New professional women's league set to launch in 2024
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[July 01, 2023]
(Reuters) - A new professional women's ice hockey league will
launch in January 2024, bringing together the world's best players
in a unified league, it was announced on Friday.
News of the league ends a long-running divide between the
Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA) and the
seven-team Premier Hockey Federation (PHF).
The league will be supported financially by Mark Walter, co-owner of
Major League Baseball's Los Angeles Dodgers, and his wife Kemba
while former tennis great Billie Jean King will be among the board
members.
"I have always believed that professional sports should bring the
highest levels of performance and organization, and this new league
will have the backing and resources it needs to represent the very
best of women's hockey," said Walter.
Details on the new league with regards to how many teams it will
consist of and in what cities were not disclosed.
The new league acquired assets of the PHF, spent months negotiating
a collective bargaining agreement with the PWHPA and will undertake
a thorough and equitable process to ensure that it features the best
women's hockey players in the world.
"This is an extraordinary opportunity to advance women's sports,"
said King, who has spent her life fighting for gender equality. "I
have no doubt that this league can capture the imagination of fans
and a new generation of players."
Established in 2015 as the National Women's Hockey League, the NWHL
rebranded to become the PHF in 2021 and its teams competed each year
for the Isobel Cup.
The PWHPA, which features mostly U.S. and Canadian national team
players competing in showcase events, was formed in 2019 after the
demise of the Canadian Women's Hockey League.
The PWHPA held traveling showcases called the Dream Gap Tour in a
bid to draw attention to the fact there is no hockey league that
pays women a living wage or has the infrastructure in place to
succeed.
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Jun 18, 2022; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Mark
Walter, Owner and Chairman, Los Angeles Dodgers speaks during the
unveiling ceremony of a brand new Koufax commemorative statue at the
Centerfield Plaza at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne
Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports/File Photo
"I am extremely proud of our PWHPA group, which has
remained committed to our vision and steadfast in our efforts to
change the landscape of women's professional hockey forever," said
PWHPA member and Olympic gold medallist Kendall Coyne Schofield.
"Over the past four years, we have worked tirelessly to close the
gap on what young girls and boys could dream to become in this
sport."
The deal has also grabbed the attention of the National Hockey
League (NHL), which has long said it would not provide fiscal
support so long as there were two competing leagues.
"The National Hockey League congratulates the Professional Women's
Hockey Players' Association and the Premier Hockey Federation on
their agreement," the NHL said in a statement.
"We already have initiated discussions with representatives of this
unified group regarding how we can work together to continue to grow
the women's game."
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Ken Ferris)
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