The gap that has begun to form in the PWHL standings is being reported as game-by-game news: Minnesota Frost beat Seattle Torrent 4-1 in front of a season-high crowd, and the table is spreading. The bigger story is how fast a single league has reshaped women’s hockey. As Yahoo Sports Canada and The Hockey News have reported, the Frost’s win and the emerging standings gap are part of one season’s consolidation of talent and narrative in a way that took other leagues years.
The PWHL Standings Gap Reflects One League’s Rapid Consolidation
On March 13, 2026, the Minnesota Frost returned home after the Olympic break and defeated the Seattle Torrent 4-1 at Grand Casino Arena in St. Paul in front of 11,120 fans, a season-high crowd. As Yahoo Sports Canada reported, a gap has begun to form in the PWHL standings: Minnesota sits third with 33 points, six ahead of fourth-place New York and seven ahead of fifth-place Ottawa, with a game in hand on both. Only Boston Fleet (37 points) and Montreal Victoire (34 points) sit above them. Rookie Peyton Anderson scored her first PWHL goal and goaltender Maddie Rooney recorded her fifth straight win with 28 saves. The victory was the Frost’s third in a row over Seattle by at least three goals, the first time in PWHL history a team has done that against one opponent. The game-by-game framing is accurate, but it understates the structural shift: the PWHL has consolidated top women’s hockey talent under a single entity in a way that took the CWHL and NWHL/PHF years and multiple false starts to achieve.
How Fast a Single League Can Reshape the Sport
The Professional Women’s Hockey League launched on January 1, 2024, with six teams. By its third season (2025-26) it had expanded to eight with the addition of Seattle and Vancouver. As The Athletic and The Hockey News have documented, the PWHL is the third attempt since 2007 to build a sustainable women’s professional league in North America. The Canadian Women’s Hockey League (CWHL) ran from 2007 until it folded in 2019; the National Women’s Hockey League, later the Premier Hockey Federation (PHF), ran from 2015 until the PHF shut down in June 2023 when player contracts were terminated. The PWHL was formed when the PHF and the Professional Women’s Hockey Players Association joined forces, backed by billionaire Mark Walter. Unlike the previous leagues, which competed for talent and fragmented sponsorship, the PWHL consolidates all top women’s hockey talent under one umbrella. Yahoo Sports Canada’s coverage of the Frost win and the standings gap is part of that narrative: a single league with a clear table, clear playoff races, and a season-high crowd in one building. The consolidation of talent and narrative is happening in one season in a way that took other leagues years.
Why This Happens Now: Olympic Cycle and Expansion
The 2026 draft and post-Olympic cycle are adding more talent to the league. The Hockey News has reported that the 2026 PWHL draft class is exceptionally deep from the NCAA and from Europe after the Olympics, and that league leadership has indicated two to four new teams could be added. USA Today noted that the PWHL resumed after the 2026 Winter Olympics with players having left a mark on the international stage. The Frost’s win and the standings gap are happening in a season when the league is no longer in start-up mode: it has a clear hierarchy (Boston, Montreal, Minnesota at the top), a playoff race, and the kind of game-by-game storylines that drive coverage. Yahoo Sports Canada and the league’s own channels report those storylines; the editorial point is that the speed of consolidation—one league, one narrative, one standings table—is what makes the PWHL different. The gap in the standings is not just a gap. It is the shape of a single league reshaping women’s hockey in real time.
What This Actually Means
The PWHL standings gap and the Frost’s home win are game-by-game facts. The argument is that the PWHL’s consolidation of talent and narrative is happening in one season in a way that took other leagues years. A single league with unified ownership and a full talent pool is reshaping women’s hockey faster than the CWHL or PHF ever could.
What Is the PWHL?
The Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) is a North American women’s professional ice hockey league that began play in January 2024. It was formed in 2023 when the Premier Hockey Federation and the Professional Women’s Hockey Players Association merged, with backing from Mark Walter. The league started with six teams (Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Boston, Minnesota, New York) and expanded to eight in 2025-26 with the addition of Seattle and Vancouver. The PWHL consolidates top women’s hockey talent under a single league, unlike earlier attempts such as the CWHL (2007-2019) and NWHL/PHF (2015-2023), which folded or were dissolved. The Minnesota Frost won the Walter Cup in the league’s first two seasons.
Sources
Yahoo Sports Canada, The Hockey News, PWHL, The Athletic, USA Today.