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Canada set for another hockey franchise as a major expansion into Southern Ontario to be made official by PWHL

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Skyler Walker
May 7, 2026  (2:25 PM)
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Photo credit: Facebook

The PWHL is closing in on Hamilton, and that would change the map in Southern Ontario. The move would give the league another Canadian market and turn Toronto into something bigger than a one-team zone.

Detroit is already official as the league's ninth franchise for 2026-27. Hamilton now looks like the next piece, with momentum building toward another expansion announcement.

That matters because this is not just about adding another logo.

It is about creating a tighter regional footprint, one that can drive rivalries, short trips, and more repeat interest over a full season.

Toronto already gives the PWHL a major Canadian anchor.

Hamilton would add a second stop nearby, and that creates natural tension without forcing the story.

A Toronto-Hamilton setup would be easy to sell. Fans could travel. Media attention would rise.

"There are reports out today that Hamilton will be the PWHL's next expansion destination, a point that Mayor Andrea Horwath may have hinted at."

The schedule would feel more alive on a week-to-week basis.

That is the real value here. The league is not just spreading outward.

It is stacking markets that can feed each other.

Hamilton gives the PWHL a sharper rivalry lane

The attendance backdrop also helps explain the timing.

The PWHL reported 1,116,497 fans over 120 regular-season games in 2025-26, an average of 9,304 per game.

Those are numbers a growing league can work with.

Hamilton also was not a random idea.

It was part of the league's 2025-26 Takeover Tour, with Seattle facing Toronto at TD Coliseum on January 3. That looked like more than a one-night test.

The risk is easy to spot too.

Hamilton sits close enough to Toronto that the league has to be careful not to cut into the Sceptres' base.

Still, the upside feels bigger than the concern.

A second Southern Ontario club would give the PWHL a built-in derby, stronger road-game energy, and a cleaner regional identity. If Hamilton becomes official, the league is betting on density, not distance.