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PWHL Draft 2026: Order, Top Prospects and the Full Eligibility List

19 May 2026

PWHL Draft 2026

For the first time, the PWHL Draft is heading to Hockeytown. On June 17, 2026, the Fox Theatre in Detroit will host the league's biggest player intake yet: 236 declared players, 23 of them with 2026 Olympic experience, and an expansion class of new franchises waiting to stack their rosters. Vancouver Goldeneyes own the No. 1 pick. Caroline Harvey, the Patty Kazmaier winner and Olympic MVP, sits at the top of nearly every public board. From there, things get interesting fast.

About the 2026 PWHL Draft

The 2026 PWHL Draft is the league's fourth, and by every measurable yardstick the deepest pool the PWHL has ever produced. According to the league's own announcement, 236 players officially declared by the May 8 deadline, broken down as 128 forwards, 68 defenders and 40 goaltenders. More than half come from NCAA programs, with the remainder spread across U Sports, the SDHL, and clubs in Switzerland, Germany, Czechia, Russia and beyond. The draft will be open to ticketed fans for the first time and follows a Detroit-hosted awards ceremony the night before.

Two storylines drive the class. The first is the Olympic effect: gold medalists Harvey, Laila Edwards, Abbey Murphy, Tessa Janecke and Kirsten Simms headline a deep American group, while Switzerland's bronze-medal goaltender Andrea Braendli and Sweden's Thea Johansson lead a 23-player international contingent that includes four Finns, five Germans and three Italians. The second is expansion. The league announced PWHL Detroit earlier this month, along with newly announced franchises in Hamilton, Las Vegas and San Jose. All four expansion teams are set to enter play in 2026-27, bringing the league to 12 franchises.

When is the PWHL Draft 2026?

The 2026 PWHL Draft takes place on Wednesday, June 17, 2026, beginning at 5 p.m. ET at the historic Fox Theatre in Detroit, Michigan. The PWHL Awards will be held at the same venue the previous evening, June 16. Tickets went on sale to the public on May 13.

PWHL Draft Order 2026

The top of the 2026 PWHL Draft order was set by the league's Gold Plan, the points-based system that rewards eliminated clubs for finishing the regular season strong. Both expansion sides bottomed out the standings, and the race for No. 1 went down to the final weekend.

Pick

Team

Gold Plan Points

1

Vancouver Goldeneyes

5

2

Seattle Torrent

5

3

New York Sirens

0

4

Toronto Sceptres

n/a

Vancouver and Seattle finished tied on five Gold Plan points, with the Goldeneyes winning the tiebreaker on the strength of their post-elimination record. New York and Toronto round out the non-playoff group. The rest of the first round will be determined by playoff results and the placement of the new expansion teams in Detroit, Hamilton, Las Vegas and San Jose, with the league confirming the back-end order closer to draft night.

For Vancouver, this is a chance to immediately address the structural problem that defined their inaugural season. The Goldeneyes scored 64 goals and conceded 78, and their pipeline of high-end finishing forwards is thin. The No. 1 pick can change that overnight.

2026 PWHL Top Prospects

There's no quibble about No. 1. From there, the board fragments into a half-dozen legitimate top-six forwards, two true No. 1 goaltending candidates, and a deeper group of NCAA-tested defenders than the league has seen since its inaugural draft. The names below stand out, presented in no particular order.

Caroline Harvey, D, Wisconsin (NCAA)

The headline. Harvey just swept the 2026 Patty Kazmaier as the NCAA's top player, was named MVP and Best Defender at the 2026 Olympics, and capped it all with another national title in Madison. There hasn't been a defenseman to enter this league with her combination of skating, vision and international pedigree.

Abbey Murphy, F, Minnesota (NCAA)

Olympic gold medalist, Patty Kazmaier finalist, and one of the hardest players in the women's game to play against. Murphy returned for her graduate season at Minnesota and only sharpened the physical edge that already made her a nightmare matchup. Goal-scoring touch to match.

Laila Edwards, F/D, Wisconsin (NCAA)

The most versatile player in the draft. Edwards has played both forward and defense at the international level and owns arguably the best shot in the class. Built for the physicality of the pro game.

Lacey Eden, F, Wisconsin (NCAA)

The Annapolis, Maryland native just made history as the first player in NCAA women's hockey history to win four national championships, capping a graduate season in which she also led the country in scoring with 77 points (29 goals, 48 assists) in 41 games. Creative, elite passer, equally comfortable on the half-wall or in the middle of the ice. The kind of mind a coaching staff trusts in any situation.

