When the condensed NWHL season begins in Lake Placid, theyโ€™ll have a shiny new team taking part. The Toronto Six joined the league via expansion in April 2020 and theyโ€™ve endeared themselves to fans ever since. Will they be able to swoop in and win the Isobel Cup in their inaugural season, or do they still have some growing pains to work through?

Five Factors

  • Beginnerโ€™s Luck | The Toronto Six are the new kids in town. We donโ€™t really know what to expect from them considering they havenโ€™t even played their first game yet. We know that theyโ€™ve been practicing at their home rink in Toronto, but the first time this team hits the ice to play a meaningful game, itโ€™s going to be in Lake Placid. Only four players on the roster have played in the NWHL (Shiann Darkangelo, Emily Fluke, Mikyla Grant-Mentis, Emma Greco). Of those, only Darkangelo and Fluke have played full seasons. Finding the right balance of youth and experience has been important in building Torontoโ€™s roster. Some players are coming from Europe, others from the PWHPA, and many are recent graduates out of Canadian and American universities. Only time will tell if a ragtag bunch of NWHL rookies โ€” and Fluke โ€” can snatch the Isobel Cup from the reigning champion Minnesota Whitecaps or the favorite Boston Pride.
  • Why Canโ€™t We Be Friends? | Speaking of Boston, the Six and the Pride havenโ€™t even played each other and they already have beef. Fluke played for Boston last season and scored 9 goals and 27 points in 23 games (she previously played two seasons with the Connecticut Whale and served as their captain in 2018โ€“19). Expect things between the Six and Pride to get a bit testy on the ice. Toronto and Boston have truly proved that some cities just donโ€™t get along.
  • Do it for Digit | As anyone whoโ€™s seen Miracle knows, one of the most important stats going into a hockey tournament in Lake Placid is โ€œinspirational speeches/60โ€ โ€” and Toronto Six head coach Digit Murphy has no shortage of motivating speeches to dish out to her team. All you have to do is listen to Murphy talk for a couple of minutes and youโ€™ll be ready to run through a wall for her. Her illustrious coaching career in womenโ€™s hockey includes 20 years at Brown University and a stint with the national team in China. Murphy brought a winning attitude to Toronto; hopefully she has it packed and ready to go for Lake Placid.
  • Shot in the Dark(angelo) | The Toronto Six have announced the first captains in team history. Darkangelo will be wearing the C in Lake Placid, with Greco and Emma Woods wearing the As. Darkangelo has a wealth of experience playing in North America (for the Beauts, Whale, and CWHLโ€™s Toronto Furies), as well as one season overseas with Kunlun Red Star โ€” where she was coached by Digit Murphy. Sheโ€™s a dynamic goal scorer with a wicked one-timer thatโ€™s likely to give goalies some trouble in the bubble.
  • Queens of the Power Play | Any team that takes a penalty against the Six is going to be in trouble (so watch out, Madison Packer). The Six signed several power play specialists, including Kristen Barbara and Taytum Clairmont. Barbara is an ideal quarterback for any teamโ€™s power play, and Clairmont has great execution in front of the net. Both played in the OUA, the conference that assistant coach Lisa Haleyโ€™s Ryerson Rams play in. The familiarity might be an asset when it comes to setting up special teams. Expect a lot of the Sixโ€™s goals to come while the other team is in the box./

Why the Toronto Six Can Win It All

Toronto has become the go-to destination for many Canadian women who want to go pro after university. This is good news for the Six because it means their roster is deep and chock full of skill, particularly at the forward position.

Itโ€™s going to take a little bit of beginnerโ€™s luck to win it all, but I truly wouldnโ€™t put anything past this team. The condensed schedule might actually be an asset for the newest NWHL team. Good teams are more likely to make mistakes on such a short schedule, and the consequences of those mistakes are way more severe when each team only plays five times. If the Six can hit the ice running, they just might be able to surprise a few teams.

We know for sure that the Six have all the pieces that a team needs to succeed. They have skill up and down the lineup, solid goaltending, and a coach who knows how to win. Having the puzzle pieces isnโ€™t going to be the challenge for the Six, itโ€™s going to be about putting them in the right place at the right time.

Prediction

Itโ€™s not a stretch to say the Six will make the semifinals. On paper, they have the talent to take a run at the Cup, but we donโ€™t know what theyโ€™re going to be like on the ice. Every team in the NWHL has an identity, and Toronto still has to find theirs.

Could the season be a bust? Maybe. Could the Six win it all in their inaugural season? Also maybe. Theyโ€™re the mystery box team of the NWHL: we donโ€™t know exactly what weโ€™ve got until we open it. Most of these players havenโ€™t played together before, and if they have a fatal flaw, thatโ€™s most likely what it will be. But even so, the Toronto Six are going to be a fun team to watch.

I have high hopes for the Six this season, and you should too โ€” itโ€™s fun to cheer for the expansion team. If they win itโ€™s a great story, and if they finish last, well, itโ€™s only their first season and theyโ€™ll be better next year.

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