Courtney Kessel leaves PWHL Boston Fleet in return to Princeton as head coach of women's hockey team
Princeton made it official on Monday in announcing Courtney Kessel's hiring as coach of the women's hockey team, a week after the two sides were finalizing the agreement.
Kessel spent the past two years coaching the PWHL Boston Fleet and returns to Princeton where she spent four seasons, from 2019-23, as an assistant under Cara Gardner Morey. She now succeeds Gardner Morey, who left the Tigers in May upon being hired as general manager of the PWHL's expansion team in Vancouver.
Advertisement
The 35-year-old Kessel had a 27-19-8 record in Boston, including a Walter Cup Finals appearance in 2024, which the team lost to Minnesota in a decisive Game 5.
'It is bittersweet to move on from the Boston Fleet and the amazing people building that organization and the PWHL as a whole,' Kessel said. 'This opportunity was the only one that could draw me away from where I was.'
From Toronto, Kessel played at New Hampshire, where she was a 2010 finalist for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award, given to the MVP of women's college hockey. She also represented Canada at three world championships, including a gold-medal win in 2012.
She also has Hockey Canada coaching experience, serving as a senior team assistant in 2024 and head coach of the 2023 gold-medal winning Under-18 team.
Advertisement
The Fleet have undergone major changes this offseason. Star forward Hilary Knight left Boston to sign with the PWHL's expansion team in Seattle. The Fleet also have an opening at assistant general manager after Meghan Turner was hired as Seattle's GM.
'Courtney set the tone from Day 1 and elevated our group with her competitiveness, preparation, and care,' Fleet GM Danielle Marmer said. 'She's already established herself as an elite coach early in her career, and I know she'll continue to raise the bar as the next head coach at Princeton.'
___
AP women's hockey: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-hockey
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
17 minutes ago
- CBS News
Patriots roster crunch: Will Kyle Dugger, Anfernee Jennings make the cut?
The Patriots have just one preseason game left, though a lot of the team's regulars aren't expected to play given the short week ahead of Thursday's exhibition finale against the New York Giants. That will mean a lot of playing time for players who find themselves on New England's roster bubble. But for some, the writing may already be on the wall. At the forefront of that group is veteran safety Kyle Dugger, who was on the field until the final whistle in Saturday's preseason win over the Vikings in Minnesota. Dugger has struggled to find his fit in Mike Vrabel's defense and has been repping with the twos in practice. He saw a heavy dose of playing time in the second half Saturday, another indication his time in New England may be coming to an end soon. Dugger was on the bubble heading into Saturday's game, and then played all the way until the end. He came down with a game-saving interception on the final play, but also nearly fumbled his pick in the end zone, which would have allowed the Vikings to score a last-second touchdown. The veteran tried to do too much on the play and it nearly cost the Patriots. The near mental miscue aside, the fact Dugger was out there at all is an indication to former Patriots tight end Christian Fauria that Dugger will not be part of the team come Week 1. "The relevance is [he was on the field]," Fauria said on Sunday night's Sports Final on WBZ-TV. "There is a home for him. But certain things are just set in stone for me. One of them is in the preseason, veterans, distinguished guys who have made a lot of money, when they're in during the fourth quarter when there is absolutely no need for them to be there, they're either being shopped or they're just giving them reps. But they're not making the team." Cutting Dugger would likely leave New England with Jabrill Peppers, Jaylinn Hawkins, Brenden Schooler, and rookie Craig Woodson at safety. ESPN Boston's Mike Reiss fought back a little bit, saying Dugger still has a chance to make the squad. "He can play," Reiss said of Dugger. "I see he's making plays, coming down hill and on the run blitz." The Patriots have a healthy group of edge rushers, and it looks like veteran Anfernee Jennings is making a late push to make the team. While Jennings also played in the second half Saturday, he dominated during his time on the field with three sacks. Fauria remembers back to the days of Bill Belichick, who