Kirsten Simms, F, Wisconsin (NCAA)

Saved her best for the biggest games. Simms isn't physically imposing, but her quickness and ability to manipulate defenders in tight spaces translate cleanly to pro hockey. A Plymouth, Michigan native heading into a draft hosted in her home state.

Tessa Janecke, F, Penn State (NCAA)

The Nittany Lions captain who carried a program to its first Frozen Four ever and finished as a Patty Kaz top-three finalist. Reliable at both ends, dangerous off the rush, and already comfortable playing alongside Hilary Knight and Alex Carpenter for Team USA.

Thea Johansson, F, Minnesota-Duluth (NCAA)

Sweden's leading scorer in Milan. The transfer from Mercyhurst to Duluth unlocked another gear. A sneaky-quick release and elite off-puck reads make her one of the more underrated names in this class.

Andrea Braendli, G, Frölunda (SDHL)

Finally. After years of being the best goaltender outside North America, Braendli has declared. Named Best Goaltender at the 2026 Olympics on Switzerland's bronze-medal run. The PWHL gains a player who can carry a starting workload from day one.

Petra Nieminen, F, Luleå (SDHL)

Eight seasons in the SDHL, the reigning SDHL scoring champion, five league championships, and one of Finland's central figures on the international stage. The best European forward to declare since the inaugural class.

Emma Peschel, D, Ohio State (NCAA)

Quiet, complete, two-way blueliner. Doesn't generate Harvey-level highlight clips, but she shuts plays down and moves the puck cleanly. The model of the modern PWHL defender.

Elisa Holopainen, F, Frölunda (SDHL)

Holopainen has been the runner-up to Nieminen in SDHL scoring two years running and just won league MVP honors after leading the SDHL with 27 goals. Another Finn capable of stepping straight into a top-nine role.

Josefin Bouveng, F, Minnesota (NCAA)

Sweden's Olympic showing was uneven, but Bouveng's NCAA résumé speaks for itself: 43 points this season after a 50-point sophomore year. North-south skater with the kind of straight-line speed PWHL coaches will love.

Vivian Jungels, D, Wisconsin (NCAA)

Played pair-mate to Harvey for two years in Madison. A stay-at-home defender in the truest sense, with enough mobility to escape pressure. The kind of complementary piece that lets a top pair thrive.

Nelli Laitinen, D, Minnesota (NCAA)

Power play and penalty kill, ECAC scoring and international shutdown duty. Laitinen has done all of it. Three IIHF World Championship bronze medals and an Olympic bronze with Finland.

Viivi Vainikka, F, Brynäs (SDHL)

Just led Brynäs to the first SDHL title in club history with a tournament-leading seven goals, named playoff MVP for her efforts. Career-best 52 points in 2023-24 with Luleå. A pure playmaker who should slot into a top-six somewhere in this expansion class.

Tia Chan, G, UConn (NCAA)

The reigning NCAA Goaltender of the Year. A 27-8-2 record, .951 save percentage and 1.55 GAA in her fifth year in Storrs. The best North American goaltender entering the pro ranks behind Braendli.

Issy Wunder, F, Princeton (NCAA)

Tigers captain. Fifty points as a junior, then 43 points (27 goals) as a senior. The kind of finisher who will draw a Hockey Canada call sooner rather than later.

Honorable mentions that should land somewhere in the top three rounds: Meghan Agosta (a three-time Olympic gold medalist mounting a comeback at 39), Laura Fortino (the former Canadian national-team blueliner who represented Italy in Milan), Sydney Morrow, Sloane Matthews, Lily Shannon, Grace Dwyer, Emma Nordström, Rhea Hicks, and the Welcke twins from Boston University.

All PWHL Draft Prospects

Below is the full list of declared players for the 2026 PWHL Draft, grouped by position. Each name links to that player's Elite Prospects profile, and verified team pages are linked where available.

