PWHL Takeover Tour

This is a list of neutral site games played by the Professional Women's Hockey League (PWHL) more commonly known as the PWHL Takeover Tour. The tour brings PWHL regular season games to cities that do not currently have a league franchise, allowing fans in new markets to experience professional women's ice hockey while the league evaluates potential expansion locations.[1]

Background

Since the PWHL's inaugural season, the league has hosted regular-season games at neutral sites outside of its home markets as part of initiatives to expand its fanbase, test potential expansion markets, and grow the sport of professional women's ice hockey across North America.[1]

During the league's second season in 2024–25, the league formalized its neutral site program as the PWHL Takeover Tour, which featured nine games across the United States and Canada.[2][3] The tour expanded to 16 games for the 2025–26 PWHL season.[4] The Takeover Tour serves several strategic purposes including: market testing, fan development, developing relationships with cities and partners, league growth, and player exposure.[4][5][6] PWHL Executive Vice President of Hockey Operations Jayna Hefford stated that the tour has been "one of the most rewarding initiatives since our inception—for our fans, our athletes, and our staff."[3]

The success of the Takeover Tour has influenced the PWHL's expansion strategy. Prior to announcing Seattle and Vancouver as the league's first two expansion teams in April 2025, the inaugural tour had tested markets in both cities with strong results—particularly the sold-out Vancouver game that drew over 19,000 fans.[4] Both cities joined the league as permanent franchises for the 2025–26 PWHL season.[7] PWHL officials have stated that the tour demonstrates the strong demand for professional women's hockey across North America and provides valuable data for future expansion decisions. Scheer noted that the league has "proven that time is overrated" regarding the pace of expansion, emphasizing that growth and profitability are interconnected objectives.[8] At an Ottawa City Council meeting, Scheer stated: "We're going to expand at least two to four teams next year... We are in growth mode, and this league is exploding."[5] The increasing interest in the PWHL expanding beyond its current cities was evidenced by a new single-day ticket sales record set during 2025–26 PWHL Takeover Tour presales which surpassed the previous benchmark by more than 55 percent.[9]

Format

PWHL Takeover Tour games are official PWHL regular-season contests that count toward team standings. Two of the neutral-site games are designated as home games for participating teams.[4] The games follow standard PWHL rules and scoring systems.

2023–24 season

The inaugural PWHL season featured two neutral site games as part of "PWHL Takeover Weekend" in March 2024.[10]

2023–24 PWHL neutral site games
Date Venue City Visiting team Home team Score Attendance Ref
March 16, 2024 Little Caesars Arena Detroit, Michigan Ottawa Boston 4–3 13,736 [1][2]
March 17, 2024 PPG Paints Arena Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Toronto Montreal 2–1 8,850 [10][11]

2024–25 season (PWHL Takeover Tour)

The first PWHL Takeover Tour was announced on November 18, 2024, and launched on January 5, 2025.[1] The 2024–25 season featured nine neutral site games from January through March 2025.[3] The tour drew a total of 123,601 fans across nine games and set multiple attendance records for professional women's hockey.[3][12] An estimated 80% of attendees experienced their first-ever PWHL game[3][4] Fans from all 50 U.S. states and all 13 Canadian provinces and territories attended the games.[3][4] Social media engagement led to a 30% increase in league-wide followers during the tour.[3]

2024–25 PWHL Takeover Tour games
Date Venue City Visiting team Home team Score Attendance Ref
January 5, 2025 Climate Pledge Arena Seattle, Washington* Montreal Boston 3–2 (SO) 12,608 [3]
January 8, 2025 Rogers Arena Vancouver, British Columbia* Montreal Toronto 2–1 19,038 [3]
January 12, 2025 Ball Arena Denver, Colorado Montreal Minnesota 4–2 14,018 [3]
January 19, 2025 Videotron Centre Quebec City, Quebec Ottawa Montreal 2–1 18,259 [3]
February 16, 2025 Rogers Place Edmonton, Alberta Toronto Ottawa 3–2 (OT) 17,518 [3][13]
February 23, 2025 KeyBank Center Buffalo, New York Boston New York 3–2 (SO) 8,512 [3]
March 7, 2025 Lenovo Center Raleigh, North Carolina Ottawa Minnesota 5–0 10,782 [3]
March 16, 2025 Little Caesars Arena Detroit, Michigan Minnesota New York 4–1 14,288 [3]
March 29, 2025 Enterprise Center St. Louis, Missouri Ottawa Boston 2–1 8,578 [3]

*City joined the PWHL as an expansion market for the 2025–26 season.

