Rift appears to widen between PHF, PWHPA women's pro hockey organizations
CBC
Hockey Hall of Fame member Angela James opened what could become a widening rift between North America's top two women's professional hockey organizations on the eve of joining the new ownership group of the Premier Hockey Federation's Toronto Six.
Days before the PHF officially announced the sale on Monday, James posted a lengthy note on a Facebook group page in which she accused the Professional Women's Hockey Players' Association of stunting the sport's development because of its refusal to join forces. Her message drew more attention when Six player Saroya Tinker re-posted it on her Twitter account.
"Right now, I'm so disappointed in the PWHPA. [Whose] interests are you trying to protect?" James wrote.
"Why can't you work out these differences instead of suppressing and handcuffing the elite women's athletes in the progress of the pro game already made," she added. "Women's hockey is bigger than the PHF and the PWHPA, together we can make history."
James, a Six assistant coach this season, said she was speaking on her own and did not note she was part of the group buying the Toronto franchise. The ownership group is also made up of former NHL coach Ted Nolan, ex-NHL player Anthony Stewart and Bernice Carnegie, co-chair of the Carnegie Initiative, which was established to promote inclusiveness in hockey.
James' criticism drew a response from PWHPA adviser Liz Knox. Without referencing James, Knox tweeted Sunday "management, coaches, front office (etc.) speaking on behalf of players' experience instead of supporting the true voice of the players is exactly why the PWHPA was formed."
The back and forth overshadowed the Six's sale to a group hailed for its diversity.
James is the only Black player to captain Canada's national team. Nolan is member of the First Nation's Ojibwe tribe, who was the NHL's coach of the year with the 1996-97 Buffalo Sabres. Stewart, whose father is from Jamaica, is chair of Hockey Equality.
The group purchased the team from BTM Partners, which established the Six as an expansion franchise two years ago.
The PHF, formerly known as the National Women's Hockey League before rebranding last summer, is North America's lone professional women's hockey league, established in 2015. The PHF plans to expand from six to eight teams, provide health care and more than double its salary cap to $750,000 US per team next season.
The PWHPA, who's membership is made up of a majority of U.S. and Canadian national team players, was formed in May 2019 following the demise of the Canadian Women's Hockey League.
The two sides have been at odds ever since, with PWHPA members balking at playing for the then-NWHL because of differences with former commissioner and founder Dani Rylan Kearney's management style.
Concerns were also raised over the private-investor-backed league's financial shortfalls. The league slashed players' salaries by more than half a month into its second season and was criticized for not always reimbursing players' travel and meal expenses.
The PWHPA instead pushed for forming a league with what it called a sustainable economic model with more robust support for players.