Forwards

Avi Adam Cornell Univ. (NCAA)

Meghan Agosta – DNP

Brooklyn Anderson Univ. of Calgary (U Sports)

Alexis Bedier Concordia Univ. (U Sports)

Lara Beecher Clarkson Univ. (NCAA)

Courtney Ben Adrian College (NCAA III)

Elyssa Biederman Colgate Univ. (NCAA)

Béatrice Bilodeau Univ. of Ottawa (U Sports)

Jaden Bogden Northeastern Univ. (NCAA)

Majorie Bolduc – Lakers Kärnten (EWHL)

Naomi Boucher Yale Univ. (NCAA)

Josefin Bouveng Univ. of Minnesota (NCAA)

Oxana Bratishcheva – Sakhalin Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (ZhHL)

Lily Brazis Northeastern Univ. (NCAA)

Neena Brick MoDo Hockey (SDHL)

Brooke Campbell Univ. of Connecticut (NCAA)

Sena Catterall Clarkson Univ. (NCAA)

Madison Chantler Clarkson Univ. (NCAA)

Madelyn Christian Penn State Univ. (NCAA)

Nina Christof RPI (Rensselaer Poly In.) (NCAA)

Jessica Ciarrocchi Mercyhurst Univ. (NCAA)

Christiana Colizza – DNP

Carys Collie Queen's Univ. (U Sports)

Maggie Conroy – DNP

Sarah Davies Providence College (NCAA)

Carina DiAntonio Yale Univ. (NCAA)

McAllister Dixon Dartmouth College (NCAA)

JessyMaude Drapeau Concordia Univ. (U Sports)

Jenna Duarte Brock Univ. (U Sports)

Lacey Eden Univ. of Wisconsin (NCAA)

Grace Elliott Univ. of British Columbia (U Sports)

Avery Farrell St. Cloud State Univ. (NCAA)

Joelle Fiala HC Davos Ladies (SWHL)

Allie Franco Univ. of Minnesota (NCAA)

Laurence Frenette Quinnipiac Univ. (NCAA)

Laura Fuoco – EV Zug (SWHL)

Molly Goergen – DNP

Jenna Goodwin Frölunda HC (SDHL)

Celina Haider – Eisbären Juniors Berlin (DFEL)

Emma Hall – Lakers Kärnten (EWHL)

Charlotte Hallett Syracuse Univ. (NCAA)

Kate Ham Boston College (NCAA)

Kelly Harty Univ. of New Hampshire (NCAA)

Sydney Healey Boston Univ. (NCAA)

Katherine Heard Univ. of Guelph (U Sports)

Molly Henderson Lindenwood Univ. (NCAA)

Rhea Hicks Clarkson Univ. (NCAA)

Elisa Holopainen Frölunda HC (SDHL)

Allie Hubenschmidt Adrian College (NCAA III)

Sophie Hudson Queen's Univ. (U Sports)

Alyson Hush Univ. of New Hampshire (NCAA)

Jade Iginla Brown Univ. (NCAA)

Julia Jackson Ontario Tech Univ. (U Sports)

Tatum James Univ. of Waterloo (U Sports)

Tessa Janecke Penn State Univ. (NCAA)

Emerson Jarvis Quinnipiac Univ. (NCAA)

Thea Johansson Univ. of Minnesota-Duluth (NCAA)

Riley Johnson Adrian College (NCAA III)

Kyla Josifovic Univ. of Connecticut (NCAA)

Reichen Kirchmair Providence College (NCAA)

Baylee Kirwan – Lakers Kärnten (EWHL)

Heidi Knoll Syracuse Univ. (NCAA)

Courtney Kollman – CG Puigcerda (Spain)

Jane Kuehl Princeton Univ. (NCAA)

Alessia Labruna – HC Milan (Italy)

Emilie Lavoie Concordia Univ. (U Sports)

Krystin Lawrence – DNP

Lane Lewis College of the Holy Cross (NCAA)

Taylor Lind – DNP

Lea MacLeod – SC Bern (SWHL)

Jade Maisonneuve Mercyhurst Univ. (NCAA)

Sarah Marchand MoDo Hockey (SDHL)

Sloane Matthews Ohio State Univ. (NCAA)

India McDadi Brown Univ. (NCAA)

Kaitlyn Mckenna Univ. of Guelph (U Sports)

Sophie McKinley Mercyhurst Univ. (NCAA)

Aly McLeod MoDo Hockey (SDHL)

Madison Michals Merrimack College (NCAA)

Jadynn Morden Univ. of Alberta (U Sports)

Alexia Moreau College of the Holy Cross (NCAA)

Abbey Murphy Univ. of Minnesota (NCAA)

Jamie Nelson Univ. of Minnesota (NCAA)

Petra Nieminen Luleå HF (SDHL)

MaryKate O'Brien Univ. of Minnesota-Duluth (NCAA)

