Red Sox?
Boston has had 23-year-old Marcelo Mayer working out at both third base and second base this offseason.
As a rookie last season, Mayer made 28 of his 35 starts at third base. His other seven starts came at second. He was promoted from Triple-A Worcester when Boston placed Bregman on the injured list May 24 with a right quad strain. The left-handed hitter started mostly at third base against right-handed starters when Bregman missed 43 games from May 24-July 11.
The sure-handed Mayer is considered Boston’s long-term shortstop. But chief baseball officer Craig Breslow has committed to keeping Trevor Story as his shortstop this season instead of moving the veteran to second base to open shortstop for Mayer immediately. That leaves Mayer as either Boston’s second baseman or third baseman depending on how the roster shakes out.
With Bregman gone, it’s looking more likely that Mayer will play third base.
The options on the free agent and trade markets are dwindling. The Red Sox could target free agent shortstop Bo Bichette to play second base. Meanwhile, free agent third baseman Eugenio Suárez, who hit 49 homers for the Diamondbacks and Mariners last year, remains available. But the 34-year-old would represent a significant downgrade from Bregman defensively. Suárez finished with minus-six defensive runs saved in 1,347 ⅔ innings at third base last year.
Mayer has the ability to play plus defense at third. He finished with 0 defensive runs saved in 248 ⅔ innings there last year. But the more reps he receives there, the better he should get. Most of his pro career has been spent at shortstop. He played just 48 ⅓ innings at third base in the minors compared to 2,254 innings at shortstop.
“It’s not easy going into an offseason kind of getting reps at every position,” Mayer said at Fenway Fest on Saturday. “I believe that every position requires different traits, different skills, different angles that you need to master. Obviously, I’m doing everything I can taking reps at third and second base and I feel really good at both. So wherever they need me is where I’m going to play. I’m going to do my best out there.”
He added that playing third base is completely different than playing second base.
“Second base, you’re doing everything backwards,” Mayer said. “Third base, you’re pretty much playing shortstop with less range, kind of quicker reflexes. So yeah, I think they’re just different skills that you need to hone in on to be able to be great at that position.”
Mayer spent the final 58 games of the 2025 season on the IL with a wrist injury that required surgery. He expects to be ready to fully participate in workouts once spring training begins.
“I’m pretty much doing full baseball activity, like a normal ramp-up, as I would for a regular season going into spring training,” Mayer said. “So I feel like I’m in a good spot.”
Mayer’s injury history is another concern if he replaces Bregman. It’s fair to question whether the Sox can rely on him to be available for the majority of a 162-game season.
The Red Sox asked him to put on weight this offseason to try to make him more durable. He has had issues staying healthy throughout his career so far, never playing more than 91 games in any season in the minors and majors.
“It was one of the main goals I set for myself going into the offseason,” Mayer said. “I weighed in at like 218 right now, which is by far the heaviest I’ve ever weighed in my life. I feel great, stronger and faster than ever. So I feel like my body’s in a really good spot.”
He’s up from 208 pounds at the end of last season.
“Moving well,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said Saturday at Fenway Fest. “Actually, Trevor was surprised the way he’s moving. Fast. It seems like his offseasons, the last two or three, he’s always rehabbing or trying to catch up. Not this year. I had a conversation with him toward the end of the season and he basically said, ‘I’m ready, I’m ready.’ And we’ll see, we’ll see how it works out. But the kid, he’s a good baserunner, he’s a good defender, he can hit the ball out of the ballpark. Obviously there’s a few things offensively that he needs to improve, but that’s everybody. And I like the player. I like him a lot. I don’t think he’s afraid of this environment. He actually likes it. So just go out there and play in spring training.”
Another question mark is whether Mayer is ready to be an everyday starter who faces both righties and lefties?
Cora typically avoided batting Mayer against lefty starters and relievers last year, like he does with most all his young left-handed hitters. Mayer went 4-for-26 (.154) against southpaws while starting five games against them. He was 13-for-48 (.271) with a .300 on-base percentage, .458 slugging percentage and .758 OPS in 50 plate appearances against lefties for Triple-A Worcester before his promotion.
The Red Sox faced left-handed starters in 28% of games in 2025.
“I think he can play every day,” Breslow said at the GM Meetings in early November. “I certainly wouldn’t want to set limits on what he’s capable of doing. He hasn’t and that’s something we of course need to be mindful of.”
Cora said while discussing Mayer, “Facing lefties in spring training is going to make them better. If we don’t face them, we’ll figure out. … So just try to get them against lefties. Same with Roman (Anthony), same with Wilyer (Abreu), same with Jarren (Duran). That’s something that, like I said, we’ll talk with Bres and see where we’re at.”
Last year the Red Sox had a unique and enviable problem, which was that at full strength the club had more starting-caliber outfielders than it had available lineup spots.
