As Kasten said, it was "serendipitous" that the PWHL was announced one day after the 50th anniversary of the U.S. Open tennis tournament becoming the first sporting event to offer equal prize money to female and male competitors. King organized women players to threaten a boycott of the 1972 tournament unless women got the same pay as men.
"Like everything she's done in life and been successful with, I can tell you she has brought that same energy to this project," Kasten said of King. "She is our spiritual leader. All of us who have been involved have had the benefit of her guidance and her pressure to get this done and to make it right."
On Friday, general managers for the six franchises were named: Danielle Marmer in Boston, Natalie Darwitz in Minnesota, Daniele Sauvageau in Montreal, Pascal Daoust in New York, Michael Hirshfeld in Ottawa and Gina Kingsbury in Toronto.
The league will hold a 10-day free agency period beginning Sept. 1. The inaugural PWHL Draft will be held Sept. 18.
The order of selection in the draft was announced Friday; Minnesota holds the No. 1 pick in the first round, followed by Toronto, Boston, New York, Ottawa and Montreal.
The draft will consist of 15 rounds and 90 picks using a snake format; once a round is completed, the following round will be held with the teams picking in reverse order of the previous round.
The lottery to determine the draft order was held using a computerized list randomizer during a video conference call with all six GMs. Teams had equal odds of securing the top pick.
Each team is allowed to have 20 players under contract when training camps open in November.
Tuesday was an emotional day for all involved, including Brian Burke, who was named executive director of the PWHL Players' Association. He's mindful of the struggles women's teams have endured.
"I've watched players borrow tape and borrow laces when the teams playing had no resources at all," said Burke, a former general manager for the Hartford Whalers, Vancouver Canucks, Anaheim Ducks and Toronto Maple Leafs, and president of hockey operations for the Calgary Flames and Pittsburgh Penguins. "I watched a Calgary Inferno (Canadian Women's Hockey League) game, and I watched players passing around a roll of tape. A roll of tape, for God's sake. So I've seen now the hardships they've gone through, the iterations they've gone through, to get there to play and to put this together.
"I'm so proud to be involved. It was a very emotional moment for me when they offered me the job."