Nikko Defeats Tohoku in All-Japan Ice Hockey Championship Final
With the All-Japan Ice Hockey Championship title up for grabs, Ice Bucks forwards Sota Isogai and Maito Omuku score third-period goals against the Free Blades.
Makuru Furuhashi scored in the first and second periods at Shin Yokohama Skate Center for Nikko, and Masaki Tokoro and Michihiro Kyoya responded for Tohoku.
Daichi Igari took a tripping penalty midway through the third period and Isogai capitalized with a power-play goal assisted by Yuri Terao and Hiroto Sato.
Tohoku pressed for an equalizer but Omuku sealed the game with an empty-netter in the final minute.
On Saturday, the Free Blades beat the Hokkaido Wilds 4-3 in a tourney semifinal to reach the final while the Ice Bucks edged the Red Eagles Hokkaido 2-1 in the other semifinal.
The Wilds are a team made up mostly of players from the Eastern Hokkaido Cranes, a club that was suspended from the Asia League Ice Hockey this season due to financial difficulties.
The All-Japan Ice Hockey Championship began in 1930, making the tournament one of the oldest sporting competitions in the country.
Nikko previously won the tournament in 2015 and 2019. And the team also won the championship four times in the 1950s and '60s when it was known as Furukawa Electric Tochigi.
Shiga and her teammates will kick off the brand new season at TD Place in Canada's capital against Montreal on January 2.
Shiga, a member of Japan's national team, previously played in the now-defunct Premier Hockey Federation with the Buffalo Beauts.
The 22-year-old Shiga is a native of Obihiro, Hokkaido Prefecture. Her sister Aoi also plays for the national team.
One of her country's top goal scorers, Shiga represented Japan at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
The inaugural PWHL season consists of 72 games, with each of the league's six teams competing 24 times.
In addition to Ottawa and Montreal, the other teams in the new league are in Toronto, New York, Minnesota and Boston.
The season will take a break for the Ice Hockey Women's World Championship in April so Shiga could draw in for Smile Japan, aka the women's national team.
Hopefully, the league can succeed where others have failed.
The National Women's Hockey League was a women's professional hockey league in the United States and Canada.
It eventually became the Premier Hockey Federation and lasted from 2015 before morphing into the PWHL.