Times Colonist

First-place Toronto chooses Minnesota as PWHL semifinal foe

- DONNA SPENCER

TORONTO — Toronto declaring Minnesota its semifinal opponent in the Profession­al Women’s Hockey League on Monday evening ended the suspense for the three other playoff teams.

Minnesota started preparing for a flight today to Toronto for the first two games of the bestof-five semifinal Wednesday and Friday at Coca-Cola Coliseum.

“Considerin­g it was about 30 minutes ago, all of us are scrambling to find dog sitters, babysitter­s, get our passports and figure out what time our flight is in the morning,” said Minnesota captain Kendall Coyne Schofield on a media conference call.

The PWHL in its first season introduced an unconventi­onal playoff hockey tweak in that the regular-season winner had the choice between the third and fourth seeds for its semifinal opponent.

Toronto had 24 hours after the buzzer in Sunday’s 5-2 win over Ottawa, which kept Minnesota in the final four, to announce its decision.

Giving fourth-seeded Minnesota the nod meant No. 2 Montreal will face third seed Boston in the other semifinal starting Thursday at Place Bell in Laval, Que. The higher seeds get home-ice advantage for games one, two, and five in each series.

The semifinal winners advance to the best-of-five Walter Cup. New York and Ottawa finished outside the playoffs in the six-team league.

Toronto (13-4-0-7) clinching first with five days remaining in the regular season gave general manager Gina Kingsbury, head coach Troy Ryan and the players lead time to ponder their upcoming decision.

“The process started a long time ago when we knew the rules and when we clinched first place, we started those discussion already on the hypothetic­als of who that may be that we get to choose from,” Kingsbury said.

“There’s no easy opponent in this league and so we looked at all different angles. We talked to our leadership group, we leaned on our athletes, just what they’re feeling and how they feel against all of these opponents that we got to choose from.

“I looked at analytics and numbers, how we matched up against these teams throughout the season. You want to also look at the more recency of the teams and how they’re doing at this time frame of the season. Are they healthy? Are they banged up? Travel came into play. What does that look like? Where do we feel comfortabl­e travelling to?”

Kingsbury gave the players a strong voice in the decision, Ryan said.

“I thought she did a really good job bringing in the leadership group and having those conversati­ons to get a little bit of their feedback,” he said. “She took it to the bigger group as well, the athletes, just to get their thoughts on things.

“The list that Gina just talked about, they’re all things that were considered. The difficult part is which factors within there carry the most weight.”

Montreal (10-3-5-6) ranked second ahead of Boston and Minnesota with identical 8-3-4-9 records. Boston ranked higher in the tiebreaker.

Riding a four-game win streak into the post-season, Toronto had a choice of U.S. clubs headed in opposite directions. Minnesota backed into the playoffs with a five-game losing streak.

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