would tell veterans if they were playing in the second half against third- and fourth-stringers, they better dominate. Jennings' big game against the Vikings may have convince Vrabel and Company he should stick around into the season. "He's starting to change their mind," said Fauria. "I would not cut him. I still think he could help you," said Reiss. Harold Landry, Keion White, K'Lavon Chaisson, Bradyn Swinson, Elijah Ponder, and Truman Jones are the likely locks among New England edge rushers, with Jennings coming on strong as of late. Undrafted rookie receiver Efton Chism likely locked down a roster spot with another big performance on Saturday, when he caught six passes for 71 yards and a touchdown. Chism shed a number of tackles throughout his big game, which saw him account for 62 of the team's 88 yards on a second-quarter touchdown drive. However, Reiss pointed out there may be an injury concern with Chism, who spent time with team trainers after his 12-yard touchdown and didn't return. "This was maybe a little bit underplayed. He was being looked at by the training staff, and didn't go back into the game," noted Reiss. "Were they protecting him because he had shown all he needed to show? The other part is, maybe they protecting him because of his health." Vrabel will speak with reporters at 10:15 a.m. on Monday, and will hopefully give an update on Chism's status ahead of the team's practice in Foxboro.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Meet the New Guy: Nathaniel Lowe
He's Nathaniel Lowe, recently of the Washington Nationals and quite possibly the only American to go by Nathanial since approximately 1872. In fact, he actually went by Nate early in his career, changing it back to his birth name only after his mama yelled at him. The Red Sox just picked him up off the scrap heap after he was designated for assignment by the Washington Nationals and then went unclaimed on the waiver wire. He's plays first base, which (incoming understatement alert!) has been somewhat of a problem position for the Red Sox ever since Triton Casas's early season injury. Well, you've already read the whole 'DFA'd by a team that's 24 games under. 500' thing so you probably already have a guess at what the answer to this question is. Lowe is slashing just .216/.292/.373 this year with 16 homers and his 26.5% strikeout rate is the 26th-highest in baseball. His savant page makes it clear he's going through his blue period, which is cool if you're Picasso, less so if you're a baseball player: But Lowe has been good before. He even won the Silver Slugger back in 2022, when he blasted 27 homers with the Texas Rangers while slashing .302/.358/.492. He's always been known for controlling the strike zone, laying off bad pitches, and taking walks. And while this has been the worst season of his career, he's still managed to show power against right-handed pitchers, hitting 14 homers and 10 doubles in 302 at-bats (though the .312 OBP he carries against righties isn't too impressive). Lowe is a baseball brother! His brother Josh is an outfielder with the Tampa Bay Rays, and isn't above doing annoying little brother things on the field: But that's really a Josh Lowe highlight, so here's another one of Nathaniel blasting a clutch postseason home run: Gazing up into the wild blue yonder and looking for his father, who flew fighter jets in the Navy for 20 years. It seems pretty clear that he's going to usurp Abraham Toro as the left side of a first base platoon with Romy Gonzalez. Toro has been abysmal of late, so it shouldn't be too hard for Lowe to be something of an improvement over there. Maybe Lowe even takes to Fenway's dimensions and has a mini resurgence down the stretch, which would be nice. Granted, I'm not really expecting that, but it's worth a shot.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Josh Kraft Fights to Narrow 30-Point Gap in Boston Mayoral Race
Josh Kraft, son of billionaire New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, says his campaign for Boston mayor still has a path, even as he trails the incumbent by 30 points in recent polling and his campaign funds have dwindled after a pricey ad blitz. A longtime nonprofit leader with no prior political experience, Kraft launched his bid in February, hoping to become the first candidate in 76 years to unseat a sitting Boston mayor — and a popular one at that. His challenge to Democratic Mayor Michelle Wu has drawn national attention, thanks in part to a flood of early support from some of the wealthiest names in business and sports — many of them close to his father.