Expansion-seeking PWHL ready to drop puck on 9-game neutral site Takeover Tour in Seattle

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FILE - United States forward Hilary Knight skates to the bench to celebrate her goal against Canada during the first period of a rivalry series women's hockey game, Nov. 8, 2023, in Tempe, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)

Of all the places Hilary Knight has played competitive hockey ā€” from Beijing to Utica, New York ā€” during her 17 U.S. national team seasons, the Boston Fleet captain holds a soft spot for Seattle, not far from her home in Sun Valley, Idaho.

Two years have passed, but the four-time Olympian still excitedly reflects on the electric atmosphere a U.S.-Canada Rivalry Series record-crowd of 14,551 created inside the NHL Krakenā€™s arena.

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ā€œTo be honest, I have yet to experience another crowd like that,ā€ Knight said of playing in Climate Pledge Arena, where she scored twice and added an assist in 4-2 win. ā€œSeattle holds a special place in my mind, and thatā€™s why Iā€™m super excited to be able to share that experience with other teammates, whether itā€™s on the Fleet or on the Montreal team.ā€

Knight makes her return to the Pacific Northwest on Sunday, when Boston faces the Montreal Victoire to kick off the PWHLā€™s expanded series of neutral-site games. Dubbed ā€œThe Takeover Tour,ā€ the Seattle stop is the first of nine out-of-market outings the PWHL will play in places including Raleigh, North Carolina, St. Louis and Vancouver, British Columbia.

The series serves two major purposes for the six-team league a month into its second season: Aside from broadening the sportā€™s reach across North America, the tour allows the PWHL to test markets as it considers expanding by as many as two franchises next season.

ā€œI think any opportunity to have an outreach of currently out-of-market games for us is a critical one for the growth of the game and also our league,ā€ Knight said of a league whose westernmost team is in Minnesota.

ā€œWould I love to see teams out west? Absolutely. I think itā€™s a prime hockey market,ā€ added Knight. ā€œSo thereā€™s really no sky or ceiling to where this league can go.ā€

Rounding out the list of neutral sites are Denver, Detroit, Buffalo, New York, and the Canadian cities Edmonton and Quebec City. Detroit is already considered a front-runner for expansion and the only repeat city on the schedule after drawing 13,736 fans for one of two neutral-site games last year; Pittsburgh was the other.

Minnesota goalie Nicole Hensley looks forward to her Denver homecoming on Jan. 12, when the Frost play Montreal at the Avalancheā€™s Ball Arena.

ā€œI think the last time I (played in Denver) was in high school,ā€ Hensley said.

ā€œYeah, it was a pretty small rink, so this will be little different,ā€ Hensley added, noting she attended many Avalanche games. ā€œIā€™m not going to lie, Iā€™ve been looking forward to it for a while.ā€

Current players arenā€™t the only ones awaiting tour stops.

Cammi Granato, who captained the United States to win gold at the first Winter Games to feature womenā€™s hockey in Nagano in 1998, considers the tour yet another a breakthrough for her sport, with Montreal playing Toronto in her adopted hometown of Vancouver on Jan. 8.

ā€œItā€™s something I never thought could be possible,ā€ Granato wrote in a text to The Associated Press.

ā€œWhen I was growing up, I had the same dream as my brothers to play in the NHL. As I got older, it was hard to accept that I didnā€™t have the same opportunities to play professional hockey,ā€ added Granato, now an assistant GM with the NHL's Canucks. ā€œIt is incredible to see that it can be a dream come true for this generation of players.ā€

Montreal rookie Jennifer Gardiner is from suburban Vancouver and felt isolated from womenā€™s hockey because much of it was being played in the east. Sheā€™s excited to hear the Victoireā€™s game against Toronto has already sold out with the regionā€™s youth girls' hockey associations suspending play that day in order to attend.

ā€œIt goes to show how important it is to continue to expand this league and get these games all over North America because people want to watch,ā€ said Gardiner, who played at Ohio State. ā€œI havenā€™t stopped smiling since I heard about these games out west.ā€

The Kraken privately campaigned to land one of the PWHLā€™s inaugural franchises a year ago. Seattle's staff includes assistant GM Alexandra Mandrycky and it is the NHLā€™s first team to hire a full-time womenā€™s assistant coach in Jessica Campbell.

ā€œWe are committed to growing the game of hockey for both boys and girls in the Pacific Northwest. Itā€™s inspiring for young women in our region to witness female success in hockey on and off the ice,ā€ Kraken GM Ron Francis said. ā€œThis is an exciting moment for our community and an important step forward for womenā€™s hockey.ā€

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AP Womenā€™s Hockey: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-hockey


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