logo
PWHL Vancouver inks forward Hannah Miller as free agency opens

PWHL Vancouver inks forward Hannah Miller as free agency opens

CTV News17-06-2025
Toronto Sceptres' Hannah Miller (34) and New York Sirens' Alex Carpenter (25) battle for control of the puck during overtime PWHL hockey action in Toronto on Tuesday, April 29, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Arlyn McAdorey
PWHL Vancouver has signed former Toronto Sceptres forward Hannah Miller as a free agent.
The expansion team announced the deal Monday, the first day of the league's free agency window.
The 29-year-old Miller has played two seasons in Toronto, and contributed 10 goals and 14 assists in 29 regular-season appearances during the 2024-25 campaign.
She previously spent five seasons with the KRS Vanke Rays in Shenzhen, China.
'I'm truly honoured and very excited to be joining the team in Vancouver,' said Miller. 'It means so much to me to represent the city where I first fell in love with the game. It's a real full-circle moment, and I can't wait to meet all the fans and get started!'
Internationally, the native of North Vancouver, B.C., represented China at the 2022 Beijing Olympics and scored the host country's first goal of the Games.
Miller was named to Canada's roster for this year's women's world hockey championship in March, but was later ruled ineligible due to International Ice Hockey Federation transfer rules.
'Hannah is an elite forward who can put up points and wear down opponents,' said Cara Gardner Morey, PWHL Vancouver's general manager. 'We are excited to bring her home to Vancouver to be part of our foundation.'
PWHL Vancouver will continue adding to its inaugural season roster with six picks in the 2025 PWHL Draft on June 24, including the seventh overall selection.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 16, 2025.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko upsets top-seeded Coco Gauff to reach Montreal quarterfinals
Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko upsets top-seeded Coco Gauff to reach Montreal quarterfinals

CTV News

time30 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko upsets top-seeded Coco Gauff to reach Montreal quarterfinals

Victoria Mboko of Canada waves to the crowd following her win over Coco Gauff of the United States during round of 16 tennis action at the National Bank Open in Montreal, Saturday, Aug. 2, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi MONTREAL — Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko upset top-seeded Coco Gauff 6-1, 6-4 on Saturday night to reach the National Bank Open quarterfinals. 'Your support was incredible,' Mboko told the crowd in French after a chorus of 'Olé, Olé, Olé!' chants echoed around the venue. 'I'm really happy to win today. .. It's incredible. I'm so happy to beat such a great champion.' Gauff dropped to 2-3 since winning the French Open. She followed the major victory with opening losses in Berlin and Wimbledon, then overcame double-fault problems to win two three-set matches in Montreal. Gauff had five double-faults Saturday after having 23 in her opener against Danielle Collins and 14 against Veronika Kudermetova. 'She's playing high-level tennis.' Gauff said. 'I think that's what showed today. I think she was the better player.' The 18-year-old Mboko, ranked 85th in the world, finished off the 21-year-old Gauff — who had 24 unforced errors — in 1 hour, 2 minutes. 'When I was up 5-4, the crowd started cheering even louder, and everything got super noisy,' Mboko said. 'I used that as more fuel for myself and to pump myself up a little bit more. I just used the crowd to my advantage as much as I could.' Mboko will face Jessica Bouzas Maneiro of Spain, a 7-5, 6-1, 6-2 winner over Lin Zhu of China in a rain-interrupted match that ended just before midnight. In Rome in May, Gauff rallied to beat Mboko 3-6, 6-2, 6-1. 'I was actually really thinking about it a lot during the match,' Mboko said. 'I had flashbacks to when I played her in Rome a little bit. I just remember when she came out playing even better and stepped it up a bit better. Wanted to step my game up a little bit more and make sure I matched whatever she was producing, and I wanted to stay right there with her.' Earlier, 24th-seeded Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine and ninth-seeded Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan set up a quarterfinal match. Kostyuk beat McCartney Kessler of the United States 5-7, 6-3, 6-3, and Rybakina topped Dayana Yastremska of Ukraine 5-7, 6-2, 7-5. The Associated Press

SIMMONS SAYS: If the Blue Jays can play .500 the rest of the way, they should reach playoffs
SIMMONS SAYS: If the Blue Jays can play .500 the rest of the way, they should reach playoffs

