Interesting read, thanks!
Attendance has been an issue for New York and a bit for Boston. New York has 2 more games at UBS Arena and 1 more at Prudential Center in New Jersey. Yesterday, their first game at Prudential Center had about 5100 fans. That is about 1000 higher than the average at UBS. The team/league removed Bridgeport from consideration for remaining home games about a month ago - some home games weren't set for their location or time at that point. So, sounds like Bridgeport will no longer be a home for the team. Attendance usually was about 2000 there. The evening when it was only around 700, the torrential rain and, around NYC, flooding probably didn't help attendance.
The article includes good perspectives from NY players Jaime Bourbonnais, Madison Packer, and Micah Zandee-Hart. It was an interesting note from Abby Roque that the league decided not to place more midwestern teams and insisted on placing a team around NYC.
I'm glad that Zandee-Hart bucked the trend of players in initial free agency signing in their home country, when she signed in New York. Though Zandee-Hart wasn't included on the latest Canadian national team for Worlds, Ella Shelton and Bourbonnais were. Happy for Shelton earlier this season getting both the first goal in the league and the first goal in the All-Star game. Alex Carpenter is high on the PWHL leader-board for points and picked up another assist yesterday on Jessie Eldridge's goal.
Yesterday, Montreal vs Toronto set a new world record for attendance at a women's hockey game with 21,105 fans in the sold-out Centre Bell! Montreal and Minnesota are neck-and-neck around 2nd place, while Toronto in first is the only team so far to have clinched a playoff spot. They clinched it with Sarah Nurse's OT winning goal yesterday.
Off the cuff, Ottawa and Minnesota seem to be maybe the only teams likely to keep their main venues for next season - who knows, though? Ottawa has had some sell-outs but not all sell-outs, and Xcel Energy Center looks relatively full for Minnesota games. Toronto and Montreal's main rinks seem too small, while Boston and New York's rinks are far from the population centers and haven't drawn a lot. Overall, though, the PWHL people like Jayna Hefford whom media have quoted have said the demand for the league much exceeded their expectations.