Category: Women’s Hockey

  • NWHL News and Notes – June 4th, 2019

    NWHL News and Notes – June 4th, 2019

    In NWHL news today it was announced that the Connecticut Whale has signed forward Kendra Broad, who is returning to North America after spending the last three seasons in Europe.

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    Broad’s salary was not disclosed.

     

    Broad will partake in the 50 percent cut of revenue from league sponsorship and media deals. Plus she will also receive 15 percent of revenue from apparel sold with their name on it.

    TXHT will continue to provide NWHL coverage as more signings are announced.

    *Graphics courtesy of the NWHL.

  • NWHL News and Notes – June 3rd, 2019

    NWHL News and Notes – June 3rd, 2019

    Today in the NWHL we had a couple more signings announced for the 2019-20 season.

     

    First up, the Connecticut Whale have re-signed defender Taylor Marchin to a one year deal.

    IMG_20190603_091619.jpg

    Marchin’s salary for the 2019-20 season was not disclosed.

     

    Then next up the Boston Pride has signed the 12th overall pick of the 2017 NWHL Draft Lexie Laing to a one year deal.

    IMG_20190603_111305

    Laing’s salary was also not disclosed.

     

    Both players will partake in the 50 percent cut of revenue from league sponsorship and media deals. Plus they will also receive 15 percent of revenue from apparel sold with their name on it.

     

    TXHT will continue to provide NWHL coverage as more signings are announced.

    *Graphics courtesy of the NWHL.

  • NWHL News and Notes – May 29th, 2019

    NWHL News and Notes – May 29th, 2019

    Today the NWHL has announced that the Boston Pride has signed defender Lexi Bender to a one year contract.

    IMG_20190529_103043.jpg

    Bender will make $13,000 in salary, and she will also partake in the 50 percent cut of revenue from league sponsorship and media deals. Plus she will also receive 15 percent of revenue from apparel sold with her name on it.

     

    TXHT will continue to provide NWHL coverage as more signings are announced.

    *Graphics courtesy of the NWHL.

  • NWHL News and Notes – May 28th, 2019

    NWHL News and Notes – May 28th, 2019

    Today the National Women’s Hockey League has announced two more signings for the 2019-20 season.

     

    First signjng to be announced was that the Boston Pride have signed 2018 NWHL Draft pick Jenna Rheault to a one year contract.

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    Rheault will be making $7500 this season in salary.

     

    Next up the NWHL announced that the Metropolitan Riveters have signed their 2018 NWHL Draft pick Cailey Hutchison to a one year deal.

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    Hutchison’s salary was not disclosed for the 2019-20 season.

     

    Both players will partake in the 50 percent cut of revenue from league sponsorship and media deals. Plus they will also receive 15 percent of revenue from apparel sold with their name on it.

     

    Then later this afternoon the NWHL announced that the Buffalo Beauts have hired Mandy Cronin as their new General Manager.

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    Cronin is one of the co-founders of the Canadian Women’s Hockey League, and also the founder of M-Power Hockey. As part of her duties as GM, Cronin will collaborate with the league in the hiring of coaches, construction of a roster, and overall management of the team and Beauts’ staff.

     

    TXHT will continue to provide NWHL coverage as more signings are announced.

    *Graphics courtesy of the NWHL.

  • NWHL Announces First Whitecaps Signing

    NWHL Announces First Whitecaps Signing

    Today the NWHL has announced that the Minnesota Whitecaps has re-signed Allie Thunstrom for the 2019-20 season.

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    Thunstrom, who played in all 18 regular season games last season, had 5 goals and 5 assists for 10 points in her first season in the NWHL.

     

    TXHT will continue to provide NWHL coverage as more signings are announced.

    *Graphics courtesy of the NWHL.

  • NWHL Announces the Pride’s Third Signing for 2019-20

    NWHL Announces the Pride’s Third Signing for 2019-20

    This morning the NWHL announced that the Boston Pride has signed forward Christina Putigna.

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    Putigna has signed a one year deal, and her salary was not announced. This will be Putigna’s first season in the NWHL.

     

    TXHT will continue to provide NWHL coverage as more signings are announced.

    *Graphics courtesy of the NWHL.

  • NWHL and NWHLPA Reach Agreement for the 2019-20 Season

    NWHL and NWHLPA Reach Agreement for the 2019-20 Season

    Today the NWHL and NWHLPA announced that they have reached an agreement for the 2019-20 season featuring the first ever revenue sharing agreement, plus higher salaries and better benefits.

     

    Per the release this is a one year deal between the league and the players association, which also features an option to extend the agreement for the 2020-21 season by the NWHL. Also under this deal the players will make substantial gains in both revenue and benefits, which is a first in the NWHL since the inaugural season in 2015.

     

    Highlights of 2019-20 NWHL-NWHLPA Agreement feature:

    • Ensures a full 24-game schedule for all five NWHL teams during the 2019-20 season beginning in October 2019 and concluding in April 2020
    • For the first time, includes NWHL players in fifty-fifty sponsor revenue sharing after league operating expenses have been met
    • Salary increases above the 2018-19 season agreement
    • Significant increases to travel, per diem and meal allotments
    • League option to extend the agreement to 2020-21 season

    Director of the NWHLPA Anya Battaligno issued the following statement in regards of todays release:

    “This agreement comes at a critical time for our sport ensuring that the NWHL will have a full 2019-20 season and signifying a breakthrough for our players as we will be included in revenue sharing for the first time this season and every season moving forward. We as players have a proud history and strong connection to the NWHL as the first ever league to pay women hockey players, so it was important for us to honor that relationship by coming to terms that will keep the league going, which this contract achieves. We continue to regard NWHL and its leadership as our strong partners in growing the sport of women’s hockey.

