PWHL

Looming expansion, close standings made for a quiet PWHL trade deadline

Just one trade, between Montreal and Toronto, happened on Thursday. The Montreal Victoire acquired forward Kaitlin Willoughby from the Toronto Sceptres in exchange for Swedish defender Anna Kjellbin, who will bolster the team's back end.

Just one trade, between Montreal and Toronto, happened on Thursday

A group of hockey players celebrate on the ice.
Only one deal materialized on PWHL trade deadline day: Montreal defender Anna Kjellbin (71), pictured far right, was sent to Toronto in exchange for forward Kaitlin Willoughby. (PWHL)

The PWHL's one and only swap on trade deadline day came down to the wire.

Toronto Sceptres GM Gina Kingsbury was in professional development sessions all day, stepping out to take calls from Montreal Victoire GM Danièle Sauvageau, who was travelling.

At the last minute, the pair completed the only deal of the day by exchanging two depth players: the Victoire got veteran forward Kaitlin Willoughby, while the Sceptres bolstered their defensive depth by adding Swedish defender Anna Kjellbin.

It was one of only three trades all season in the PWHL, the product of trades being extra tricky for GMs to pull off. Teams can't trade draft picks this season, nor do they have a bevy of prospects to pull from the way NHL GMs do. Any trade needs to be one-for-one to work.

With expansion on the horizon, teams are also preparing for the possibility of an expansion draft. Should that happen, teams don't know yet what such a draft would look like, including how many players they can protect.

On top of all that, the standings are tight. The Sceptres, Boston Fleet, Minnesota Frost and Ottawa Charge are all within six points of each other in the middle of the pack. Four of the six teams will make the playoffs.

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That meant no one was really a seller, and GMs chose a more conservative path, not wanting to radically change their lineups.

"You're still trying to go for a Walter Cup this year," Kingsbury said on Friday. "There's not that separation that forces people to make bigger and bolder decisions because they know where they sit either positionally from a ranking perspective, but also just future wise."

The good news is that every GM found themselves in the same boat with the same set of rules to operate with.

"I'm pretty sure that all of us did the same thing, to look at what are those possibilities within those facts and within that situation," Sauvageau said. "We were able to have discussion about how could we, if that was possible, bring different changes on our team to be able to be prepared for the next situation, if needed." 

Ottawa places Maschmeyer on LTIR

The Victoire's newest forward, 29-year-old Willoughby, has seven professional seasons on her resume across the PWHL, Canadian Women's Hockey League and Professional Women's Hockey Players Association. She registered one point for Toronto last season.

Montreal has been without third-line centre Alexandra Labelle, who is on long-term injury reserve. The team has only one forward on the reserve list to call in case of injury (Gabrielle David), and Willoughby should add some extra insurance.

Two women's hockey players battle for the puck.
Willoughby, seen above (28), adds some extra depth to Montreal's forward group. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

The Victoire gave up Swedish national team captain Kjellbin, who was drafted 35th overall by Montreal last year. She found herself on the outside of the team's lineup when defender Dominika Lásková was activated from long-term injury reserve in February.

But Kjellbin was exactly what Toronto needed, after New York signed two of its depth defenders, Lauren Bernard and Olivia Knowles, off the reserve list. 

Kjellbin is someone Kingsbury said the team was interested in last year, after the GM had a 90-minute conversation with her prior to the draft. Kjellbin spent years in the Swedish Women's Hockey League (SDHL) and arrived in the PWHL with a solid sense of the professional women's hockey landscape, plus a lot of drive.

"I definitely see her potentially in that five-six [defender] spot, potentially seven spot for us, but definitely would want to give her the opportunity to come in and showcase what she can bring," Kingsbury said. "From there [we'll] make a decision on the 6th or 7th D we'll be playing every night, and I think she'll be competing for that."

The Ottawa Charge didn't make any deadline trades, after pulling off a blockbuster in December that saw the team pick up forward Victoria Bach and veteran defender Jocelyne Larocque from Toronto.

On Friday, Ottawa also announced it had signed goaltender Lucy Morgan off the Minnesota Frost's reserve list. She appeared in one game for the Frost this season, allowing five goals from the New York Sirens.

A female ice hockey goaltender guards her net during a game.
Ottawa Charge starting goaltender Emerance Maschmeyer was placed on long-term injury reserve this week, after leaving a game against Minnesota on Tuesday. (Troy Parla/Getty Images/File)

The Charge's starting goaltender, Emerance Maschmeyer, left Tuesday's win over Minnesota with an injury. She was placed on long-term injury reserve, though GM Mike Hirshfeld said the team is "cautiously optimistic" to see Maschmeyer return by the end of the season.

In the meantime, Ottawa will rely on rookies Gwyneth Philips and Logan Angers. Philips has looked solid in seven games with the Charge this season, registering a shutout and a 2.29 goals against average.

Ottawa sits in 5th place, five points behind Minnesota for the last playoff spot. The team has two games in hand on the Frost.

"We believe strongly in this group and are excited to battle for a playoff spot over the next eight games," Hirshfeld wrote on X.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Karissa Donkin is a journalist in CBC's Atlantic investigative unit. You can reach her at karissa.donkin@cbc.ca.

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