Emerson O'Leary Princeton Univ. (NCAA)

Carly Orth Univ. of Waterloo (U Sports)

Taylor Otremba Minnesota State Univ. (NCAA)

Ekaterina Pelowich Concordia Univ. (U Sports)

Kierra St. Peter Univ. of PEI (U Sports)

Alexis Petford Colgate Univ. (NCAA)

Brette Pettet Djurgårdens IF (SDHL)

Tereza Pištěková SDE HF (SDHL)

Erica Plourde Univ. of Moncton (U Sports)

Asher Printzen – Michigan State (ACHA)

Keiara Raitt Univ. of Waterloo (U Sports)

Jordan Ray Yale Univ. (NCAA)

Jenna Redford – DNP

Katelyn Roberts Penn State Univ. (NCAA)

Naomi Rogge Linköping HC (SDHL)

Shani Rossignol – Mad Dogs of Mannheim (DFEL)

Gracie Sacca – Stonehill College (NCAA)

Evelyne Blais-Savoie HV71 (SDHL)

Georgia Schiff Cornell Univ. (NCAA)

Mira Seregely – HKB Budapest (EWHL)

Lily Shannon Northeastern Univ. (NCAA)

Kirsten Simms Univ. of Wisconsin (NCAA)

Charlotte Sonntag College of the Holy Cross (NCAA)

Elle Spencer Wilfrid Laurier Univ. (U Sports)

Sara Stewart Colgate Univ. (NCAA)

Kyley Toye RPI (Rensselaer Poly In.) (NCAA)

Mckenna Van Gelder Cornell Univ. (NCAA)

Viivi Vainikka Brynäs IF (SDHL)

Mya Vaslet Penn State Univ. (NCAA)

Svenja Voigt St. Cloud State Univ. (NCAA)

Christina Walker Univ. of Connecticut (NCAA)

Riley Walsh Boston Univ. (NCAA)

Alexandria Weiss – Neuchâtel Hockey Academy (SWHL)

Lilli Welcke Boston Univ. (NCAA)

Luisa Welcke Boston Univ. (NCAA)

Tatum White – Neuchâtel Hockey Academy (SWHL)

Hayley Williams – DNP

Kennedy Wilson St. Lawrence Univ. (NCAA)

Annalise Wong Univ. of British Columbia (U Sports)

Megan Woodworth Univ. of Connecticut (NCAA)

Isabel Wunder Princeton Univ. (NCAA)

Clara Yuhn Boston Univ. (NCAA)

Mckayla Zilisch Univ. of Wisconsin (NCAA)

Alexa Davis St. Lawrence Univ. (NCAA)

Defenders

Lyndsy Acheson Univ. of Waterloo (U Sports)

Jade Arnone Boston College (NCAA)

Mariia Batalova – Agidel Ufa (ZhHL)

Casey Borgiel Colgate Univ. (NCAA)

Stephanie Bourque – Union College (NCAA)

Jada Burke – DNP

Kendall Butze Penn State Univ. (NCAA)

Maeve Carey Boston Univ. (NCAA)

Meadow Carman Univ. of British Columbia (U Sports)

Cristina Cavaliere Providence College (NCAA)

Meghane Chalifoux Univ. of Connecticut (NCAA)

Jules Constantinople Northeastern Univ. (NCAA)

Gretchen Dann – Amherst College (NCAA III)

Maya D'Arcy Syracuse Univ. (NCAA)

Brooke Disher Ohio State Univ. (NCAA)

Katina Duscio Univ. of Waterloo (U Sports)

Grace Dwyer Cornell Univ. (NCAA)

Laila Edwards Univ. of Wisconsin (NCAA)

Bri Eid HC Davos Ladies (SWHL)

Ashley Episcopo – Indiana Tech (CCWHA)

Payten Evans Mercyhurst Univ. (NCAA)

Laura Fortino Real Torino (Italy)

Sophia Gaskell Univ. of British Columbia (U Sports)

Sarah Gendron Syracuse Univ. (NCAA)

Gracie Gilkyson Yale Univ. (NCAA)

Kristen Guerriero – Bolzano Eagles (EWHL)

Kayleigh Hamers SDE HF (SDHL)

Caroline Harvey Univ. of Wisconsin (NCAA)

Sophie Helgeson Linköping HC (SDHL)

Tova Henderson Univ. of Minnesota-Duluth (NCAA)

