Taylor Girard’s four-game suspension is the harshest in PWHL history, sidelining New York’s second-leading scorer through the Olympic break and forcing the Sirens to chase a playoff spot without one of their most versatile forwards.
The Professional Women’s Hockey League dropped the hammer Monday, banning New York Sirens forward Taylor Girard for a league-record four games after she left the bench to join a late-game skirmish against Montreal. The punishment eclipses the previous high of two games and instantly becomes the most consequential disciplinary decision in the PWHL’s three-year existence.
What Happened in D.C.
With the horn sounding on a 2-1 Sirens win at Capital One Arena, Girard sprinted from the New York bench and crashed into Maggie Flaherty from behind, flattening the Montreal defender. Refrees handed out eight 10-minute misconducts—four per side—but only Girard drew the automatic 20-minute major for illegally entering the fray.
The league’s Player Safety Committee upheld the mandatory four-game ban after video review, citing the automatic nature of the rule: first player off the bench equals four games, no exceptions.
Numbers That Hurt New York
- 5 goals – Girard’s season total, second only to Jessie Eldridge on the Sirens.
- 30 penalty minutes – Girard now leads the PWHL in PIM despite having zero prior infractions this season.
- 4 games – She’ll sit until March 5 versus Boston, forcing New York to navigate the post-Olympic restart without a top-six forward.
Historical Context
The previous record suspension was Aneta Tejralova’s two-game ban for an illegal check to the head last month. Girard’s punishment doubles that and becomes the first disciplinary ruling to cost a marquee player nearly 15 percent of the regular season.
It also spotlights the PWHL’s zero-tolerance stance on bench-clearing incidents at a time when the league is expanding its U.S. footprint—Sunday’s game drew a U.S.-record 17,228 fans and was broadcast nationally.
Playoff Ripple Effects
New York entered Monday four points behind fourth-place Toronto for the final playoff spot with 10 games remaining. Girard’s absence removes:
- A versatile 200-foot forward who kills penalties and quarterbacks the second power-play unit.
- A career 0.58 points-per-game producer acquired from Boston exactly one year ago.
- A locker-room voice who has appeared in every PWHL season since the league’s 2023 launch.
Interim head coach Howie Draper must now shuffle lines and elevate rookie Sydney Bard or veteran Paetyn Levis into top-nine minutes, asking them to replicate Girard’s defensive-matchup workload.
What the Rulebook Says
PWHL Rule 70.2 mandates an automatic four-game suspension for the first player to leave the bench “illegally” during an altercation. The league added the clause in 2024 to mirror NHL standards and deter bench-clearing brawls that could injure star players and damage broadcast optics.
Girard’s skate clearly crossed the blue-line threshold before officials intervened, leaving the committee no wiggle room even though no punches were thrown.
Social Media Reaction
Fans split into two camps overnight: some praised the league for enforcing player safety, while others argued the punishment outweighs the crime. #FreeGirard trended in New York, and Montreal supporters countered with #JusticeForFlaherty, citing Flaherty’s absence from practice Monday with an upper-body injury.
Coming Schedule Without Girard
- Feb. 22 @ Ottawa — final pre-Olympic game
- Feb. 28 vs. Minnesota — post-break opener
- Mar. 2 vs. Toronto — potential four-point swing
- Mar. 5 vs. Boston — Girard’s return date
Three of the four are against direct playoff competitors; every point will swing the wild-card chase.
Bottom Line
Girard’s suspension is more than a footnote—it’s a potential season-altering moment for a franchise still chasing its first playoff berth. If the Sirens stumble during her absence, Monday’s ruling could be remembered as the pivot point that cost them a postseason slot.
For the league, the decision sends an unmistakable message: star power does not supersede player safety, even on the sport’s biggest U.S. stage.
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