Paige Harrington


Paige Harrington is an American former professional ice hockey player. She last played for the Boston Pride of the National Women's Hockey League in 2017–18, following two seasons with the NWHL's Buffalo Beauts.

Playing career

High school

Harrington attended Mansfield High School in Mansfield, Massachusetts. She played boys hockey for three years at MHS and girls hockey for one before graduating in 2011.

College

Following a freshman season at Penn State, Harrington played for the University of Massachusetts Amherst in the American Collegiate Hockey Association for three years. Harrington's time at UMass was characterized by unprecedented success for the Minutemen, as the team won the Eastern Collegiate Women's Hockey League regular season and playoff championships in both 2012–13 and 2014–15. Additionally, UMass advanced to the ACHA semifinals in both 2012–13 and 2013–14, doubling the number of final four appearances in team history to that point.
In 2012–13, Harrington was sidelined with a broken leg during UMass' late-season playoff push, but still managed to post 16 points in 21 games prior to her injury, while helping the Minutemen to a top-five ranking for the first time in four years. Her teammates went on to defeat defending ACHA national champion Northeastern in the ECWHL championship game and put together an impressive ACHA National Tournament run that ended with a semifinal defeat to eventual champion Minnesota.
Although UMass archrival Rhode Island re-captured both ECWHL titles in 2013–14, the season was still a historic one for the Minutemen. With Harrington now an alternate captain, and with her 17 points leading the way among the squad's blueliners, UMass was ranked in the ACHA's top five for the entirety of the season, winding up in second to equal its best placement ever. At that year's ACHA National Tournament in Newark, Delaware, the Minutemen quickly secured advancement to the semifinals with pool round wins over Liberty and Adrian, followed by Harrington scoring twice in a post-clinch defeat to Robert Morris. The RMU contest was notable as a meeting of future NWHL teammates Harrington and Hayley Williams. In the semifinals, Massachusetts got revenge on URI for the ECWHL playoffs with a 2–1 victory, although Miami University stopped UMass one win shy of a national title with a 3–1 result in the final.
As a senior in 2014–15, Harrington was a co-captain of the team as they took back both ECWHL championships from Rhode Island and once again qualified for the ACHA National Tournament. She enjoyed, arguably, her best season individually as well. Included among her career-best 26 points were a four-point outing against Northeastern on October 24, 2014, as well as the game-winning goal against Penn State two weeks prior to that, her first game against PSU since departing that program in 2012. Harrington was picked as the ACHA's Harrow Defenseman of the Month in November 2014 and was named a First Team All-American at the end of the season.
Harrington graduated from UMass in 2015 with a degree in communications. Despite only spending three seasons in Amherst, her 59 career points rank 15th in program history, as of the end of the 2016–17 season.

International

Winter Universiade

Harrington was selected as a member of the United States National University Team which competes at the Winter Universiade twice, in 2013 and 2015, and was selected as an alternate captain each time. The 2013 edition of the tournament, played in Trentino, Italy resulted in a bronze medal for Harrington after a third-place game win over Japan - the first-ever podium finish for an American women's team at the event and the first for the Team USA men or women in USA Hockey's modern era of participation. In 2015, Harrington helped Team USA to a fifth-place finish in Granada, Spain.

ISBHF World Championship

In 2017, Harrington was named to the United States Women's National Ball Hockey Team's roster for the International Street and Ball Hockey Federation's Ball Hockey World Championship tournament. As with the national university team, Harrington helped the U.S. ball hockey program reach new heights by winning the silver medal, following fourth-place finishes each of the previous five times it had entered the biennial tournament. A late semifinal win over a Canada team defending gold medals in 2013 and 2015 and featuring professional women's ice hockey stars Jamie Lee Rattray and Devon Skeats clinched Team USA's best finish ever and highlighted the run.

NWHL

Ahead of the inaugural NWHL season in 2015–16, Harrington signed a professional contract with the Buffalo Beauts. The signing made her the first former ACHA player to sign in the league and just the third documented ACHA alumna to sign in any North American women's professional league. Harrington went on to play in all 18 regular season and all five playoff games during the 2015–16 Buffalo Beauts season, which saw a third-place finish in the standings and an appearance in the first-ever Isobel Cup Final.
In April 2016, Harrington became the first player to re-sign a contract with the Buffalo Beauts for the 2016–17 NWHL season, earning a second $10,000 one-year deal, although league-wide financial difficulties early in the year led to all contracts being halved and eventually supplemented with a revenue-sharing program. Harrington, once again, appeared in every regular season contest as the Beauts repeated their third-place finish with a 6–10–1 mark. However, that season's playoffs, which took place entirely over the March 17–19, 2017 weekend, more than erased that losing mark. Buffalo pulled off a pair of upset victories, over the New York Riveters in the semifinals by a 4–2 count, then 3–2 over the Boston Pride to capture the Isobel Cup.
On July 12, 2017, Harrington signed with the Pride, the team she faced in the Isobel Cup Final in both 2016 and 2017 as a member of the Beauts, citing the ability to play close to home while transitioning to her off-ice career as reasons for changing teams. She played 14 regular season games for the Pride in 2017–18 and collected three assists. Boston uncharacteristically struggled throughout the season though, managing only a 4–8–4 record and a third-place finish before being eliminated in the league semifinals in overtime by Harrington's former Beauts squad.

Career statistics

College and professional

International

Awards and honors

ACHA