Abby Roque 2024-25 PWHL season statistics and report card: even-strength dominance
Roque’s five-on-five impact begins in the face-off circle, where she has improved her win rate to 52.3 percent after finishing under 48 percent a year ago. That possession edge allows Toronto to start with the puck, and the numbers show what happens next:
- 9 goals and 11 primary assists at five-on-five—tied for second on the club
- On-ice shot share of 54.1 percent, best among regular Sceptres forwards
- Expected goals for percentage of 55.7, a team-high mark that sits in the 91st league-wide percentile
Her most frequent linemates, Natalie Spooner and Emma Maltais, both see their individual scoring rates climb when skating alongside Roque. Spooner told reporters last week, “She does the grunt work in our own end, so by the time we cross centre I’m already at full speed.” That selfless cycle game is why Toronto’s second line has outscored opponents 14-7 through the first half of the schedule.
Abby Roque 2024-25 PWHL season statistics and report card: special-teams value
Short-handed situations have become Roque’s personal showcase. She averages 2:38 of penalty-kill time per game and has already scored two shorthanded goals—more than any PWHL forward has managed since the league’s inception. Both tallies came on the same aggressive route: stalking the point, lifting the stick, and racing the other way for a breakaway finish.
On the power play she plays the bumper role inside Toronto’s 1-3-1 set, using her 5-foot-9 frame to shield pucks and create second-chance looks. The unit clicks at 23.4 percent with Roque on the ice versus 17.8 percent without her, a split that underscores her quick-touch passing and willingness to battle in tight space. Assistant coach Klee credits her “lacrosse vision” for finding seams that appear for only a fraction of a second.
Abby Roque 2024-25 PWHL season statistics and report card: advanced metrics breakdown
Traditional stats tell only part of the story. A deeper dive into tracking data compiled by the league’s analytics partner highlights why Toronto signed Roque to a two-year extension in October:
- Controlled entry rate: 58 percent when she carries the puck over the red line—elite territory for a centre
- Forecheck pressure: 2.3 retrievals per period, leading to 0.9 high-danger shots within five seconds
- Defensive gap: maintains a 1.8-metre average gap at her own blue line, forcing dump-ins instead of clean entries
Those micro-stats translate to macro-wins. Toronto’s goal differential swings by plus-nine when Roque steps on the ice, the largest differential among all Sceptres skaters. Her WAR (wins-above-replacement) model clocks in at 0.78, a borderline All-Star number in a 24-game season.
Abby Roque 2024-25 PWHL season statistics and report card: report card by skill
Skating: A-
Roque added a tenth of a second to her ten-metre sprint over the summer, giving her the burst needed to win loose pucks. The minus stems from occasional inside-edge slips when cutting hard in transition.
Puck protection: A
She uses wide hips and active shoulder checks to spin off forecheckers, a technique she refined while watching NHL board-play specialists like Anze Kopitar.
Shooting: B+
Wrist-shot velocity is up 3 mph after weighted-stick training, yet she still passes up open looks from the slot too often. Coaches want two shots per period; she’s at 1.6.
Hockey sense: A
Anticipatory sticks in passing lanes and a knack for changing speeds make her the Sceptres’ most reliable neutral-zone thermostat.
Physicality: B+
Delivers 2.8 hits per game without sacrificing position, but can be overpowered by larger PWHL wingers along the end wall.
Abby Roque 2024-25 PWHL season statistics and report card: what the future holds
Barring injury, Roque is on pace for 13 goals and 29 points—numbers that would place her inside the league’s top-ten scorers and squarely in the MVP conversation. More importantly, Toronto owns a five-point cushion atop the standings, and every metric suggests the centre is driving that success rather than riding coattails. If she maintains a 55 percent expected-goals rate and continues to tilt the ice on special teams, the Sceptres will enter the playoffs with the most versatile 200-foot forward in the field.
Scouts from USA Hockey’s centralization camp have attended the last three Sceptres home games, fueling speculation that Roque could wear the maple leaf—she recently obtained dual citizenship—at the 2026 Milano-Cortina Olympics. For now, her focus remains on the PWHL’s inaugural championship. “Personal stats are cool,” Roque said after recording a goal and an assist against New York, “but I want my name on that trophy first.” If the first half of 2024-25 is any indication, both the trophy and a spot among the league’s elite are well within reach.
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Par Mike Jonderson
Mike Jonderson is a passionate hockey analyst and expert in advanced NHL statistics. A former college player and mathematics graduate, he combines his understanding of the game with technical expertise to develop innovative predictive models and contribute to the evolution of modern hockey analytics.