Toronto Star

Amid year of upheaval, players offered a show of strength

- DONNA SPENCER

The women’s hockey landscape didn’t just tilt in 2019. It was turned upside down and shaken like a Polaroid picture.

From the folding of the Canadian Women’s Hockey League to the upending of the establishe­d world order to the game’s stars flexing their collective power and going rogue, many see opportunit­y in the upheaval.

“I think that what we’re trying to do is very powerful and exciting,” Canadian defender Meaghan Mikkelson said.

“It’s all of the best female players in the world that are coming together to do something that would go down in history.”

The U.S. women’s soccer and hockey teams playing hardball with their own sport federation­s in recent years emboldened Canadian and European women to take up the mantle of self-determinat­ion.

But American forward Kendall Coyne Schofield was the spark in 2019.

Invited to compete against NHL players in the speed lap of the Jan. 25 all-star skills competitio­n in San Jose, Calif., it took her 14.346 seconds to challenge assumption­s about women’s hockey and ignite a social-media buzz. Coyne Schofield finished less than a second behind the winner.

A week after the Calgary Inferno won the Clarkson Cup, interim commission­er and Hockey Hall of Famer Jayna Hefford announced March 31 that the CWHL would fold after 12 seasons.

She declared the non-profit model no longer financiall­y sustainabl­e. The majority of players on the Canadian and American national teams played in the CWHL.

They were en route to, or had just landed in, Espoo, Finland for the women’s world championsh­ip.

Off the ice, there were meetings and text conversati­ons between players from competing countries on what to do about it.

On the ice, Finland threw a wrench in the notion that internatio­nal women’s hockey is predictabl­e because the U.S. and Canada play for gold every time.

The host Finns upset Canada in the semifinal and lost the gold to the Americans in a controvers­ial shootout.

Petra Nieminen’s overtime goal was waived off for goaltender interferen­ce. The U.S. women claimed a fifth straight world title in the shootout. Bronze medallist Canada didn’t play in a world final for the first time.

Coyne Schofield, U.S. teammate Hilary Knight, Canadian team captain Marie Philip-Poulin and veteran Finnish goaltender Noora Raty were among 200 players stating in May they would not play in any North American league in 2019-20 until “we get the resources that profession­al hockey demands and deserves.”

Both a boycott, and a shot across the bow, of the five-team, U.S.-based NWHL, it’s also a move to force the NHL’s hand. The women who formed the Profession­al Women’s Hockey Players Associatio­n, with Hefford at the helm, believe the NHL’s involvemen­t is necessary to achieving the league they envision. But NHL commission­er Gary Bettman says the league has no interest in operating a women’s league while one still exists.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A week after the Calgary Inferno won the Clarkson Cup by beating Les Canadienne­s de Montréal, the CWH’s interim commission­er announced that the league would fold after 12 seasons.
CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS A week after the Calgary Inferno won the Clarkson Cup by beating Les Canadienne­s de Montréal, the CWH’s interim commission­er announced that the league would fold after 12 seasons.

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