CBC Edition

How all 6 PWHL teams look after the league's first trade deadline

- Karissa Donkin

PWHL Ottawa GM Mike Hir‐ shfeld went into Monday's trade deadline looking to add scoring and a veteran presence to a team that's struggled to close out games.

The next challenge: find another GM willing to trade players that fit those cate‐ gories when there's no clear seller across the six-team league.

On top of that, PWHL GMs can't trade draft picks in this first season, nor do they have prospects to deal.

"That makes it more diffi‐ cult because if you want to fill a hole or a gap that you see on one side of your ros‐ ter, you're taking away from a strength that you currently have," Hirshfeld said on Tues‐ day.

A trade deadline is un‐ charted territory in this new league, one of many firsts GMs are navigating in the PWHL's inaugural season.

WATCH | Recapping the PWHL trade deadline on Hockey North:

On the other side, many players are dealing with the concept of being traded for the first time in their careers.

"That is probably the hardest because all my life I tried to provide the players an environmen­t for them," Montreal GM Danièle Sauvageau told reporters last week, before the deadline passed. "So for me … even thinking about trading some‐ one is not a good feeling."

Hirshfeld and Sauvageau agreed to a trade on Monday, one of only two that hap‐ pened on a relatively quiet first deadline day across the PWHL.

Here's how each team looks after the deadline, with a break for the world cham‐ pionship set to begin next week. PWHL games will re‐ sume on April 18.

Toronto

Toronto enters the home‐ stretch with a roster that looks almost identical to the one that took the ice on Jan. 1.

Unlike Montreal or Min‐ nesota, Toronto hasn't dealt with major injuries. The only change has been the addi‐ tion of Victoria Bach to Toronto's top nine in Febru‐ ary, moving Jess Jones to the reserve list.

With a 10-game win streak in hand, it's hard to imagine wanting to change anything about Toronto's roster.

Perhaps the most impres‐ sive stat over the streak: Toronto has gone 31 for 31 on the penalty kill.

You can attribute some of that to goalie Kristen Camp‐ bell, who has rebounded from a tough start. Or to a Toronto defence that boasts arguably the top D-pairing in the world in Jocelyne Larocque and Renata Fast, who are both logging big minutes.

Up front, Toronto boasts a number of great defensive forwards including Sarah Nurse and Blayre Turnbull.

All of that has Toronto looking playoff ready, with one caveat: a number of star players on the roster are heading to New York to com‐ pete for a world champi‐ onship next month. Getting those players back to Toron‐ to healthy will be key.

Minnesota

Minnesota made its big ros‐ ter move in February, acquir‐ ing rookie defender Sophie Jaques to play beside one of the best defenders in the world, Lee Stecklein.

Minnesota GM Natalie Darwitz believed she could unlock the offensive talent Jaques showed at Ohio State University. So far, Jaques has racked up six points in purple and is quarterbac­king the team's power play.

Over the last few weeks, the team has also gotten key players, including Taylor Heise, Liz Schepers and Syd‐ ney Brodt, back from injuries.

A big part of sticking at the top of the standings through those injuries has been the play of rookie for‐ ward Grace Zumwinkle, who sits second in PWHL goalscorin­g (nine) behind Toron‐ to's Natalie Spooner, and a solid goaltendin­g tandem of Nicole Hensley and Maddie Rooney. No team has allowed fewer goals.

Minnesota can end March undefeated with a win over Montreal on Sunday.

Montreal

Montreal has lost its last three games, including two to league-leading Toronto.

The slide has come as the team has dealt with several injuries. Most notably, cap‐ tain Marie-Philip Poulin has missed the last two games.

But Montreal enters the last game before the interna‐ tional break, a key match-up against second-place Min‐ nesota, with more depth on the blue line.

Montreal acquired Aman‐ da Boulier from Ottawa on Monday. She's a right-shoot‐ ing defender who can re‐ place Dominika Lásková, who's on long-term injured reserve.

Defenders are at a premi‐ um across the league and Montreal had to give up a piece of its top six in Tereza Vanišová to get one. But that's an area of strength for Montreal, which has more forward depth in its reserve pool, including Mikyla GrantMenti­s (who's on a 10-day contract) and Mélodie Daoust, than most other teams.

Despite the last three games, Montreal still boasts the best player in the world in Poulin, arguably the best goaltender in Ann-Renée Desbiens, and one of the best power-play quarter‐ backs on its blue line in Erin Ambrose.

That's a combinatio­n no team wants to face in the playoffs.

Boston

Boston has a lot of great pieces on its roster, but it hasn't quite come together as predicted.

No team has scored fewer goals than Boston this sea‐ son. Captain Hilary Knight has had a slow start offen‐ sively, though she did find the net both in regulation and the shootout in a win over Ottawa on Saturday.

Loren Gabel and Alina Müller both had strong starts, but have one goal combined since the begin‐ ning of February.

Lucky for Boston, goal‐ tender Aerin Frankel has been solid.

"She's kept us in games we don't necessaril­y belong [in] at some points in the season," Knight said on the broadcast after Saturday's win.

GM Danielle Marmer made two trades this season, as she looks for that offen‐ sive jolt: Susanna Tapani, who was acquired from Min‐ nesota in February, and Lexie Adzija, who came over in a trade from Ottawa on Mon‐ day.

Marmer might have the inside track on Adzija's po‐ tential. The forward started playing at Quinnipiac Univer‐ sity not long after Marmer graduated.

If Boston wants to hang on to the final playoff spot, winning games in regulation will be key. Boston hasn't won three points since Feb. 25.

You can watch coverage of Boston's game against New York on Monday at 7 p.m. ET on CBCSports.ca, the CBC Sports app and CBC Gem.

Ottawa

In Vanišová and Shiann Dark‐ angelo, who was acquired from Boston on Monday, Hir‐ shfeld hopes he's found play‐ ers who can help his team close out games.

Vanišová is a player head coach Carla MacLeod, who also coaches the Czech na‐ tional team, knows well.

"I think her speed and skating will help us in some of the three-on-three situa‐ tions that we've struggled with in overtime," Hirshfeld said.

Darkangelo had only one point in 17 games in Boston, fewer points than the player going the other way, Adzija, contribute­d. But Hirshfeld is banking on Darkangelo hav‐ ing more to give, pointing to the numbers she put up as captain of the league-cham‐ pion Toronto Six in the Pre‐ mier Hockey Federation last season.

"She's smart, she's hard working, she does all the lit‐ tle things really well," he said.

New York

New York enters the home‐ stretch of the season five points behind Boston for the last playoff spot. They've lost their last six games.

More troubling is that the team has only won twice in regulation over 17 games.

New York has arguably one of the best young defen‐ sive cores in the league. But like Boston, part of the prob‐ lem is an inability to score. Chloé Aurard and Élizabeth Giguère, the team's fourthand fifth-round draft picks, have recorded only one goal each.

"I think we're trying to all come together and find ways to win," Giguère said after a loss to Boston earlier this month. "For us, we've got to get points because we're fighting for that playoff spot."

New York has two games remaining before the inter‐ national break, one against Ottawa and another against Boston. Losing those games would be a huge blow to New York's playoff hopes.

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