‘Unless You Show up on a Box Score in Women’s Hockey, it’s Lost’: Meghan Chayka on why Stathletes partnered with the NWHL

Earlier this week, the NWHL announced a partnership with hockey analytics company Stathletes, which will provide data for the league’s teams during the condensed 2021 season. The campaign will consist of 15 games beginning Jan. 23 and finish with the Isobel Cup final Feb. 5.

The NWHL is just the latest client to partner with Stathletes, which works with countless European pro leagues and NHL teams. The Hockey News caught up with Stathletes co-founder Meghan Chayka this week to discuss the NWHL partnership, Stathletes’ other ventures, her advocacy for women in sports and more.

THE HOCKEY NEWS: How did Stathletes strike up the partnership with the NWHL? Did one group approach the other or was there mutual interest between you and NWHL commissioner Tyler Tumminia?

MEGHAN CHAYKA: I actually met Ty through being on a baseball committee for diversity and inclusion and at a conference. We were on this committee for the past three years trying to get new people into baseball analytics that typically had been undeserved or constrained, whether it was by money or because they weren’t the traditional white men that work in baseball analytics. Our link was through another NHL team, and her husband (Ben Cherington) had worked for the Toronto Blue Jays. Now he’s GM of the Pittsburgh Pirates. So we had a lot of mutual overlaps. And I think she’s very much like me in terms of not being a traditional hockey person. She was managing in minor-league baseball and is just a woman who gets work done and knows how business goes.

So we had always connected over various things way before she took on this role as commissioner. I wasn’t surprised she pulled off a bubble in what is an iconic arena (Lake Placid’s Herb Brooks Arena). I’m super impressed and happy to see this go through and make an impression in terms of women’s hockey for this year.