Boston Sunday Globe

Knight awaiting new women’s pro league

- By John Wawrow

Patience remains the operative word from Hilary Knight on the Profession­al Women’s Hockey Players’ Associatio­n’s long-awaited bid to launch its own league.

“I’m not anxious yet. You know, I’m on the board, so I get a little peek behind the curtain, so to speak,” one of USA Hockey’s most decorated and longest-serving players told the Associated Press this past week.

The PWHPA — now a certified union — is in negotiatio­ns with its corporate partners (Billie Jean King Enterprise­s and Los Angeles Dodgers co-owner Mark Walter) to hammer out a collective bargaining agreement.

“I know people who aren’t necessaril­y in the mix are like, ‘What’s going to happen next year? How’s this going to work? It’s already mid-June.’ And I totally get that,” Knight said. “So I’m excited about this year. I think that’s all I can say.”

Knight’s assessment follows a recent letter the PWHPA sent to its membership saying it is at “the finish line” of negotiatio­ns with only a few details left to resolve, and has already begun touring potential arena sites in the United States and Canada.

What impresses Knight is how PWHPA members — a majority of them US and Canadian national team players — remain unified in their vision to wait out the negotiatio­ns, which began in March and were initially expected to be completed by the end of April.

In the meantime, having helped raise the profile and pay for women’s hockey, Knight is not going to begrudge fellow players from cashing in on the lucrative contracts being offered by the rival Premier Hockey Federation. The seventeam PHF has doubled it’s salary cap to $1.5 million per team entering its ninth season.

What’s also true for the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation’s first female player of the year is Knight won’t be swayed from her belief that there’s a better and more sustainabl­e alternativ­e to building the women’s pro game.

“I make this distinctio­n. The more women we can have get paid to do the sport they love, I think that’s awesome,” Knight said.

“What bothers me is the illusion of profession­alism and what women’s hockey should be, and settling for what it is, right? And I think that’s the big distinctio­n is let’s call it what it is,” she said. “For people who really want to change the game and make it profession­al and give hockey, women’s hockey particular­ly, the legs that it needs to actually get up and go in the right direction and make it sustainabl­e, that’s what it’s all about.”

If that means the PWHPA initially loses out on high-profile European national players — among them, Switzerlan­d’s Alina Muller, Sweden’s Emma Soderberg, and former Finland goalie and ex-PWHPA board member Noora Raty, who all signed with the PHF — so be it.

“It’s a personal decision. And would I love to have more European players not have signed or waited out their different prospects? Yeah,” Knight said. “But who am I to say what they should and shouldn’t do?”

In 2017, Knight was at the forefront of the US players’ threat to boycott the 2017 world championsh­ips on home soil, successful­ly achieving their bid for better pay and more equitable treatment from USA Hockey.

She has also experience­d the pitfalls, including having her salary slashed in 2016 while playing for the National Women’s Hockey League — now the PHF — and having the Canadian Women’s Hockey League financiall­y collapse in 2019.

Those experience­s leave Knight wanting to push the door open for her colleagues and hockey’s next generation of players.

“What’s really interestin­g is seeing the shift. We had a group that felt finally empowered to make change,” Knight said. “And now this next generation doesn’t feel any of those barriers . . . They think it’s the norm.”

Knight is upbeat and seemingly free of any concerns in having returned to the ice in St. Paul after recovering from what she referred to as an upper-body injury.

Personally, she is riding high with her IIHF honor after scoring three times in a 6-3 win over Canada in the world championsh­ip final to claim her ninth gold medal — tying an individual tourney record — and 10th for the US team.

Knight’s performanc­e at the world championsh­ips in April was rejuvenati­ng — “A big boost, to be honest” — to a player whose national team career that began in 2007 and is showing no signs of an end date.

A month before turning 34, Knight maintains she will continue playing until the game is no longer enjoyable or she begins showing signs of age.

“So the preconcept­ion of where I should be in my prime, to me, I don’t understand that because I show up every single day to the rink wanting to get better,” Knight said. “We’ll see how long this runway is for that.”

 ?? ?? HILARY KNIGHT Not slowing down
HILARY KNIGHT Not slowing down

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