National Post

timean hour ago

  • National Post

SIMMONS SAYS: If the Blue Jays can play .500 the rest of the way, they should reach playoffs

Article content HEAR AND THERE Article content Last season, Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner combined for 60 goals with the Maple Leafs. The number was rather low because of the 15 games Matthews missed, his mystery injury and the fact he had the lowest goal-scoring numbers of his career. If whoever plays right wing alongside Matthews and Matthew Knies scores something around 15 goals, they'll be above the 60 goal mark combined. The Leafs were still third in the East in scoring last season, 16 goals ahead of the Stanley Cup-champion Florida Panthers … The Leafs' largest challenge this coming season: Finding a way to replace the 47 primary assists Marner had last season. That's 20 more than anyone else had on the team. One reason for optimism: Max Domi had 19 primary assists while not playing much power-play time or not playing much on the first two Toronto lines … A weird stat: The Leafs were 26-1 last season in games in which Morgan Rielly had an assist … They were 21-2-1 in games William Nylander had two points … This is why Hockey Canada decided on just three goaltenders — the same three from the 4 Nations team — for its summer Olympic team gathering. General manager Doug Armstrong and staff looked at Washington's Logan Thompson, Edmonton's Stuart Skinner, Los Angeles' Darcy Kuemper and Mackenzie Blackwood of Colorado and considered them quite similar to their three named goaltenders. My understanding of this: Jordan Binnington is a sure thing for the Olympic team and, after that, two of Adin Hill, Sam Montembeault and the other four being looked at while being selected for the team in Milan … Montembeault is French Canadian, which helps his chances of being the third goalie … With rosters enlarged for the Olympics to 25 players, expect the 4 Nations forwards and defence to be much the same on the Olympic team, with the likely additions of Tom Wilson, Nick Suzuki and maybe Mark Scheifele up front and Evan Bouchard on defence. Still in tough to be named: Zach Hyman. A nice invite but with no chance of making it: Maple Leafs forward John Tavares. You can't pick Tavares over Connor McDavid, Sidney Crosby, Nathan MacKinnon, Brayden Point, Suzuki, Scheifele or Rob Thomas. He's not physical enough to play the wing or quick enough to be an effective forechecker. Article content SCENE AND HEARD Article content Elaine Tanner, once known as Mighty Mouse as Canada's greatest swimmer, predicted to me the other day that Summer McIntosh will soon be 'Canada's all-time greatest athlete ever.' So who wins Canada's athlete of the year this year? The MVP and NBA champion Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, or McIntosh, the multi gold-medal winning, record-breaking swimmer. A strong case could be made for both legends, and it's only August … SGA will be honoured in Hamilton on Thursday and presented with the first key to the city in 27 years … The NFL does Hall of Fame much better than Major League Baseball, the NBA or NHL. They do their inductions in the off-season, with no regular-season games playing opposite. Baseball and hockey have their induction ceremonies opposite league games being played. It means if you're a fan, you can't watch the Hall speeches and inductions and your favourite team play because it's happening at the same time. The NHL needs to find a way to honour its Hall of Famers properly on a night when no games are being played and the event could be televised nationally in both Canada and the United States … If you missed Ichiro Suzuki's Hall of Fame speech last Sunday, go find it. It's special and unique, just as he was as a player … Couldn't ESPN have waited another week before announcing it had fired Shannon Sharpe? His older brother Sterling Sharpe was being inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday. There was no reason to put a damper on the weekend for the Sharpe family … I can see why Bryce Harper would be obstinate with baseball commissioner Rob Manfred when it comes to the possibility of having a salary cap in baseball. Harper, who will be paid $150 million over the next six seasons, ordered the commissioner to get the eff out of the Phillies clubhouse if he's talking salary cap. Article content AND ANOTHER THING Article content Terry Greer is the best Argonauts receiver I've ever seen. Mookie Mitchell and Darrell K. Smith not far behind him. Current Argo Damonte Coxie is among the best the team has ever had. And in less than half a season, with below-average quarterbacking, Coxie has 10 catches of more than 30 yards this season. Last season, no one in the CFL had more than that for an entire season … Former Argo Makai Polk, a key Grey Cup contributor last year as a rookie, was an early cut of the Atlanta Falcons. It's never good when you get let go before pre-season games begin. Might be good for the Argos if they can get him back … Yeah, it was eight years ago that John McEnroe predicted big things for the teenager, Denis Shapovalov. It's never quite happened the way McEnroe figured. Shapovalov is 26 years old now and just another guy on the men's tennis tour. He lost in his first match at the National Bank Open, as did fellow Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime, who also looks like he should be significantly better than his results … How much does NHL regular-season scoring matter? In their back-to-back Stanley Cup seasons, the Florida Panthers finished 13th and 11th in goal-scoring … Rafael Nadal won 63 tournaments in his career and lost only 51 matches in his entire career. The retiring Genie Bouchard's reaction to that nearly impossible statistic: 'This makes me want to throw up.' … With Aaron Judge out for some time and the rest of his season in question, does that put Cal Raleigh in the MVP chase, or is it simply Judge and nobody else in the American League race? … This is how bad a season Mookie Betts is having with the Dodgers: He ranks 63rd in the National League in batting, 55th in home runs, 47th in RBIs, 72nd in OPS, 63rd in on-base percentage … I don't suspect Connor Bedard or Macklin Celebrini have much chance of playing for Team Canada in Italy in February, but I do like the idea that both young stars have been included on the summer camp invite list. They both will be on the Olympic roster in 2030 in the French Alps … Happy birthday to Marv Levy (100), Tom Brady (48), Marcel Dionne (74), Jim Gott (66), Dominic Moore (45), Kristaps Porzingis (30), Evander Kane (34), Bombo Rivera (73), Troy Glaus (49), Sid Bream (65), and Tony Amonte (55) … And hey, whatever became of Devon Travis? Article content

