Minnesota made hockey history on Wednesday, winning the inaugural PWHL championship in five games after defeating Boston 3-0 in front of a packed Tsongas Center.
HISTORY ✅@PWHL_Minnesota ARE THE FIRST EVER WALTER CUP CHAMPIONS!#PWHL pic.twitter.com/82BLB1iwsz
— TSN (@TSN_Sports) May 30, 2024
With two minutes remaining, leading 2-0, captain and Olympic gold medalist Kendall Coyne Schofield sealed the win with an empty-netter before hoisting the Walter Cup.
THE WALTER CUP HAS BEEN LIFTED! pic.twitter.com/QN8Ct1A3Vt
— PWHL (@thepwhlofficial) May 30, 2024
Following a scoreless first period, Liz Schepers scored the game's first goal, tipping in a cross-crease pass from Sydney Brodt with 13:46 left in the second period. Brodt, who had initially fanned on a shot attempt, regained possession before throwing a pass behind netminder Aerin Frankel off the waiting stick of Schepers to make it 1-0, Minnesota.
Liz Schepers gets us on the board first with her first PWHL goal! https://t.co/HR7g4ZXKvM pic.twitter.com/pWMRaGiECq
— PWHL Minnesota (@PWHL_Minnesota) May 30, 2024
Carrying a 1-0 advantage into the third, Minnesota's Michela Cava made it 2-0 with 11:52 left. After gaining possession a step inside the zone, Cava made her way around the Boston net before throwing a backhander into traffic in front, which somehow snuck past the goal line.
MICHELA CAVA WITH INSURANCE! pic.twitter.com/6TKAyqmkvU
— PWHL Minnesota (@PWHL_Minnesota) May 30, 2024
Overall, Minnesota dominated the decisive Game 5 on Wednesday, outshooting Boston 44-17. Meanwhile, Nicole Hensley was solid in net for Minnesota, posting the shutout, while Frankel turned away 41 shots in a valiant effort between the pipes for Boston.
Minnesota lost Game 1 4-3 but went on to outscore Boston 10-2 over the remaining four games. Their only hiccup was a 1-0 double-overtime loss in Game 4.
Taylor Heise, the first player selected in the PWHL Draft, was named the inaugural Ilana Kloss Playoff MVP award winner. Heise recorded eight points in the postseason, including five goals.
THE FIRST EVER ILANA KLOSS MVP IN LEAGUE HISTORY... TAYLOR HEISE #PWHL pic.twitter.com/XEI2Ck6QsH
— TSN (@TSN_Sports) May 30, 2024
Backed by billionaire Mark Walter, owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Billie Jean King Enterprises, the PWHL marked a rebirth for women's professional hockey following the termination of the last remaining league, the PFH, in June 2023. The league, consisting of six teams, three in the United States and three in Canada, saw positive progression in year one, marked by a full house for Wednesday's decisive Game 5 of the Walter Cup Final.
In case anyone was wondering what the Tsongas Center looks like tonight for the @PWHL_Boston and @PWHL_Minnesota championship game. #EveryoneWatchesWomensSports pic.twitter.com/9FEgWAe89y
— Bridgette Proulx (@bridgetteproulx) May 30, 2024
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