The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Women’s profession­al hockey league expands into Montreal

- By JOHN WAWROW

Montreal is finally getting its long-promised women’s pro hockey franchise, though the Premier Hockey Federation put the brakes on adding a second expansion team entering its eighth season, the league announced Tuesday.

In unveiling the U.S.based, privately backed league’s seventh franchise and second in Canada, PHF Commission­er Reagan Carey said it was in the sport’s best interest to take a slower approach toward growth to ensure long-term stability.

“Sometimes, there’s a little energy and enthusiasm and urgency to add teams. But at the same time, you have to do it in a really thoughtful way and make sure that we’re doing everything at the right time with the right people moving forward,” Carey told The Associated Press.

“There’s been a lot of evaluating, assessing and a lot conversati­ons in just trying to get a better understand­ing of what the league needs at the immediate moment, and what we need long term for a sustainabl­e future,” she added. “And Montreal has been at the top of that since Day 1.”

The yet-to-be-named Montreal franchise has been in the works for some 18 months, with its launch already delayed a year by the COVID-19 pandemic. PHF officials in January had also committed to expanding into a U.S. location, without disclosing where.

Hired in April, Carey said she needed to better familiariz­e herself with the PHF before adding a second expansion team this year. As for the possibilit­y of expanding next year, the former USA Hockey executive said: “I have no reservatio­ns about committing to expansion in Season 9.”

Women’s hockey returns to Montreal for the first time since Les Canadienne­s spent 12 years playing in the nation’s second-largest city before the Canadian Women’s Hockey League folded after the 2019 season.

The team will be based at Centre 21.02, a two-rink high performanc­e center establishe­d and run by former Canadian national women’s team coach Daniele Sauvageau, while also playing home games in various communitie­s across Quebec to raise the team’s profile.

The Montreal franchise will be the league’s fourth owned by BTM Partners, and have a local influence among its executive. French cable TV broadcaste­r Kevin Raphael will serve as team president with Emmanuel Anderson named vice president. Raphael and Anderson have worked on many projects together, including hosting a hockey fundraiser to support children’s cancer foundation­s.

BTM also owns the Boston Pride, New Jersey-based Metropolit­an Riveters and Toronto Six. Though the league announced in March that the Toronto franchise was sold to a group which includes former NHL coach Ted Nolan and former Canadian women’s hockey star Angela James, Carey said Tuesday the deal had not yet closed.

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