Toronto Star

New women’s pro hockey league has young players dreaming big

SPORTS Excitement builds as Toronto opens PWHL season

- MARK COLLEY STAFF REPORTER

Mackenzie Cotey is in Grade 10. She plays defence for the Toronto Aeros under-18 hockey team and dreams of playing at a U.S. college or a Canadian university.

Recently, her eight-year-old cousin told her what her dream is. “First, I’m going to work at Starbucks,” she said. “(Then) I’m going to play in the PWHL.”

The Profession­al Women’s Hockey League will play its first game on Monday, when Toronto hosts New York at the Mattamy Athletic Centre.

Ahead of puck drop at 12:30 p.m., the league is already raising the ceiling of women’s hockey in North America, creating jobs on and off the ice — and inspiring dreams along the way.

“Hearing that from kids that are younger is so exciting for me,” Cotey told the Star. “Last year, it was just, ‘Oh, I wanna go (play U.S. college Division I hockey)’ … It’s not just university now. There’s an actual league you can play in.” PWHL salaries range from $35,000 to $80,000 (U.S.) with the average at $55,000, allowing players to focus on hockey full-time. There are also award and playoff bonuses, plus benefits such as health and life insurance, longterm disability, relocation allowances and a retirement plan.

Cotey started playing when she was five. Her only opportunit­y to watch the women’s game was during the Olympics and world championsh­ips.

Otherwise, Cotey watched the NHL and tried to model her game after defencemen such as the Maple Leafs’ Morgan Rielly.

Now, she’s excited to watch women’s hockey regularly and model her game off players such as Toronto defender Renata Fast.

For the Aeros, the PWHL hits close to home. Numerous alumni are playing in the league, including forward Claire Dalton, who was an assistant coach for the Aeros under-22 team before being drafted by PWHL Montreal. Seeing the direct pathway to playing pro is eyeopening.

“Growing up, you always realize that you’re gonna have to leave it someday and there really is no pathway unless you make the one national team,” Aeros under-18 captain Logan Tierney said. “(But) it doesn’t have to end after university … It’s something I can do for the rest of my life.”

Showing this to girls playing youth hockey is important to PWHL Toronto players. Before Christmas, the team asked a handful of players to lend a hand with an Etobicoke Dolphins under-13 practice. Forward Samantha Cogan, who helped run the practice, said the girls were “dialed in” and excited to be coached by pros.

But the PWHL’s impact reaches off the ice, too. It also creates coaching and front-office jobs for explayers, said Lisa Haley, head coach of the Toronto Metropolit­an University women’s hockey team.

Her former full-time assistant coach, Haley Irwin, is now on the staff in Ottawa, while a former player works in Ottawa’s front office. TMU equipment services manager Alana Goulden is Toronto’s hockey operations manager of equipment and logistics.

It helps make sharing game-day facilities at the Mattamy Athletic Centre more worthwhile, although the team still has to move out of its dressing room12 times to make way for the PWHL. The Toronto team is providing tickets to players and staff who want to attend.

There are still challenges in girls’ hockey.

For Shirley Collins, president of the Scarboroug­h Sharks, finding financial sponsors and ice time are issues that won’t be solved immediatel­y by having a pro league.

“It’s inspiring for the next generation of young women players,” Collins said. “But in terms of how much impact it will have on our associatio­n, that remains to be seen.”

In creating opportunit­ies, though, the league seems to be well on its way.

“It’s very surreal for us as players in the league to know that kids, their goal now is to play in this league, too,” said Toronto forward and captain Blayre Turnbull. “It just opens the door for so many more women to have a career in hockey.”

 ?? GIOVANNI CAPRIOTTI FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? Mackenzie Cotey, a Grade 10 student who plays for the Toronto Aeros under-18 team, says she’s excited to watch women’s hockey regularly instead of having to wait for the Olympics or the world championsh­ips to come around.
GIOVANNI CAPRIOTTI FOR THE TORONTO STAR Mackenzie Cotey, a Grade 10 student who plays for the Toronto Aeros under-18 team, says she’s excited to watch women’s hockey regularly instead of having to wait for the Olympics or the world championsh­ips to come around.

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