Terriers strengthened their recruiting pipeline Sunday when 4-⭐️Halifax Mooseheads left wing Shawn Carrier committed to BU for the 2027-2028 season. The 5’10”, 183 lb., native of Trois-Rivières, Quebec, just completed his third QMJHL season with a team-high 37 goals–eighth best in the Q–and 65 points.
Carrier is ranked 178th among N.American skaters for the 2026 NHL Entry Draft and is a second-year eligible. The Halifax team site notes:
The energetic and creative player was passed over in his first year of eligibility in 2025 mainly due to his smaller stature at 5-foot-10, but his no-fear style of play, paired with his elite scoring talent opened the eyes of many NHL scouts during the recently finished season. Carrier was second on the team in points with 65 while scoring a team-leading 37 goals and adding 28 assists.
🚨BREAKING🚨
2007-born 4⭐️ forward Shawn Carrier has committed to Boston University! The Québec native had 65 points in 61 games for the Halifax Mooseheads this season.
A great get for the Terriers. pic.twitter.com/EvqyARxstX
— Puck Preps (@PuckPreps) April 27, 2026
With one more junior season ahead of him, Carrier, who turned 19 last month, already has 179 regular season CHL games under his belt along with 19 playoff games. A first-round QMJHL draft pick (sixth overall) by Moncton in 2023, he struggled in his rookie season with the Wildcats. Traded to Halifax in 2024,Carrier blossomed into consistent scorer, racking up 44 points (18G,34A).
Following the season, Elite Prospects wrote:
Although Carrier plays a straight-line, chip-and-chase game, he does so
with a higher level of cunning than most, depositing the puck in the
right areas to quickly get it back, evading sticks, and running inside.
He engages opponents with skill, driving through their space and using
his arm and leg to shield possession, as he finds an escape.
Carrier joins fellow QMJHL skaters Egor Shilov and Rian Chudzinski, OHL forward Braidy Wassilyn, USHL forward James Scantlebury, and NTDP forwards Jamie Glance, Carter Meyer and Sam Pandolfo in the current 2027 forward recruit group.
Shilov, who was the Q’s top rookie scorer with 82 points, Meyer and Scantlebury all are 5-⭐️prospects.
IIHF U18 World Championships
Glance scored a goal and assisted on three others in Team USA’s 11-2 drubbing of Germany in the team’s final preliminary round game. The win clinched the Group B title for the U.S. Meyer, who centered Team USA’s second power-play unit, assisted on two tallies, while defenseman Luke Schairer added a helper.
Where grandma keeps the cookies: top shelf 🍪#U18MensWorld pic.twitter.com/1FWm0KH456
— USA Hockey (@usahockey) April 27, 2026
● USA Hockey recap, Glance slick assist
In the quarterfinals, the U.S. takes on Latvia, which upset Canada in the preliminary round. Gametime Wednesday is 10 A.M. with NHL Network carrying the contest live.
On Saturday, 2027 recruit Brady Knowling stopped 18 shots in Team USA’s 9-1 win over Sweden. Meyer scored a goal and added an assist while Glance and Schairer each contributed an assist.
Carter Meyer (@USAHockeyNTDP) banks one in to make it 8-1!
📺: #U18MensWorlds on NHL Network pic.twitter.com/fXWoW6AFIH
— NHL Media (@NHLMedia) April 25, 2026
● USA Hockey recap
Tynan Lawrence score a goal, assisted on two others and won 11 of 16 draws as Canada thumped Norway, 8-0. Lawrence has a 2-3-5 line across four preliminary round games.Canada takes on Sweden in the quarterfinals on Wednesday.
The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler’s took a deep dive into Lawrence in his feature piece, Why
Tynan Lawrence is still one of the best prospects in the 2026 NHL Draft.
“When you look at guys like
Crosby and Celebrini and Tynan Lawrence, you think about habits and details,” Muskegon
GM McGroarty said. “Their habits and details are through the roof, and that’s
what separates them. They’ve got hard skill. And you put it all together, and
they’re the best players on the ice, and every coach would want them centering
their top line.”St. Clair, Lawrence’s head
coach this season and assistant coach last season with Muskegon, couches it a
little more.“I don’t want to get any crap
for this, especially after the year that Celebrini had,” he said, “but I would
say as far as players that have that skill set and can produce but have that
work ethic for a 200-foot game, that’s the closest comparable. I’m not saying
he’s Macklin Celebrini, but I think there are some similarities as far as his
identity.”“You just saw him get better
and better. The production wasn’t there to start, but you still saw a lot of
the things that make him a really good hockey player; just his relentless
effort and motor, creating turnovers with a good stick, his pace,” Jay Pandolfo
told The Athletic. “And I thought in the last 3-4 games he played for us that
he was arguably our best forward.”Pandolfo thinks that will serve
him well next year. Burgess went as far as to predict a 45-point post-draft
season.“I think he can be a driver for
our team,” Pandolfo said. “For him, too, just his confidence is going to be
higher knowing what to expect. He’s going to be a guy who plays all situations
for us and really drive play to the middle of the ice. And in practice every
day, he has that ability to push the group because of his work ethic. He can
pull our group along.”
Looking ahead
2026 recruit Viktor Norringer
scored his third playoff goal—and seventh point—in six games as Muskegon
doubled up Dubuque, 4-2,
to tie their playoff series at two games apiece.
Nörringer increases the gap💥🚨
2-0 Jacks‼️#MKGHST #ChopChop #GetJACKD #USHL pic.twitter.com/LkRZXYk3FE
— x – Muskegon Lumberjacks (@MuskegonJacks) April 25, 2026
The 6’4” right wing, who rang up 24 goals and 49 points in 48 regular-season games, had also
scored in game three of the series. 2026
returnee Carter Amico, who skates on the Lumberjacks’ top defensive pair, is +5
in the playoffs.
Chudzinski scored his second playoff goal in Moncton’s 6-2 win against Blainville-Boisbriand. A former standout at Dexter Southfield prep, Chudzinski had a 21-17-38 scoring line in 54 regular season games and has 12 points in 11 playoff games.
Chudzinski gets his 2nd of the Playoffs. pic.twitter.com/pcSRJBITKR
— Moncton Wildcats (@monctonwildcats) April 27, 2026
Looking back
Macklin Celebrini will be lacing ’em up for Canada in next month’s World Championships in Switzerland. He’s coming off a milestone-filled season with San Jose, setting a team single-season record of 115 points and being a standout for Canada in the 2026 Winter Olympics.
