I'm sure the number of women's games I've watched is in the very low double digits. Pretty much every big Canada-usa game of the last 24 years, and that's about it.
Am I a women's hockey expert? Nope. Is anyone else on the HOH board? Don't think so. That all being said, however, we've all done some pretty good ranking and sorting of dozens of pre-merger players, none of whom a second of footage existed for.
How were we able to do that? For starters, our aptitude isn't just for hockey, but for historical ranking itself. For example, I only have a passing interest in baseball, but give me a day and a history of league leaders, award voting records, etc, and I could use methods and principles that I've developed over the last 15 years and come up with a top 100 for baseball that would be pretty damn good. As good as someone who has my skillset, plus knows baseball intimately? Surely not, but reasonable nonetheless. And I can do a better job on women's hockey than I could on baseball.
How do we rank those older players from the formative years of hockey whom we can never see play? Well, to start with, we get a good sense for who the greatest were based on who made it into the HHOF. We can look at their stats. We can use reference points to infer the strength of competition that existed in their various leagues. We can look at who won awards and made all-star teams. We can read about who observers thought was the best.
All of these things, we can also do for women's hockey, except we can see them play, too.
I do agree that it would be a good idea to have multiple people involved who know more about women's hockey than anyone here currently does. I believe I know who I can ask about that.
We are all here to learn, and I can't speak for everyone of course, but I think that this would bring out the best in me as a researcher and as a student of the game. It's a very worthwhile topic.
As for who would ultimately make the list, I imagine it would be a few dozen who played in multiple Canada/USA clashes since 1998, and maybe the odd great from another country here and there (those exist, right?)
But of course, just like men's hockey didn't start in 1967 and it didn't start in 1926 and it didn't start in 1918 and it didn't even really start in 1893, I'm definitely open to being taught about some Elite women's players that came before 1998. I would need to be more convinced of their greatness and how much they stood above other women's players of their day, but I'm not opposed to ranking them in earnest with the modern greats, just like we should be open to ranking players like Russell Bowie and Mike Grant.