Hockey Hall of Famer Angela James named general manager of Toronto Six
57-year-old was assistant coach for the team last season
Hockey Hall of Famer Angela James has taken over as general manager of the Toronto Six women's pro hockey team.
The 57-year-old from Toronto stepped into the job two months after assuming an ownership stake in the Premier Hockey Federation team alongside former NHL player Anthony Stewart and coach Ted Nolan.
"I've had 35 years of sports administration experience, so this was an easy fit for me," James said Tuesday in a statement released by the Six.
James was a Six assistant coach to Mark Joslin last season when Toronto finished second in the six-team league with a 16-3-1 record. The Six lost to the eventual Isobel Cup champion Boston Pride in a playoff semifinal game.
James replaces Krysti Clark, who was Toronto's GM for one season.
A star on the Canadian team before women's hockey became an Olympic sport, James was one of the first two women inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2010 alongside Cammi Granato.
The PHF's salary cap will be $750,000 US per team in 2022-23 with a floor of $562,500.
'I'm really excited about the fact that I'm a part of a new beginning for professional women's hockey players getting paid a really good contract," James said.
"Not only are the PHF owners taking a professional approach to our league, the actual teams are taking a professional approach, as well as the players in terms of business."
After two seasons with the Six, star forward Mikyla Grant-Mentis signed a one-year contract with the Buffalo Beauts last month worth a reported $80,000.