Sailing school allows beginners to learn the ropes this summer in Saskatchewan
Sailing school allows beginners to learn the ropes this summer in Saskatchewan

CTV News

time3 hours ago

  • CTV News

Sailing school allows beginners to learn the ropes this summer in Saskatchewan

Beginners are taking advantage of learning how to sail this summer in Saskatchewan, thanks to the Regina Sailing Club. After travelling to Tahiti with her husband, Victoria Oppenlander came across a couple of sailors. 'We ran into people sailing around the world. We chatted with them, gave them a ride to their next spot, and it kind of piqued our interests,' she shared. Upon returning to their home in Saskatchewan, the two felt the wind in their own sails to learn the ropes of the sport themselves. 'When we got home we checked it out, found out there was a learn-to-sail class in the province,' she explained. 'It worked out that we were able to sign up for classes this summer so that's what we're doing.' In late July, Oppenlander was one of many people participating in the water-based sport at Last Mountain Lake – joining a one-week sailing course organized by the Saskatchewan Sailing Club's Association's Mobile Sailing School. Expand Autoplay 1 of 12 Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) Regina Sailing Club (Gareth Dillistone / CTV News) The organization makes its way across the province visiting different sailing clubs with the goal of introducing the sport to more people. 'We get about 10 students every class,' shared head instructor Rhys Kelm. 'I really like teaching them how to sail right from the barebones beginning. As they get in the boat and they don't even know how the boat steers at all, then suddenly by the end of it, they're racing, right? It's super cool to see that progression from zero to hero almost.' Out on her first time with her father and brother, 12-year-old Hayley Mickelborough said the activity was her dad's idea, but she hopped on board as soon as arriving at shore. 'It's a little scary, it's fun, it's interesting. I like it,' she said smiling. 'I would recommend this because it's a big learning experience. It's just really fun overall.' Regina's local club said the initiative helps encourage people of all ages and skill levels to come out. 'These courses are very important to the growth of our sport. It's a not a very known sport in Saskatchewan,' explained Adam Fletcher, commodore of Regina Sailing Club. 'Anytime we have the opportunity to get new people involved, exposed, we will take it.' Fletcher added that people don't need to have much experience or own their own equipment to be able to join. 'If you're looking at becoming a member of the Regina Sailing Club, you do not have to own your own boats. We do have member boats available to you,' he explained. 'We do have some little dinghies that you can use if you're starting out from. We do have cruiser boats for those more experienced sailors.' People can find out more information on the club's website. - With files from Gareth Dillistone

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store