Less than a year since getting off the ground, the Professional Women’s Hockey League has staged its inaugural season with 72 games around North America televised or streamed and attendance records broken over and over, putting the sport in the spotlight like never before.
It could not be happening at a better time.
The PWHL’s launch finally brings together the best players in the world on a regular basis and beyond the annual world championships or Olympics every four years. And it has placed the game firmly on the map at a time of heightened interest in women’s sports, led by the Caitlin Clark effect in basketball and a quarter-century since Brandi Chastain and the U.S. soccer team rose to international prominence.
While it will still take time to catch up in a crowded landscape, the PWHL is off to a blazing beginning after decades of frustration, featuring fitful starts and stops, by putting it all together on the ice with a chance to capitalize on a growing appetite for elite women’s sports.
Chad holds presidential election after years of military rule
Roll of Japanese chemical warfare unit disclosed
News Analysis: U.S. hits technical recession, but many sectors remain healthy
China Focus: CPC Leadership Maps out Priorities for China's Economic Development in H2
Woman reveals horror of being sexually abused by her cousin's fiancé, 26, when she was 12 years old
China aid welcomed by developing world
Xi Meets Former Philippine President
Hongjiannao National Nature Reserve in NW China's Shaanxi, sanctuary for relict gulls
76ers president Daryl Morey has big plans to build NBA title team around Embiid and Maxey
China's electricity use mirrors economic recovery
The foods that cancer experts want you to stop eating
Ambassadors gain insights from visits to Xinjiang