PWHL adding expansion teams in Las Vegas and Hamilton, Ontario, with 1 more coming to reach 12 – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Unsplash)
The Professional Women’s Hockey League has moved forward with two new expansion franchises, placing teams in Las Vegas and Hamilton, Ontario. The additions bring the league to 11 teams, one short of the dozen it aims to reach as it doubles in size from its original six franchises launched in 2024. League officials described the decisions as part of a deliberate effort to broaden the sport’s reach while maintaining strong local support.
Expansion Timeline and League Leadership Views
The announcements arrived this week, with the Las Vegas franchise set for a formal introduction at T-Mobile Arena on Wednesday and Hamilton’s reveal scheduled for Thursday. League executive vice president of business operations Amy Scheer noted the rapid pace of growth, including the recent addition of Detroit, and emphasized that the real work begins after the headlines. She highlighted the excitement across the organization while stressing the need to deliver on operational details such as scheduling and fan engagement.
Scheer pointed out that the process has already produced measurable interest, including a neutral-site game in Hamilton that drew more than 16,000 spectators in January. Roughly 70 percent of those attendees had never seen a PWHL game before, a figure the league views as evidence of untapped demand in new markets.
Las Vegas Enters the Southwest Market
Las Vegas marks the league’s first foray into the American Southwest, following last year’s additions in Seattle and Vancouver that extended the PWHL into the Pacific Northwest. The city meets several expansion benchmarks, including rapid growth in girls’ and women’s hockey participation, which has risen 600 percent since the Vegas Golden Knights joined the NHL in 2017. The new team will share T-Mobile Arena with the Golden Knights and adopt green-and-gold colors.
The move also places the PWHL alongside established professional sports in the region, including the WNBA’s Las Vegas Aces, who have averaged more than 11,000 fans per game in recent seasons. Arena availability played a key role in the selection, as the league ruled out several other candidates due to scheduling conflicts.
Hamilton Strengthens Ontario’s Core
Hamilton becomes the third PWHL franchise in Ontario, joining Toronto and Ottawa while serving the densely populated Golden Horseshoe region. The team will play at the renovated TD Coliseum, which has a hockey capacity of 16,400 and will also host the New York Islanders’ relocated minor-league affiliate. Its color scheme will feature gold, maroon, and cream.
The market already supplies 15 percent of current PWHL players, among them Vancouver’s Sarah Nurse and Toronto teammates Renata Fast and Emma Maltais. The Hamilton-Burlington area has a population exceeding 785,000, with additional major centers such as London, Kitchener-Waterloo, and the Niagara Region within an hour’s drive. League officials noted that the location avoids direct competition with Toronto, 42 miles to the east, while tapping into established hockey infrastructure.
Key Expansion Details
- Las Vegas: T-Mobile Arena, green and gold colors, first Southwest market
- Hamilton: TD Coliseum (16,400 capacity), gold/maroon/cream colors, third Ontario franchise
- Next step: One additional team to reach 12 total
Geographic Balance and Future Structure
With San Jose and Denver still under consideration for the final spot, the league is positioned to organize into either two six-team conferences or three four-team divisions based on travel efficiency. The original six teams – New York, Boston, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, and Minnesota – remain the foundation, and the new additions help reduce concentration in the Northeast and northern markets.
Scheer described the expansion criteria as focused on female hockey development, arena partnerships, and long-term viability. Both Las Vegas and Hamilton satisfied those standards, including demonstrated fan interest and facility access that allows flexible game scheduling. The league expects the completed 12-team roster to support more balanced competition and broader national visibility.
