Home / Sportscope / For the PWHL’s top draft pick Taylor Heise, pressure serves as a privilege

For the PWHL’s top draft pick Taylor Heise, pressure serves as a privilege

After two pre-season games, PWHL 1st overall pick Taylor Heise has three goals to her name. It’s the culmination of a whirlwind fall that began with her historic selection in the first PWHL draft in September. 

Minnesota has mounted pair of comeback wins as Heise records 3 goals in 2 games.

A female hockey player wears a purple jersey with the word Minnesota written across it.

Before she stepped on the ice for her very first professional hockey game on Monday, Taylor Heise tried to remind herself she was going out to play a kids’ game.

As her Minnesota team lined up against Ottawa in pre-season Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) action in Utica, N.Y., Heise thought about how long she’d dreamed of this moment.

“I need to go out there and have fun,” Heise said, describing her thought process before that first game.

“I sometimes get caught up in the little details of things. That’s definitely been something I’ve been trying to fix and focus.”

It didn’t take long for the first-game jitters to dissipate. Heise scored Minnesota’s first goal in the second period. After two pre-season games, she has three goals to her name.

PWHL 1st overall pick Taylor Heise making an impact in pre-season

Minnesota forward picked up two goals leading her team to a win, in their second scrimmage of the PWHL pre-season.

It’s the culmination of a whirlwind autumn for 23-year-old Heise, who was the PWHL’s first overall pick at the league’s inaugural draft in September.

Her selection marked a historic moment for the new league, and you couldn’t have scripted it better for the Lake City, Minn., native to go to her hometown team.

It followed a sparkling collegiate career with the University of Minnesota that saw Heise win the Patty Kazmaier Award as the best player in Division 1 NCAA hockey in 2022.

A few months later, she was named MVP of the Women’s World Championship in Denmark, after leading the tournament in scoring with seven goals and 11 assists.

Now, Heise can call herself a pro league player, a fact she has to remind herself of all the time.

“I sometimes forget to say it,” she said.

“But it’s an amazing feeling. To work as hard as we all do, to have this accomplishment now to say we’re professional is really awesome. It makes the hard work worth it.”

Heise pots a pair vs. Toronto

For Heise, the pressure that comes along with being the first overall pick isn’t something that gets to her. She sees it as a privilege.

She credits her parents with putting the title of first overall in perspective for her.

“It happened, it’s important and we’re going to forever remember it,” Heise said. “But I’m also going to take that with a grain of salt.”

A woman in a blue blazer smiles as she walks toward a stage.

In two pre-season games, Heise has shown the skill to warrant her draft-day buzz.

On Tuesday, her team climbed back from a deficit for the second day in a row, beating Toronto 5-4 at the end of regulation.

With Minnesota trailing by one goal in the second, Minnesota got a two-player advantage after forward Susanna Tapani went into the net hard following some after-whistle chippiness. Tapani left the game and didn’t return.

As she stepped on the ice for the two-player advantage, Heise felt motivated by the emotion of seeing Tapani go off injured.

“I told [forward Kelly Pannek] on the bench, I just need one cut across the ice and that’s my move,” Heise said after the game.

She kept her word. Toward the end of the power play, Heise put the puck over the glove of Minnesota goalie Maddie Rooney, tying the game.

A second Heise goal followed in the third period, giving Minnesota the lead. Grace Zumwinkle, Lee Stecklein and Denise Křížová also added goals for Minnesota.

TAYLOR TIES IT 🔥 <a href=”https://t.co/MjVCrTdlNh”>pic.twitter.com/MjVCrTdlNh</a>

&mdash;@PWHL_Minnesota

Minnesota GM Natalie Darwitz believes Heise is going to be one of the best players in the world.

“With the puck, obviously she’s dynamic and most importantly, she’s a heck of a teammate and does things on and off the ice the right way,” Dawritz said.

College teammates

Abby Boreen spent five years playing with Heise at the University of Minnesota, primarily on the same line.

They’re also best friends off the ice and lived together in college. Boreen describes her friend as equally kind as she is skilled.

Speaking of skill, she singled out Heise’s hockey IQ and ability to make plays all over the ice.

“Just the quick movements with her feet and everything like that, I think that’s what makes her a skilled player,” she said.

A female hockey player smiles through her helmet's cage.

Boreen is hoping to keep playing with Heise this year. She’s in her second year of pharmacy school, but vying for a job as one of two of Minnesota’s reserve players. She’s made a case this week, with a goal and an assist in a win over Ottawa on Monday.

