The Co-Hosts of PWHL’s podcast ‘Jocks in Jills’, Tessa Bonhomme and Julia Tocheri, offer insight on expansion, playoffs and more

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Although the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) is only in its sophomore season, given the buzz it has already generated, one could assume it has been around much longer.

Micah Zandee-Hart of the New York Sirens and Marie-Philip Poulin of the Montréal Victoire.(via Instagram/@victoire_lphf)

The league is on notice in the wake of the recent expansion announcements and with the playoffs just around the corner. The co-hosts of the PWHL’s podcast Jocks in Jills, Tessa Bonhomme and Julia Tocheri offered their insights about the flourishing league to journalist Sharisse Cohee on Thursday.

“I think it’s fantastic,” Bonhomme said when asked about the growth of the league. “I think it speaks volumes to the success the league has had, not even through two seasons yet.”

“I often feel like they talk about it like it’s been around for 10 years, and it hasn’t yet, and it’s still managed to garner so much momentum and success,” she continued.

Bonhomme is an Olympic gold medalist, representing Canada at the 2010 Vancouver games. She has also won multiple IIHF World Championships. After retiring from professional hockey, the former defender became a prominent broadcaster.

Tocheri, a native of Thunder Bay, Ontario, has become a groundbreaker in Canadian sports media. As the former co-host of TSN’s Leafs Lunch, she became one of only a few women in Canada to anchor an all-sports radio production.


League Expansion  

The PWHL officially announced its westward expansion to Vancouver on April 23. Then, the following week, it revealed that it is also expanding to Seattle. 

The markets will be called PWHL Vancouver and PWHL Seattle until the official names are announced. The teams will play in the 2025-26 season, and the additions increase the number of teams in the league from six to eight.

“I think the fact that Vancouver and Seattle are the first two markets to join are fantastic,” Bonhomme said. “We got to go to Seattle for the Takeover Tour when it was there, and it was awesome. It’s amazing.”

The PWHL’s Takeover Tour ran from Jan. 5 through March 29, and included nine neutral-site games throughout North America. All six teams competed in the tour, which included stops in Seattle, Vancouver, Denver, Quebec City, Edmonton, Buffalo (New York), Raleigh (North Carolina), Detroit, and St. Louis.

PWHL 2024 Takeover Tour (via Instagram/@thepwhlofficial)

Bonhomme and Tocheri were in Seattle for the opening night, recording Jocks in Jills before the game. They spoke about the energy that they felt in the Emerald City.

“In that venue, the people showed up and showed out for the game. It surprised me,” Bonhomme said. “I had no idea, and it was a nice way to have your eyes open.”

The crowd of 12,608 at Climate Pledge Arena was treated to a thrill-fest as the Boston Fleet rallied to defeat the Montréal Victoire in a 3-2 shootout victory.

“It’s so exciting; I was stunned by Seattle, too,” Tocheri said. “It was our first time there, and it feels a little bit full circle that Seattle and Vancouver are going to be the two first ones.”

Tocheri also added that Seattle’s inclusion in the PWHL means the team will share a home with trailblazer Jessica Campbell, the assistant coach of the Seattle Kraken. On the Kraken’s opening night on Oct. 8, 2024, Campbell became the first woman in history to coach an NHL franchise.

“She’s created such a movement not just in Seattle, but people around the world are still amazed to see her behind the bench coaching an NHL game. So, to see her drop the puck at that PWHL game, to know that PWHL Seattle is going to share a venue with her,” Tocheri said.

Bonhomme also touched on the success of the Takeover Tour and how it was instrumental in introducing multiple fan bases.

“I love it because it just continues to prove to everybody that there may only be six teams, but you can go across this country and these ladies are packing venues,” Bonhomme said. “In Denver, they were chanting, ‘We want a team,’ and that was on them. No one else started that. Those were Denver hockey fans that started that.”

Denver played host to the third stop on the tour on Jan. 12. The crowd of 14,018 at Ball Arena made history, setting the record for the highest-ever attendance for a professional women’s hockey game in the United States at the time.



Playoff Picture

The last games of the 2024-25 regular season are Saturday, with a triple-header that will determine the final standings.

“The last games of the PWHL regular season are this weekend, and every single one means something, like, there is something on the line in every single one of those games,” Tocheri said.

Naturally, the Ontario native was most excited about the Ottawa—Toronto game because it resembled last year’s intense matchup. 

“I’m most excited for Toronto [versus] Ottawa because they played the last day of last season as well, in the exact same scenario,” Tocheri explained. “Toronto was already in, and Ottawa needed a win to get into the postseason, and Ottawa did not get that win.” 