Detroit's Little Caesars Arena was the only venue to host a second neutral-site PWHL game, having previously hosted a game on March 16, 2024, that drew a then-U.S. professional women's hockey attendance record of 13,736 fans.[1] The second game attendance at Little Caesars Arena grew to 14,288.[3]

Attendance records

The 2024–25 Takeover Tour set multiple attendance records:

  • U.S. professional women's hockey record: 14,288 fans in Detroit on March 16, 2025 (breaking the previous record of 14,018 set in Denver on January 12, 2025)[3]
  • Fourth all-time PWHL attendance: 19,038 fans in Vancouver on January 8, 2025 (sold out)[3]
  • All-time PWHL single-game attendance: Five games ranked in the top 10 for attendance in league history[3]

2025–26 season (expanded Takeover Tour)

The 2025–26 season features an expanded PWHL Takeover Tour with 16 neutral site games across 11 cities from December 2025 through April 2026.[4] The tour includes seven new markets (Calgary, Chicago, Dallas, Halifax, Hamilton, Washington, D.C., and Winnipeg) and four returning markets (Denver, Detroit, Edmonton, and Québec City) from the previous season.[14] The tour's expansion was covered extensively in Canadian media, with TSN reporting that the tour would make its regular-season debut in the four new Canadian cities.[14]

With the PWHL's expansion to eight teams (adding Seattle and Vancouver as permanent franchises) in 2025, all eight teams in the league participate in at least three Takeover Tour games during the 2025–26 season.[4] The 2025–26 tour includes multiple presenting partnerships and sponsors, including: DoorDash, BJ's Wholesale Club, Woody Creek Distillers, Ally Financial, Explore Edmonton, and the province of Nova Scotia.[4]

Attendance records

The 2025–26 Takeover Tour broke the following attendance records:

  • U.S. professional women's hockey record: 17,228 fans at Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C. on January 18, 2026 between the Montréal Victoire and the New York Sirens briefly set a new record that was broken the following month by a sellout of 17,335 at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle on February 27, 2026 following the Winter Olympics.[15][16]
2025–26 PWHL Takeover Tour games
Date Venue City Visiting team Home team Score Attendance Ref
December 17, 2025 Scotiabank Centre Halifax, Nova Scotia Montreal Toronto 2–1 (SO) 10,438 [4]
December 21, 2025 Allstate Arena Rosemont, Illinois Ottawa Minnesota 4–3 (OT) 7,238 [4]
December 27, 2025 Rogers Place Edmonton, Alberta Minnesota Vancouver 2–1 (OT) 10,264 [4]
December 28, 2025 American Airlines Center Dallas, Texas Seattle New York 3–4 8,514 [4]
January 3, 2026 Little Caesars Arena Detroit, Michigan Boston Vancouver 4–3 9,624 [4]
January 3, 2026 TD Coliseum Hamilton, Ontario Seattle Toronto 4–3 (SO) 16,012 [4]
January 11, 2026 Videotron Centre Quebec City, Quebec Vancouver Montreal 4–0 14,624 [4]
January 11, 2026 Scotiabank Centre Halifax, Nova Scotia Ottawa Boston 2–1 10,452 [4]
January 18, 2026 Capital One Arena Washington, D.C. Montreal New York 1–2 17,228 [4]
January 25, 2026 Ball Arena Denver, Colorado Vancouver Seattle 3–1 11,612 [4]
March 15, 2026 Ball Arena Denver, Colorado New York Minnesota 3–4 15,512 [4]
March 22, 2026 Canada Life Centre Winnipeg, Manitoba Montreal Ottawa 1–2 (OT) 15,225 [4][14]
March 25, 2026 Allstate Arena Rosemont, Illinois New York Seattle [4]
March 28, 2026 Little Caesars Arena Detroit, Michigan New York Montreal [4]
April 1, 2026 Scotiabank Saddledome Calgary, Alberta Toronto Ottawa [4][14]
April 7, 2026 Rogers Place Edmonton, Alberta Boston Vancouver [4]

Broadcast coverage

All games are broadcast on YouTube to viewers in the United States, Europe, Asia, South America, Africa, and Australia. In Canada, broadcast partners include: TSN, Sportsnet, Amazon Prime Video, and CBC.[17] PWHL Takeover Tour games in the United States also air on over-the-air broadcast partners in each host market, including TEGNA in Denver, Scripps Sports in Detroit, and FOX-owned stations in Chicago, Dallas, and Washington, D.C.[17]