Heise described Boreen as someone she looks up to.

“She has the work ethic of someone I’ve never met, in school, out of school,” Heise said.

Minnesota dealing with injuries

Darwitz didn’t like the after-whistle play that led to Tapani’s injury on Tuesday.

Over two games, Minnesota has lost three players to injury, with defender Sydney Brodt leaving the game with a lower-body injury on Monday and forward Grace Zumwinkle going off with a shoulder injury in overtime on Tuesday. (All pre-season PWHL games go to 3-on-3 overtime and a shootout, regardless of the score at the end of regulation.)

“One of them was extra-curricular,” Darwitz said, referring to Tapani’s injury. “That stuff needs to be nipped in the bud right now for this league to be successful and that stuff can’t happen.”

A female hockey player looks to the side, reading the play.

With the deadline approaching to set her final roster by Dec. 11, the injuries throw a wrench in things. Darwitz said she’ll likely get a crash course in how the league’s injury reserve process is going to work.

Teams will make their final cuts this week, with a waiver period opening on Dec. 8. The final rosters due on Dec. 11 must have 23 players under contract and two reserve players.

The PWHL will continue its pre-season evaluation camp in Utica with several off-ice meetings for players and staff on Wednesday.

Pre-season game action resumes Thursday, as does the PWHL’s experimentation with different rules, as the league prepares for regular season puck drop in Toronto on Jan. 1. On Thursday, players won’t be allowed to ice the puck while shorthanded.

Montreal defeats Boston

Montreal beats Boston in the second pre-season game on Tuesday, a day after dropping its first pre-season contest to New York.

Montreal head coach Kori Cheverie was happier with her team’s effort on Tuesday. Montreal led 3-1 at the end of regulation, with Boston adding a tally by winning the shootout that happens at the end of every PWHL pre-season game.

“A more complete game by our group,” Cheverie said.

The game marked the first start for goaltender Ann-Renée Desbiens, who was dealing with an injury at the beginning of training camp.

Having her in net brought a sense of calmness to the team, Cheverie said.

“She plays the puck really well so it’s kind of like a third D for us back there,” she said. “She tends to calm some storms for [us]. It’s great having her back.”

Two female hockey players wearing red jerseys celebrate on the ice, while a third player in a red jersey looks on.

Montreal forward Ann-Sophie Bettez had a goal and an assist in the game. Her assist came on a goal by Jillian Dempsey, who is playing in Montreal for the first time after spending the first 10 years of her career on Boston teams.

Bettez, who’s played her entire career in Montreal, said she and Dempsey have put their Montreal-Boston rivalry aside to become teammates.

“It was a great opportunity to be on the power-play with her today and then to be able to get an assist on her goal,” Bettez said. “I’m happy she was able to put the puck in the net against Boston. It’s kind of cool.”

New York, Ottawa play with spectators

Fans saw PWHL action for the first time in the final pre-season game on Tuesday, when New York defeated Ottawa 2-1 in a shootout.

Ottawa led 1-0 until New York forward Alex Carpenter tied the game on the power play with a little more than four minutes remaining in regulation time.

New York prevailed in a shootout, with Chloe Aurard and Elizabeth Giguère beating Ottawa goalie Emerance Maschmeyer.

New York goalie Corinne Schroeder had 40 saves in the win.

“I think the pace was incredible,” Schroeder said about her first taste of PWHL action. “Ottawa came to play so that was really exciting hockey.”

A group of female hockey players celebrate behind the net, wearing white and teal jerseys.

New York coach Howie Draper said Schroeder gave the team a chance to a win.

“She was phenomenal in net,” he said. “It was a pleasure to watch her.”

The game was part of an event the PWHL dubbed Fan Fest, where fans also got the chance to meet the players and get their autographs before and after the game.

Draper said New York’s players talked about the crowd in the dressing room before the game, and how their game might be the first image of the highest level of women’s hockey for some young fans in the stands.

“We wanted to make sure that we did our bets as a team to make it a very positive, just an outstanding image for them that they’ll hold for the rest of their lives,” Draper said. “I think it was a great game by both teams. I think we all met that goal.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Karissa Donkin is a journalist in CBC’s Atlantic investigative unit. You can reach her at karissa.donkin@cbc.ca.

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Credit belongs to : www.cbc.ca

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