New Jersey
Keefe | POST-RAW 11.12.24 | New Jersey Devils
NewJerseyDevils.com is the official web site of the New Jersey Devils, a member team of the National Hockey League (“NHL”). NHL, the NHL Shield, the word mark and image of the Stanley Cup and NHL Conference logos are registered trademarks of the National Hockey League. All NHL logos and marks and NHL team logos and marks as well as all other proprietary materials depicted herein are the property of the NHL and the respective NHL teams and may not be reproduced without the prior written consent of NHL Enterprises, L.P. Copyright © 1999-2024 New Jersey Devils and the National Hockey League. All Rights Reserved.
New Jersey
Taste of bigger stage leaves one of N.J. hockey’s top prospects with plenty of drive
Mason Hriczov, one of New Jersey’s top goalie prospects, had to shrug off thoughts on his sub-par performance, by his standards, at one of the most important camps of his career.
He attended four camps overall over a span of four months last summer and the journey took him to Buffalo, Omaha and Ontario.
All that camp exposure was a result of Hriczov’s getting drafted by two leagues and receiving an invitation to USA Hockey’s annual development camps.
In April, Hriczov was selected by the Kitchener Rangers in the 13th round, 262nd overall, in the Ontario Hockey League draft. The OHL is one of the three preeminent junior leagues in Canada that make up the Canadian Hockey League and is a major feeder to NCAA Division 1 programs and the NHL draft.
Just a few weeks later, in May, he was picked by the Omaha Lancers in the seventh round, 104th overall, in the United States Hockey League draft, which is the United States’ equivalent to the CHL.
There were serious options in front of him to weigh.
“Hockey’s getting real at this point. That was the first summer I took it very seriously,” he said. “I locked in. It’s a lot, but you just gotta push through it, I guess. You gotta love it. You just gotta play your best, every time, going to camps. Scouts are watching.”
The junior attended rookie camp in Kitchener not long after being drafted in May. USHL camp in Omaha followed in June. Then came the National U16 Camp for USA Hockey in Buffalo at the end of June before his first full training camp back in Kitchener in August.
“It was a lot of games, some practices,” Hriczov said of the U.S. development camp. “It’s great competition. It’s some of the best kids who didn’t make the national team, and guys have to work. A lot of scouts there. There were games I don’t think I played my best, but you just gotta work.”
Players from the National U16 Camp were chosen to play for the United States U17 Select Team that participates in the annual Four Nations Tournament every summer.
Hriczov didn’t make the cut.
“After that camp, I was like, I’m going to the gym every day. I put on a lot of muscle. I put on a lot of size,” he said. “When I went to rookie camp for Kitchener, they told me, you gotta get bigger. I kind of waited until after USA camp. I didn’t get to make the cut and I felt I just gotta take off now. And that’s what I did.”
Hriczov doesn’t like to remember bad things on the ice and loves forgetting about them. He kept that experience at the USA camp in the back of his mind, but he went straight to work. He had roughly seven weeks to make a plan and go on attack to make a strong showing at camp with Kitchener in late August.
All of the work added about 15 pounds to his 6’2” frame. Hriczov had reason to believe the team only wanted to keep him around for a cursory look at camp before sending him home. Hriczov was determined to make things go another way.
Once he hit the ice, he put on a show.
“Going up there was great. I go up there, play a great couple games. They tell me you’re going to stay for the week.” Hriczov said. “They had no intentions of keeping me, but I played, worked my butt off and got to stay there for the week and (then) they’re like, ‘We’re going to keep you for preseason. You did really good. We weren’t going to keep you after the first couple of days.’ So, I had a big summer.”
He wasn’t going to be the team’s starting goalie, or the backup, but his performance at training camp helped Hriczov make key moves up the depth chart for Kitchener. He is now next in line after the backup goalie, should anything happen. It almost became the best of both worlds for the time being. He can jump to Kitchener should he be needed and he returned to New Jersey for the 2025-26 season.
