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PWHL Toronto keeping perspective while building from slow start to season

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Ottawa forward Natalie Snodgrass (8) battlers with Toronto defender Renata Fast (14) during first period PWHL action in Toronto on Saturday January 13, 2024. Maintaining perspective has helped Toronto in working through a tough start to the Professional Women's Hockey League season. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn

TORONTO — Maintaining perspective has helped Toronto in working through a tough start to the Professional Women's Hockey League season. 

Toronto has gone 1-3-0 to begin its 24-game schedule, losing both its home games, and only mustering five goals to 14 allowed. The team sits one point ahead of last-place Boston, which has played just two games so far. Toronto hosts Boston on Wednesday.

"It's hard because you don't want to be a team that's losing," Toronto captain Blayre Turnbull said after practice Monday. "But on the flip side of it, I'd rather go through this now than later in the season. 

"Once we figure everything out, I'm really hoping that we'll get some wins and start stringing together a little bit of a winning streak. And I know this group can do it, we have everything we need in the dressing room, we just have to commit to executing it on the ice during games."

Turnbull said the team needs better attention to detail for a full 60 minutes. Meanwhile, forward Sarah Nurse said the team needs to turn its strength in puck possession into grade-A scoring chances. 

The experience of the group, with several players having competed on the biggest stages internationally, in now defunct pro leagues or in the NCAA, plays a role in its confidence to rebound.

"We've got an older group that's been through the highs and lows of hockey seasons, the highs and lows of Olympic Games, world championships, CWHL (Canadian Women's Hockey League) playoffs," Turnbull said. "We've got girls who've won and lost national championships. 

"We have a ton of experience throughout our whole lineup and I think with experience, you go through adversity all the time and I think it's about understanding and knowing that it doesn't last forever and things will get better. You just have to stick to it and stick together."

Toronto dropped the league's first-ever game at home, 4-0, to New York on Jan. 1. After defeating New York four days later on the road, Toronto fell 3-1 at Minnesota last Wednesday and 5-1 to Ottawa at home on Saturday. 

"There was a lot emotion with that (home opener) that I don't think anybody could've really prepared for even though we talked about it a lot," said Nurse. "But the way that I see it, it's four games into the season, I don't really think there's a reason to hit the panic button.

"I think that it's an opportunity for us to really learn and go through a little bit of adversity that other teams aren't going through right now."

Head coach Troy Ryan has tinkered with lines in games and practice to see what works best. He also said the team had a "great" meeting Monday, talking through positives and negatives.

The early learning curve, though, is beyond what's seen on the ice from Ryan's vantage point.

"The one thing that's been difficult is, there's been a lot of nerves," he said. "They're playing pro hockey, they're signing contracts — some are signing one-year deals, some are signing three, this is all new territory for them. So now they come here on a one-year contract like, 'am I going to stay?' 

"I think if we had a better start, everything becomes a little looser. Our group is really loose, if you see in practice, it's very loose, relaxed, energetic, fun. 

"They feel the pressure a little bit when they're playing. … So a lot of things just tend to snowball. The funny part, we've had some really good chats as a group, is that it can all end really quick. … You just need a couple players to rise above it and stop some of the craziness."

One positive is that the sluggish start hasn't hurt the team's camaraderie.

"Our locker room is one of the tightest I've ever been a part of this soon," Nurse said. "We've only been together for two or so months and to be able to have the connection (and) chemistry off the ice is kind of crazy. 

"And to be able to still hold that through tough losses and annoyances, different things like that, it's pretty special. I think moving forward, that's going to be a real strength of our group." 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 15, 2024.

Abdulhamid Ibrahim, The Canadian Press

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