Partnership with NHL 'only way forward' for unified women's league: Wickenheiser
Hall of Famer says sponsorship, media coverage, visibility also key to success
Hayley Wickenheiser knows what needs to happen for women's hockey to get back on track.
It's the same thing the Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA) has been pushing for since its inception in 2019.
"The best option for women's hockey moving forward is that we need one league where the best players in the world play," Wickenheiser wrote to CBC Sports.
There are currently two professional women's hockey streams: the National Women's Hockey League, a six-team league in which the PWHPA doesn't participate, and the PWHPA-founded Dream Gap Tour, a nomadic series of showcase tournaments.
Players participate in one or the other, but not both. The PWHPA's mission is to unite both sides to create a legitimate, high-level, sustainable women's hockey league.
"Women's hockey has been its own worst enemy in recent years with the division and split of the two leagues," Wickenheiser said.
"The way I see it is, where the best players in the world want to play is probably your answer to the best leadership and best organization and what the best chance of success is, and that is the PWHPA."
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Wickenheiser, the four-time Olympic gold medallist and Hockey Hall of Famer, played in some little-known women's pro leagues, but spent just one season in the now-defunct Canadian Women's Hockey League and never appeared in the NWHL.
The 42-year-old Shaunavon, Sask., native is in her final year of medical school at the University of Calgary and also works in the Toronto Maple Leafs' front office. The skillset gives Wickenheiser a unique perspective on unifying women's hockey amid a pandemic, though one thing remains clear.
"The answer on how to move forward is a true professional league partnering with the NHL, playing in building at a smaller scale at growing it through the partnership," Wickenheiser said.
The PWHPA was the beneficiary of some of those deep pockets last Thursday, when Secret deodorant pledged $1 million US to fund the 2021 Dream Gap Tour — the largest financial commitment to women's hockey in North American history.
Wickenheiser says the money is one of many important ingredients in the creation of a sustainable women's hockey league.
Wickenheiser is working with PC Financial on the launch of their new PC Money account, which includes every day rewards.
"I think women hockey players today live in a very financially precarious position," Wickenheiser said. "It's a challenging life, and the importance of managing our spending and maximizing our budgets when it comes to everyday essentials has never been so important."
The Secret funding is a start, though NHL involvement, increased visibility and further corporate sponsorships will all be key in the creation of one women's hockey league.
For now, Wickenheiser says the Dream Gap Tour must start off in small locations with some TV coverage while it battles the pandemic.
"Globally, the state of women's hockey is in a precarious place. We had some really good momentum until the pandemic hit and then it really set things back. I think women's hockey deserves better and [we] have to be willing to think outside the box, and adjust as this pandemic moves forward."