Hriczov still gets ample playing time with the Woodbridge Wolfpack U16 AAA team and the Morristown-Beard team welcomed him back with open arms.
After a whirlwind of a summer, the star junior still juggles playing club and high school hockey and the prospect of being called up to the OHL hovers above his head on a daily basis. For some, that might be too much to handle, but not for Hriczov.
“It’s great. They’re always watching you. The goalie coach (Jordan DeKort) is telling me, he’s always watching me. Just got to bring your A game every day. It’s great going up there, it’s fun. Kids are great, coaches are great, just got to enjoy it.”
In four games with Morristown-Beard so far this season, Hriczov owns a stellar .943 save percentage and also has a pair of assists.
He’s already one of the top goaltenders in the state. Now, he has a chip on his shoulder and that’s been bad news for everyone else in the Mennen Division and could mean the same for the Non-Public bracket once the state tournament rolls around.
“I think it’s been good. I mean, I think I could do better for club but I’m doing really well right now,” he said. “I have high expectations here for Mo-Beard, so I just got to live up to them.”
New Jersey
Woman struck, killed by NJ Transit train near Jersey Shore on Christmas Eve
A woman died Christmas Eve after being struck by a train on the Atlantic City Rail Line near Absecon, authorities said Thursday.
The incident was reported at 7:03 p.m. Wednesday when Train 4634 “struck an adult female trespasser,” according to a statement from a NJ Transit spokesman.
The woman’s name was not released.
The train had departed the Atlantic City Terminal at 6:54 p.m.
It was scheduled to arrive at Philadelphia’s 30th Street Station at 8:34 p.m.
None of the 30 passengers or crew members on board the train were injured, according to the NJ Transit statement.
Service on the Atlantic City line was temporarily suspended between Atlantic City and Egg Harbor City, then later resumed.
NJ Transit Police are investigating the fatal incident.
New Jersey
NJ man, 22, killed in GSP crash on Christmas Eve: state police
WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP, N.J. (PIX11) – A 22-year-old man was killed in a crash on the Garden State Parkway on Christmas Eve, according to New Jersey State Police.
Troopers said it happened near Woodbridge Township around 2:15 p.m. Elizabeth resident Li Wei Lin was driving a Honda on an entrance ramp when he ran off the roadway, hitting a guardrail, according to authorities.
Troopers said Lin’s car continued driving after crashing into the guardrail, running perpendicular to traffic in the northbound lanes of the parkway. A 57-year-old woman driving a Lexus SUV crashed into his car, according to authorities.
Troopers said the Honda then struck a concrete barrier, stopping it. A Ram pickup truck driven by a 74-year-old man hit the Lexus SUV, according to authorities.
Troopers said 22-year-old Lin died because of his injuries. The woman was not injured and the other man suffered minor injuries, according to authorities.
The crash is under investigation.
Erin Pflaumer is a digital content producer from Long Island who has covered both local and national news since 2018. She joined PIX11 in 2023. See more of her work here.
-
Connecticut1 day agoSnow Accumulation Estimates Increase For CT: Here Are The County-By-County Projections
-
Entertainment2 days agoPat Finn, comedy actor known for roles in ‘The Middle’ and ‘Seinfeld,’ dies at 60
-
World1 week agoPutin says Russia won’t launch new attacks on other countries ‘if you treat us with respect’
-
Entertainment1 day agoHow the Grinch went from a Yuletide bit player to a Christmas A-lister
-
Milwaukee, WI3 days ago16 music and theater performances to see in Milwaukee in January 2026
-
Science1 week agoChina’s Clean Energy Push is Powering Flying Taxis, Food Delivery Drones and Bullet Trains
-
Politics1 week agoBorder Patrol chief, progressive mayor caught on camera in tense street showdown: ‘Excellent day in Evanston’
-
Alabama7 days ago4 Takeaways From Alabama’s Comeback, Oklahoma’s Collapse in CFP First-Round Game
