National Post

PWHL back on the ice after women’s worlds

- DONNA SPENCER

The Profession­al Women’s Hockey League enters the home stretch of its inaugural season Thursday when it resumes following the world championsh­ip break.

Montreal is at home to Minnesota and Toronto visits Boston on Thursday.

Each of the six clubs has five games remaining in the regular season, which concludes May 5 with Toronto hosting Ottawa. The playoffs start the week of May 6.

Toronto (10-3-0-6), Minnesota (8-4-3-4), Montreal (7-3-4-5) and Ottawa (7-06-6) are in playoff position. Boston (4-4-2-9) and New York (3-4-3-9) are, for the moment, on the outside looking in.

“Nobody’s been eliminated yet with five games to go. I think that’s a win for the league,” said PWHL senior vice-president of hockey operations director Jayna Hefford. “We’ve created parity across this league. That’s what we set out to do.

“Going into the playoffs for the first time, we’ve seen incredible hockey this year, but I think it’s going to step up from here. We announced the trophy last week. Six weeks, it’s going to be over quick, but it’s exciting times.”

The announceme­nt of team names was still “a work in progress,” Hefford said.

“I think quite honestly, it’s been a blessing in disguise. Everybody talks about the PWHL. Nobody walks around saying ‘NHL’ around teams. We’ve been able to have a whole season where we’ve built the league brand.”

The PWHL has averaged 5,334 fans over its first 57 games.

Attendance ranged from a March 6 low of 728 at Total Mortgage Arena in Bridgeport, Conn., to a high of 19,285 in Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena on Feb. 19.

A sellout is projected for Saturday’s Toronto at Montreal clash at the 21,105-seat Bell Centre, which would set a new attendance mark.

“We’re seeing young girls and young boys and families, but we’re seeing 20-something profession­als that are out having a good time at games,” Hefford said. “We’re seeing retired couples who are season-ticket holders. We have a lot of older generation women that never got a chance to be part of something like this.

“Our demographi­cs are more broad than I think we thought.”

People watch PWHL games across eight different media company platforms in Canada and the U.S., including free streaming of all games on Youtube.

Youtube pulled in 1.3 million unique views and over 27.8 million impression­s over the first 37 games, or the first half of the season, according to the PWHL.

“The visibility is so important for us, how important that was to making it accessible and free to everyone regardless of where you are, and easy to find,” Hefford said.

Youtube is a key cog in audience-building, which will determine what rights are worth in the future, added PWHL vice-president of league operations and compliance Chris Burkett.

“It’s not so much giving it away. It’s ensuring that people can find the games,” Burkett said.

“You see with other profession­al women’s sports leagues where the media rights are incredibly valuable because they built an audience.”

New York will host Boston on both Saturday and April 30 at the Prudential Center.

The home of the New Jersey Devils will be the next NHL site of PWHL games after Pittsburgh’s PPG Paints Arena, Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena, Minnesota’s Xcel Energy Center, Montreal’s Bell Centre and Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena.

Los Angeles Dodgers controllin­g owner Mark Walter is the PWHL’S financial backer. The PWHL’S board consists of Dodgers president Stan Kasten, minority owners Billie Jean King and Ilona Kloss and vice-president Royce Cohen.

The playoff format features a Pwhl-devised quirk. The top playoff seed will have a 24-hour window to choose between the third and fourth seed for its semifinal opponent.

“We set out to just have an open mind and not be stuck in ‘this is the way it’s always been done,’” Hefford said.

“We have this mindset that we’re not going to be afraid to make a mistake. And that comes from the top, from Stan and Billie and those people. It’s OK to make a mistake and if we do, we’ll fix it, but don’t be afraid to make a mistake.”

Semifinals and the final will be best-of-five series. The higher seeds have homeice advantage for Games 1, 2 and 5.

In order to keep the two eliminated teams playing for something, the first overall pick in June’s draft goes to the team that earns the most points following its eliminatio­n from playoff contention.

Once a team is mathematic­ally eliminated, it starts earning draft order points in its remaining games using the standard points system.

Over 100 players, including Europeans, have declared for the 2024 PWHL draft, Hefford said.

Canada and the U.S. had a combined 30 PWHL players on their world championsh­ip rosters in Utica, N.Y., while another nine played for Czechia, Sweden, Finland, Germany, Switzerlan­d and Japan.

 ?? COLE BURSTON / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? “Nobody’s been eliminated yet with five games to go. I think that’s a win for the league,” says PWHL senior vice-president of hockey operations director Jayna Hefford.
“We’ve created parity across this league. That’s what we set out to do.”
COLE BURSTON / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES “Nobody’s been eliminated yet with five games to go. I think that’s a win for the league,” says PWHL senior vice-president of hockey operations director Jayna Hefford. “We’ve created parity across this league. That’s what we set out to do.”

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