Vivian Hinch St. Francis Xavier Univ. (U Sports)

Melissa Jefferies Frölunda HC (SDHL)

Meredith Jensen Dartmouth College (NCAA)

Sophia Jones RPI (Rensselaer Poly In.) (NCAA)

Vivian Jungels Univ. of Wisconsin (NCAA)

Maeve Kelly Boston Univ. (NCAA)

Anna King Univ. of Alberta (U Sports)

Tessa Kosec Nipissing Univ. (U Sports)

Nelli Laitinen Univ. of Minnesota (NCAA)

Teghan MacRae Univ. of Guelph (U Sports)

Victoria Mariano – DNP

Abbey Marohn – DNP

Megan McKay Clarkson Univ. (NCAA)

Ashley Messier Univ. of Minnesota-Duluth (NCAA)

Sydney Morrow Univ. of Minnesota (NCAA)

Heidi Niskanen – DNP

Grace Parker Färjestad BK (SDHL)

Krista Parkkonen Univ. of Minnesota-Duluth (NCAA)

Emma Peschel Ohio State Univ. (NCAA)

Nina Pirogova – Sahalin (ZhHL)

Madeline Posick Djurgårdens IF (SDHL)

Isabelle Powell Dartmouth College (NCAA)

Alyssa Regalado Cornell Univ. (NCAA)

Erica Rieder Luleå HF (SDHL)

Kianna Roeske Minnesota State Univ. (NCAA)

Maya Roy ERC Ingolstadt (DFEL)

Gabrielle De Serres – Team France

Leah Stecker Penn State Univ. (NCAA)

Heidi Strompf Bemidji State Univ. (NCAA)

Sara Swiderski Ohio State Univ. (NCAA)

Zoe Uens Quinnipiac Univ. (NCAA)

Keirstin Visser – DNP

Madelyn Walsh – Eisbären Berlin Juniors (Germany)

Valerie Watson – DNP

Cora Webber Saint Anselm College (NCAA)

Josey Weeks Lindenwood Univ. (NCAA)

Grace Wolfe St. Cloud State Univ. (NCAA)

Kendra Zuchotzki Univ. of Saskatchewan (U Sports)

Goaltenders

Sophia Bellina – RIT (Rochester IOT) (NCAA)

Andrea Braendli Frölunda HC (SDHL)

Grace Campbell Boston College (NCAA)

Tia Chan Univ. of Connecticut (NCAA)

Leocadia Clark – DNP

Haley Coolsaet – DNP

Katie DeSa Penn State Univ. (NCAA)

Gabriella Durante Real Torino (Italy)

Katelynn Fawcett Trinity Western Univ. (U Sports)

Daria Gredzen – Birusa Krasnoyarsk (ZhHL)

Rei Halloran – Järnbrotts HK (Sweden)

Jill Hertl – Franklin Pierce Univ. (NCAA)

Calli Hogarth Quinnipiac Univ. (NCAA)

Abigail Hornung College of the Holy Cross (NCAA)

Alexa Hoskin – DNP

Tzu Hsu – Team Chinese Taipei

Elise Hugens Univ. of British Columbia (U Sports)

Allie Kelley – DNP

Kiku Kobayashi – Seibu Princess Rabbits (Japan)

Alexandra Lehmann Nipissing Univ. (U Sports)

Brooke Loranger College of the Holy Cross (NCAA)

Hailey MacLeod Ohio State Univ. (NCAA)

Saskia Maurer – SC Bern (SWHL)

Zoe McGee Ontario Tech Univ. (U Sports)

Julia Minotti – Univ. of St. Thomas (NCAA)

Emma Nordström St. Lawrence Univ. (NCAA)

Michelle Pasiechnyk Boston Univ. (NCAA)

Lindsay Reed – DNP

Kayla Renaud Wilfrid Laurier Univ. (U Sports)

Vanessa Ruban Adrian College (NCAA III)

Hannah Saunders – Post Univ. (NCAA)

Natalie Stott – Amherst College (NCAA III)

Katie Sweeney – Univ. of St. Thomas (U Sports)

Emma Tennant Queen's Univ. (U Sports)

Jullia Gross-Turkey – Michigan State (CCWHA)

Anastasia Vasilenko – HC Tuchkovo

Jordyn Verbeek Concordia Univ. (U Sports)

Hope Walinski Providence College (NCAA)

Colby Wilson Univ. of Saskatchewan (U Sports)