Statistics

Games by venue

Neutral site games by venue (through March 22, 2026)
Venue City Games Total attendance Average First game Most recent
Little Caesars Arena Detroit, Michigan 3 37,648 12,549 March 16, 2024 January 3, 2026
Rogers Place Edmonton, Alberta 2 27,782 13,891 February 16, 2025 December 27, 2025
Scotiabank Centre Halifax, Nova Scotia 2 20,890 10,445 December 17, 2025 January 11, 2026
Vidéotron Centre Quebec City, Quebec 2 32,883 16,442 January 19, 2025 January 11, 2026
Ball Arena Denver, Colorado 3 41,142 13,714 January 12, 2025 March 15, 2026
Allstate Arena Rosemont, Illinois 1 7,238 7,238 December 21, 2025 March 25, 2026
Rogers Arena Vancouver, British Columbia 1 19,038 19,038 January 8, 2025 January 8, 2025
Climate Pledge Arena Seattle, Washington 1 12,608 12,608 January 5, 2025 January 5, 2025
KeyBank Center Buffalo, New York 1 8,512 8,512 February 23, 2025 February 23, 2025
Lenovo Center Raleigh, North Carolina 1 10,782 10,782 March 7, 2025 March 7, 2025
Enterprise Center St. Louis, Missouri 1 8,578 8,578 March 29, 2025 March 29, 2025
PPG Paints Arena Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1 8,850 8,850 April 20, 2024 April 20, 2024
American Airlines Center Dallas, Texas 1 8,514 8,514 February 7, 2026 February 7, 2026
TD Coliseum Hamilton, Ontario 1 16,012 16,012 January 3, 2026 January 3, 2026
Capital One Arena Washington, D.C. 1 17,228 17,228 January 18, 2026 January 18, 2026
Canada Life Centre Winnipeg, Manitoba 1 15,225 15,225 March 22, 2026 March 22, 2026
Scotiabank Saddledome Calgary, Alberta 0 April 1, 2026 April 1, 2026

Games by city

Neutral site games by city
City Country Games Status
Detroit, Michigan  United States 4 No PWHL team
Edmonton, Alberta  Canada 3 No PWHL team
Denver, Colorado  United States 3 No PWHL team
Halifax, Nova Scotia  Canada 2 No PWHL team
Dallas, Texas  United States 2 No PWHL team
Chicago, Illinois  United States 2 No PWHL team
Quebec City, Quebec  Canada 2 No PWHL team
Seattle, Washington  United States 1 Seattle Torrent (expansion 2025)
Vancouver, British Columbia  Canada 1 Vancouver Goldeneyes (expansion 2025)
Buffalo, New York  United States 1 No PWHL team
Raleigh, North Carolina  United States 1 No PWHL team
St. Louis, Missouri  United States 1 No PWHL team
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania  United States 1 No PWHL team
Hamilton, Ontario  Canada 1 No PWHL team
Washington, D.C.  United States 1 No PWHL team
Winnipeg, Manitoba  Canada 1 No PWHL team
Calgary, Alberta  Canada 1 No PWHL team

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "PWHL Heads to New Cities in Takeover Tour of Neutral-Site Games". PWHL.com. Professional Women's Hockey League. November 18, 2024. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  2. ^ a b Wawrow, John (November 18, 2024). "PWHL releases nine-date neutral-site schedule". ESPN. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "PWHL Takeover Tour By The Numbers: A Groundbreaking Initiative In Review". PWHL.com. Professional Women's Hockey League. April 11, 2025. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "PWHL Expands Takeover Tour for 2025–26 Season, Featuring 16 Neutral-Site Games". PWHL.com. Professional Women's Hockey League. November 10, 2025. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  5. ^ a b "PWHL Launches Expanded 16-Stop Takeover Tour for 2025/26 Season". Just Women's Sports. November 12, 2025. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  6. ^ "PWHL Takeover Tour A Homecoming For Serdachny And Markowski". The Hockey News. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
  7. ^ "What to know about the 2025-26 PWHL season: New teams, rules, how to watch". Yahoo Sports. The Athletic. November 21, 2025. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  8. ^ "PWHL Aims for Aggressive Pro Hockey League Expansion in 2026". 2025-12-03. Retrieved 2026-03-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ "PWHL To Make History With Season Three Puck Drop Tonight". PWHL.com. Professional Women's Hockey League. November 21, 2025. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  10. ^ a b "Professional Women's Hockey League (PWHL) Coming To Detroit And Pittsburgh March 16–17 As Part Of PWHL Takeover Weekend". PWHL.com. Professional Women's Hockey League. February 6, 2024. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  11. ^ "Pittsburgh again shows it's 'ripe and ready' for professional women's hockey". DK Pittsburgh Sports. March 17, 2024. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  12. ^ "PWHL announces 'Takeover Tour' with stops in Vancouver, Quebec City". TSN. November 18, 2024. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  13. ^ "PWHL Takeover Tour – February 16, 2025". Rogers Place. November 10, 2025. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  14. ^ a b c d "Calgary, Winnipeg, Hamilton and Halifax join PWHL's Takeover Tour for 2025–26 season". TSN. November 10, 2025. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
  15. ^ "PWHL Breaks US Women's Hockey Attendance Record in Washington, D.C." Just Women's Sports. January 18, 2026.
  16. ^ "Seattle Torrent sets new attendance record for women's hockey". MyNorthwest.com. March 1, 2026. Retrieved March 5, 2026.
  17. ^ a b "PWHL Announces Broadcasting Deals: Here's Where You Can Watch All PWHL Games This Season". The Hockey News. November 18, 2025. Retrieved January 15, 2026.