Injuries kept that from being an issue most of the season, but for some stretches the only way the club could accommodate everyone was by playing Gold Glove center fielder Ceddanne Rafaela at second base.
With Roman Anthony, Jarren Duran, Wilyer Abreu, Masataka Yoshida and Rafaela all set to return for the 2026 campaign, the Red Sox could face a similar logjam, but both manager Alex Cora and chief baseball officer Craig Breslow signaled that they’d prefer not to move Rafaela to the infield again.
“We’ll talk about that one, but probably not,” Cora said.
“Ceddanne is an incredibly gifted athlete and can impact a game in so many ways, and it makes it really easy when you can put him at second base or play shortstop for a long time for us like in ’24 when Trevor (Story) was hurt, but he is game-changing in center field,” Breslow said. “We saw that this year, and giving him the consistency of playing the same position every day also has benefits for his offense.”
Rafaela delivered a breakout season in the outfield last year, ranking second in MLB across all positions in defensive runs saved at center (plus-20) en route to his first career Gold Glove.
His impact defensively at second, however, was much more modest. In 24 games at the position he was just plus-one defensive runs saved.
Recognizing Rafaela’s value in the outfield, it was widely expected that the Red Sox would clear a spot by trading one of their incumbent players, most likely Duran or Abreu. But up to this point that hasn’t happened, and Breslow said it was never something he considered an urgent priority.
“It was never likely in my mind,” Breslow said. “We’ve got really talented outfielders and when teams call that’s what other executives point to. They’re young, they’re controllable, they’re dynamic, they’re talented, they can impact games in multiple ways. It’s really nice to be able to say they’re also members of the Boston Red Sox.”
So how will the Red Sox accommodate everyone if Rafaela isn’t going to play second? Cora said he expects to rotate players through more regularly, though he added that Rafaela and Abreu — both Gold Glove winners — will likely play more often than not.
“I think keeping guys healthy is something we always talk about,” Cora said. “They’re good outfielders, all of them, as a unit they’re the best in baseball. We just have to figure out the stadium, workload, and all that, but Willy and Ceddanne, they’re the best in the business, they probably will be playing the most in the outfield.”
Local News
A Boston woman is dealing with an unwelcome tenant on her front porch — a rat that has turned a baby stroller into a cozy winter hideaway.
The woman shared her ordeal Thursday on the r/Boston subreddit, explaining that she had left her stroller, complete with a muff, on her second-floor porch. When she checked on it later, she discovered a rat had moved in.
“I stupidly left our stroller with a muff out on the porch,” she wrote. “Today I found a big rat is nested in there. I can’t see clearly, but it seems it has chewed up the muff lining and is using the filling for a nest.”
The woman said she’s called a few pest control companies, but instead of offering immediate removal, they just tried to sell her a long-term bait boxing service.
“…Which is fine, but I urgently need someone to just safely remove the rat and the nest so I can clean or dispose of the stroller if needed,” she wrote, adding that she couldn’t secure a next-day appointment and felt Monday was too far away.
Turning to Reddit for advice, the woman asked whether she should attempt to remove the rat herself, saying she was worried about being bitten or contracting a disease. “Which professional can I call?” she asked.
Redditors reacted with a mix of humor and practical advice. The top comment began, “Sounds like it’s their porch now,” before offering an elaborate plan involving a bucket trap and joking that the rat could then “go on to be a Michelin star chef at a French restaurant,” a nod to the 2007 film “Ratatouille.”
Others suggested she evict the rat by vigorously shaking the stroller or whacking it with a broom, while many urged her to cut her losses entirely and throw the stroller out.
“I honestly wouldn’t ever use it for a small child after a rat had been cribbed up there,” one commenter wrote.
Pest control experts generally advise against handling rats without professional help. According to Terminix, rodents can become aggressive and scratch when threatened and may carry diseases such as hantavirus and leptospirosis.
“When it comes to getting rid of a rat’s nest in the house, DIY treatments won’t cut it,” the company warns on its website.
Boston has been grappling with heightened rat activity in recent years, prompting a citywide rodent action plan known as BRAP. City officials urge residents to “see something, squeak something!” and report rodent activity to 311. Officials said response teams are typically dispatched within one to two days.
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
2 hospitalized after shooting on Lodge Freeway in Detroit
Power bank feature creep is out of control
Anti-ICE protest outside Dallas City Hall follows deadly shooting in Minneapolis
Defensive coordinator candidates who could improve Cowboys’ brutal secondary in 2026
MERR responds to dead humpback whale washed up near Bethany Beach
Pat McAfee praises Audi Crooks, plays hype song for Iowa State star
Viral New Year reset routine is helping people adopt healthier habits
Oregon State LB transfer Dexter Foster commits to Nebraska