ckg927
Registered User
And it STILL doesn't take away from my original observation that Ottawa's logo is what would happen if the Calgary Flames & Cleveland Cavaliers EVER got together and had a kid.Still looks like a logo for a tire company.
And it STILL doesn't take away from my original observation that Ottawa's logo is what would happen if the Calgary Flames & Cleveland Cavaliers EVER got together and had a kid.Still looks like a logo for a tire company.
So does that mean we have to shake it off? (Not a Swiftie by any means-I don't mind her music-but the joke just writes itself.)
Barnes Out For Remainder Of Rivalry Series, Could Miss PWHL Camp
Cayla Barnes suffered a lower body injury in game one of the 2024-25 Rivalry Series. It's an injury that's expected to keep her out for the remainder of the Rivalry Series, and could see the first round Montreal Victoire draft pick unable to start PWHL training camp on time. ...
Weird that they announced camps a month ago, and are announcing them again
It's the evolution of lower level hockey's time-honored tradition to "announce the announcement" before the announcement is made. The P breaks the mold again!Weird that they announced camps a month ago, and are announcing them again ...
HFBoards has exclusive rights to LS's services. We like her just where she is.Ladystanley should work for the league…
The Stars of the Sceptres
After kicking off a new chapter for hockey with the PWHL, Natalie Spooner, Sarah Nurse and Blayre Turnbull are blazing a trail for women in sports
By Stéphanie Verge| Portraits by Markian Lozowchuk | November 13, 2024
When the puck dropped on the Professional Women’s Hockey League last January 1, diehard fans were cautiously optimistic. They’d been here before. Over the past two decades, similar leagues had come and gone, proving the prophets of doom—who insisted there wasn’t a market for women’s sports—right. But the PWHL scored big, despite not having team names, logos or home rinks. New faithful flocked to games, followed by the media and sponsors. Six weeks into the season, PWHL Toronto took over the 19,285-seat Scotiabank Arena for a face-off against Montreal, smashing attendance records. In April, the rivals met again at a sold-out Bell Centre in Montreal, North America’s hockey temple.
Toronto’s players—including forwards Sarah Nurse, Natalie Spooner and Blayre Turnbull—have become household names, kicking off a new chapter for hockey and women’s sports in general. As Toronto prepares to welcome a professional women’s soccer team in 2025 and a WNBA expansion team in 2026, the timing couldn’t be better. We sat down with the stars of the newly christened Toronto Sceptres for some real talk about the long road to success, meeting fans in unlikely places and why getting heckled is their love language. ...
Read & See more at: https://torontolife.com/deep-dives/pwhl-stars-toronto-sceptres-finally-having-a-league-of-their-own/
Ladystanley should work for the league…
Waiting on paycheck.HFBoards has exclusive rights to LS's services. We like her just where she is.
And so you shall be ... a Lady(Stanley)-in-waiting.Waiting on paycheck. ...
You get to hang out with all the Cool Kids.Where are the perks? ...