The Ottawa Charge and New York Sirens did not qualify for the postseason last year.

“Ottawa has a second chance at redemption in the exact same situation a year later,” Tocheri continued. “And I’m really excited to see if they’ve evolved at all as a group.”

“So, I’m pumped for the Battle of Ontario,” Tocheri exclaimed.

Bonhomme agreed with Tocheri but added that the second game of the triple-header has huge postseason implications. The contest between the Walter Cup champion Minnesota Frost and the Boston Fleet will be a rematch of last year’s finals series. 

Michela Cava opens the scoring for Minnesota in Game 1 of 2024 PWHL Finals.(via Instagram/@ thepwhlofficial)

“Minnesota is going to know what’s happening in the Ottawa game, and they’re one point behind Ottawa right now,” Bonhomme said. “And they’re [Minnesota] playing a very tough Boston Fleet team that is so playoff ready, they’re just built for the playoffs.”

However, Bonhomme was not too quick to count out the reigning Walter Cup champions, as veterans, including Captain Kendall Coyne Schofield, command the Frost. 

“They’ve got the leadership to get it done, and they did,” Bonhomme said about the Frost.

The Frost were able to keep their playoff hopes alive after shutting out host Ottawa 3-0 in a must-win game on Wednesday.

“It was their leaders that got them there,” Bonhomme explained. “It was Kendall Coyne Schofield, Lee Stecklein. These are all seasoned vets that earned themselves a very important three points.”

When asked if a potential dynasty may be on the horizon if Minnesota were to make it all the way, Tocheri admitted she would be intrigued but also said it’s time for a new champ.

“I’m a little bit intrigued by the idea of having a repeat champion, but I think I’m more intrigued by the idea of another legendary superstar in the game hoisting the Walter Cup this year,” Tocheri said. “Maybe it’s time to see Hilary Knight or Marie-Philip Poulin or Brianne Jenner hoist it above her head this season.”

The final game of the triple-header on Saturday is the New York Sirens versus the host Montréal Victoire.


A Special League

From the PWHL’s innovative rules and gameplay, such as the Jailbreak Goal and the use of a (3-2-1-0) point system, to the milestones and players it celebrates, the league has undoubtedly impacted women’s hockey, inclusion and the sports world.

“I love the fact that they do things differently,” Bonhomme said. It’s not just, OK, well, what are the men’s leagues doing? It’s like, no, this is our league. How do we want to do this?

“In this league, players are celebrated for their uniqueness and for who they are,” Bonhomme added. “This league prides itself on the many different characters that don the jerseys. They’re proud of them, they help promote them, as do we.”

Bonhomme touched on one of her favorite moments from this season, which occurred on Tuesday, when Carly Jackson, a third-string goaltender for the Toronto Sceptres and the league’s only openly non-binary player, got their first PWHL start on Toronto’s Pride Night and was golden between the pipes.

Jackson made 25 saves through overtime and was picture-perfect in the shootout. They were named First Star of the Game after the 2-1 victory.

“Carly Jackson earning a win in her first-ever start and didn’t even allow a shootout goal to go in,” Bonhomme said. “She’s such a staple in the Toronto slash PWHL community, she’s beloved. And as a third-string goalie who never really saw a sniff of ice time, can go out there and prove to herself right before expansion, too.”

Tocheri added that one of the most special aspects of the PWHL is that everything, from conception to gameplay, is a celebration.

“It feels like a celebration,” Tocheri said. “This league exists because of the players that are in it. This league exists because Kendall Coyne got on the phone and called Billie Jean King and said, ‘How do we do this?’”

Olympic gold medalists Kendall Coyne Schofield and Sarah Nurse of the Toronto Sceptres were among the first players to sign in the PWHL, and they also helped in negotiations with the league’s collective bargaining agreement.

“The players worked together and made it happen,” Tocheri continued. “And the league also exists because fans have been asking for it for a long time. I think the reason it feels so special is because it has been such a labor of love that everyone has been working towards.”


The PWHL acquired the Jocks in Jills podcast in November 2024 as part of the PWHL Media House venture and brought the talented co-hosts in house.

Tocheri talked about one of her favorite things about working for the innovative league.

“I think that’s my favorite part about working for the PWHL,” Tocheri said. “It feels like a whole bunch of people pulling in the same direction for a collective. Which is just putting women’s hockey on the highest pedestal.”

Jocks in Jills is in its second season, and drops a new episode every Tuesday and Friday. It is available on all major streaming platforms.


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