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Today in Canada > News > 3rd PWHL season to begin on Nov. 21
News

3rd PWHL season to begin on Nov. 21

Press Room
Last updated: 2025/10/01 at 12:26 PM
Press Room Published October 1, 2025
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The Professional Women’s Hockey League will kick off its third season on Nov. 21, as the league officially grows from six teams to eight.

The two expansion teams, PWHL Vancouver and PWHL Seattle, will play for the first time that night at 10 p.m. ET inside Vancouver’s Pacific Coliseum, the first venue to have a PWHL team as its anchor tenant.

Earlier that night, at 7 p.m. ET, the reigning-champion Minnesota Frost will begin its quest for a third consecutive Walter Cup. The Frost will host the Toronto Sceptres, the team the Frost beat in the playoffs over the last two seasons.

They’re two of 120 games scheduled for the PWHL’s third season, up from 90 games last season and 72 before that. Each team will play 30 games, and all teams will battle head-to-head at least four times.

“Season three will be truly special with the highly anticipated debut of our first expansion teams in Seattle and Vancouver and the growth of the PWHL community to the west coast,” Jayna Hefford, the PWHL’s executive vice-president of hockey operations, said in a statement. “We can’t wait for puck drop to see the impact our new and returning players will make, and to deliver a competitive season with even more games for fans to enjoy.”

The expansion PWHL Vancouver franchise will begin play on the first day of the season, hosting Seattle at Pacific Coliseum, which is pictured here. (PWHL)

The league’s first weekend will feature all eight teams in action.

The Ottawa Charge will host the New York Sirens (7 p.m. ET) on Saturday, while the Montreal Victoire will open the season on the road against the Boston Fleet on Sunday (1 p.m. ET). The league hasn’t released details on its broadcast plans yet.

Also to come are more details on games hosted outside teams’ home venues. Last season, the league visited nine cities as part of its Takeover Tour, and it will continue that tour again this season.

New-look rosters

That first Friday of the season will be the first look at the Vancouver and Seattle teams built from scratch through an expansion process this past spring.

Seattle will have no shortage of size and skill, led by former Boston Fleet captain, Hilary Knight, and sharp-shooting Alex Carpenter.

Vancouver, meanwhile, boasts what looks to be the best blue line group in the league. They’re led by three defenders who won the Walter Cup last season with Minnesota: Sophie Jaques, Claire Thompson and Mellissa Channell-Watkins.

The team will also have at least two hometown forwards in the lineup, including Hannah Miller (North Vancouver) and Jennifer Gardiner (Surrey, B.C.).

“It’s truly special to be starting our season at home in the Pacific Coliseum,” Gardiner said. “As a little girl, I dreamed of this moment, and I can’t wait to live it with my teammates and the fans on Nov. 21. Over the past few months, we’ve connected with so many incredible fans, and seeing the arena filled on game day will make it a season opener to remember forever.”

With some stars gone to Vancouver or Seattle, several existing teams across the league will look a bit different this season. Both Toronto and Montreal, for example, lost their top-three draft picks from 2024 during the expansion process.

A hockey player wearing a New York Sirens jersey celebrates on the ice.
After an off-season of change, the New York Sirens are now built around young stars like Sarah Fillier (right). (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

But no team will look more different than the New York Sirens through a combination of expansion and two major draft-night trades. Gone are four of the team’s top-five scorers from last season, along with starting goaltender, Corinne Schroeder. 

Now, the Sirens will be built around rookie of the year, Sarah Fillier, and top 2025 draft picks, Kristýna Kaltounková and Casey O’Brien, as the team looks to secure a playoff berth for the first time.

Earlier this summer, Daoust described the expansion draft process as “an opportunity to look at ourselves in the mirror and try to be honest.”

“Honesty comes sometimes with tough decisions — tough decisions that sometimes we were not even in control to make,” Daoust told CBC Sports in July. “But some other tough decisions that we felt were for the good of the organization after chatting with players, staff during the exit meetings. So to me, it was a great opportunity to change the angle that we were aiming at.”

This will be the first PWHL season with an Olympic break in the middle, and with only a handful of Team Canada games on the schedule this year, the PWHL will be a major factor in who makes the Canadian Olympic team.

PWHL action will be paused from Dec. 8 to 15 for international training and competition, including two Canada-U.S. Rivalry Series games in Edmonton. It will pause again from Jan. 29 to Feb. 25 for the Olympics.

Women’s hockey at the Olympics will begin with preliminary-round play on Feb. 5. The gold medal game is set for Feb. 19.

PWHL Canadian home openers

  • PWHL Vancouver – Nov. 21 at 10 p.m. ET vs. PWHL Seattle (Pacific Coliseum).
  • Ottawa Charge – Nov. 22 at 7 p.m. ET vs. New York Sirens (TD Place).
  • Montreal Victoire – Nov. 25 at 7 p.m. ET vs. New York Sirens (Place Bell).
  • Toronto Sceptres – Nov. 29 at 2 p.m. ET vs. Boston Fleet (Coca-Cola Coliseum).

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