    “Our players are united in the belief that women’s hockey needs additional and consistent sponsorship revenue, equitable marketing, a media partnership and better exposure to grow attendance, viewership and sustain a fan base. We remain committed to driving women’s hockey into a profitable place that will eventually deliver livable salaries and benefits for our world class athletes. We choose to play the game toward that goal rather than waiting idly for change.

    “We look forward to a successful 2019-20 season.”

     

    We here at TXHT are excited by this announcement and how this agreement between the NWHL and the NWHLPA, and we are excited about the continued growth of Women’s Hockey. We look forward to the upcoming 2019-20 season.

  • TXHT Official Statement Regarding the WWIHL

    Good Evening Hockey Fans,

     

    My name is Michael Lindenbaum and I created and run “The Xperience Hockey Talk”, aka TXHT, and I created TXHT with the purpose of being able to talk about the sport I love. At the same time I was working on creating TXHT the NWHL formed and I created a relationship with the league to add to my hockey coverage of not just the Washington Capitals and the NHL, but also Women’s Hockey for which I am a supporter of.

     

    It is truth be said that this current offseason in the world of Women’s Hockey has been a very interesting one with the CWHL folding, to the #ForTheGame Movement, and now Free Agency Signings in the NWHL. However, there was something, or someone, that came out of nowhere and that was Mr. Mark Bishop and his new league the World Women’s Ice Hockey League, aka WWIHL.

     

    With the WWIHL there was already intrigue with how it was buzzing  on social media, and made me genuinely interested in the league just like everyone else was and wanted to speak with the person in charge. So I reached out and asked for an interview for which Mr. Bishop agreed to. I researched the entire WWIHL website so I could prepare thorough and detailed questions for Mr. Bishop to answer so we can get a better perspective of his league and his vision.

     

    To Mr. Bishop’s credit, he took the time to give thorough and detailed answers to my questions, and there were questions I wondered if he was going comment on at all, so I definitely respect Mr. Bishop for taking the interview seriously and answering every question that I submitted to him.

     

    When the article published at 9a EST on Wednesday May 22nd, 2019, we believed that we were doing the right thing, and then it took off on social media. It raised more questions and concerns that people wanted to know. In Mr. Bishop’s eyes he felt that he was being attacked for his vision of a Women’s Hockey league. We ourselves engaged with our readers and expressed our views. Mr. Bishop also viewed that as an attack.

     

    Mr. Bishop requested at 714p EST the same day that the interview be deleted as he feels that we did this interview with the intentions of destroying him. I can clearly express our intentions was to not destroy Mr. Bishop or the WWIHL. Our intention was to give Mr. Bishop a platform to promote himself, the WWIHL, and to explain to us how he plans to make his league successful.

     

    The views and opinions expressed by Mr. Bishop in the interview are his and his alone. Mr. Bishop emailed us his answers and we copy and pasted them into our article. Mr. Bishop’s views and opinions do not represent the views and opinions of TXHT or it’s parent company X75 Productions. While we respect the views and opinions that Mr. Bishop made in the interview, we do not agree with them.

     

    It is with great sadness that we here at TXHT are announcing that we are pulling our interview with Mr. Bishop. We are saddened by this because we truly believed that this interview could open up more productive and constructive conversations on how we can grow the game of Women’s Hockey, but sadly it did not turn out the way we hoped.

     

    In closing I just want to say that it is ok to agree to disagree. We are allowed to express our opinions, and should be allowed to freely. However, with expressing your opinion that does not remove you from taking criticism, but it is how you deal with that criticism that matters.

     

    To Mr. Bishop and the WWIHL, we wish you the best in your future endeavors. TXHT will continue to cover the NWHL and is looking forward to the 2019-20 season to begin this fall.

  • NWHL Announces First Signing for the Whale

    NWHL Announces First Signing for the Whale

    Today the NWHL announced that the Connecticut Whale has signed defender Shannon Doyle to a one year contract.

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    Terms of Doyle’s contract were not disclosed in regards to salary.

     

     

    Per the NWHL release they clarified the following:

    “A note on background: regarding pay, our policy since we started announcing signings this offseason is that it is the decision of each player whether or not to reveal it.”

     

    TXHT will continue to provide NWHL coverage as more signings are announced.

    *Graphics courtesy of the NWHL.

  • Whale Bring Back Doyle For Fifth Season

    Whale Bring Back Doyle For Fifth Season

    The Connecticut Whale made a signing today. Bringing back their veteran All Star blue liner Shannon Doyle, for a fifth season!

    Doyle had an amazing season last year, as she played in 13 games, registering 3 goals and 5 assists for 8 points. One of her goals came via the power play and she scored a game winning goal against the Riveters. She also accounted for 15 blocked shots, in the newly revamped defensive play that the Whale displayed last season. Also, in the playoff game against the Riveters, she recorded an assist and a blocked shot.

     

    Earlier this week, she posted this:

     

    Here are a couple of highlights that she provided last season:

    https://twitter.com/WSportHilites/status/1064262804595793921

    https://twitter.com/WSportHilites/status/1069355814568243201

    https://twitter.com/WSportHilites/status/1094711430144774145

     

    After she signed, she posted this on Twitter:

     

     

    Tweets from Women’s Sports Highlights were used with their permission, you can follow them on Twitter here: @WSportHilites