Lexie Adzija

Player Information

Allexis "Lexie" Adzija is a Canadian professional ice hockey player for the Seattle Torrent of the Professional Women's Hockey League (PWHL). She previously played for PWHL Ottawa and the Boston Fleet of the PWHL. Known for her physical play, strong faceoff skills, and two-way game, Adzija played college ice hockey at Quinnipiac University, where she served as co-captain and won the 2022 Mandi Schwartz Student-Athlete of the Year Award.
Birthdate:
30 June 2000
Full Name:
Allexis "Lexie" Adzija
Birthplace:
St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada
Nationality:
Canadian
Gender:
Female
Height (cm):
178
Weight (kg):
74
Parents:
Rob (Father), Mandy (Mother)
Education:
Quinnipiac University (College)
Career Started:
2018
Awards:
Mandi Schwartz Student-Athlete of the Year (Win Year 2022)
Contract:
Contract Year 2025 to 2027, Salary $60,000 CAD
Draft Year:
2023
Drafted By:
PWHL Ottawa
Previous Teams:
Ottawa (From 2023, To 2024), Boston Fleet (From 2024, To 2025)
Player Active:
From - 2018, To - Present

Lexie Adzija Bio

Allexis “Lexie” Adzija is a Canadian professional ice hockey player for the Seattle Torrent of the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL). A forward who shoots left, she previously played for PWHL Ottawa and the Boston Fleet, and is recognized for her physical play, strong faceoff skills, and dependable two-way game. Adzija played college ice hockey at Quinnipiac University, where she served as co-captain and earned the prestigious 2022 Mandi Schwartz Student-Athlete of the Year Award. Off the ice, she works as a model and social media influencer, often speaking about breaking stereotypes for female athletes.

Early Life and Background

Allexis Adzija was born on June 30, 2000, in St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada, to parents Mandy and Rob. She has a brother whose early hockey games helped spark her interest in the sport. Adzija began skating at the age of three and decided to play hockey a year later after watching her brother compete, joining the St. Thomas Jr. Stars Timbits program. At age seven, her parents gave her the opportunity to switch from boys’ hockey to girls’ hockey, and she joined the London Devilettes program in London, Ontario. Reflecting on the move, she has said she preferred the social environment of the girls’ game, even though the local St. Thomas Panthers program was smaller at the time.

While attending P.E. Trudeau elementary school in St. Thomas, Adzija was a multi-sport athlete, competing in track and field as well as soccer. In Grade 5, she set the junior girls’ long jump record of 4.17 metres at the TVDSB track and field final meet, a mark that still stands. She also helped her school’s 4×100-metre relay team set meet records in both Grade 6 and Grade 7. Adzija later moved to Oakville, Ontario, to attend Appleby College, an independent international school, where she continued to develop her hockey skills.

Path to Professional Hockey

Adzija’s path to the professional ranks accelerated with the Oakville Hornets of the Provincial Women’s Hockey League (PWHL). As one of the youngest players in the league, she finished third in points with 46 and second in goals with 25 during the 2015–16 season. Over her first 100 PWHL games entering the 2017–18 season, she recorded 54 goals and 51 assists, helping the Hornets achieve a rare triple crown that included the PWHL regular-season title, the Lower Lakes League championship, and the Ontario Women’s Hockey Association (OWHA) crown. Internationally, she represented Canada at the 2018 IIHF U18 Women’s World Championship in Dmitrov, Russia, where the team captured a bronze medal.

Lexie Adzija Career

Early Career (2018–2023)

Adzija played five seasons of NCAA Division I women’s hockey at Quinnipiac University from 2018 to 2023, recording 43 goals and 66 assists for 109 points in 151 career games. She was named Rookie of the Year in her freshman season, leading all first-year players with 18 points. Her strongest offensive season came as a sophomore in 2019–20, when she scored 11 goals and 18 assists for 29 points in 34 games while leading the Bobcats in scoring.

She also built a reputation as one of the nation’s premier faceoff specialists, posting a 62 percent winning percentage as a senior with 536 faceoff wins, and a 66 percent rate during the COVID-shortened 2020–21 season. Despite battling injuries throughout her career, including a separated shoulder and a concussion in her final year, she reached the 100-point career milestone with a goal against Harvard in a 5–2 road victory.

Quinnipiac University Highlights (2018–2023)

Beyond her on-ice production, Adzija excelled academically and in community leadership at Quinnipiac. She earned Dean’s List honors every semester while completing a Bachelor of Science in accounting with a minor in computer information systems, followed by an MBA in May 2022 and later a Master of Science in Business Analytics. She received ECAC Hockey All-Academic and All-American Scholar honors, served as chair representative of Quinnipiac’s QCoor Community Service committee, and represented women’s hockey on the Student-Athlete Advisory Council.

Adzija was awarded the 2022 Mandi Schwartz Student-Athlete of the Year Award, becoming the fourth Quinnipiac player to receive the honor. She served as an assistant captain during her senior year before being promoted to co-captain alongside Zoe Boyd for her fifth and final season. During that graduate season in 2022–23, she led the team in power-play goals with six and dominated at the dot, going 342–235 in faceoffs.

PWHL Ottawa Era (2023–2024)

Adzija was selected 65th overall by PWHL Ottawa in the 2023 PWHL Draft and became the first player drafted by the franchise to sign with the team. During the 2023 off-season, she had also signed a $60,000 contract with the Metropolitan Riveters of the Premier Hockey Federation, but that league folded before the season began. With Ottawa, she recorded five goals and three assists in 17 games, including a five-game point streak to open her professional career. She also attended Hockey Canada’s National Women’s Team senior camp in September 2023 in St. Catharines, Ontario, which helped solidify her draft stock.

Boston Fleet Era (2024–2025)

On March 18, 2024, Adzija was traded to PWHL Boston alongside the rights to Caitrin Lonergan in exchange for Shiann Darkangelo, just ahead of the league’s trade deadline. She recorded one goal and two assists in seven regular-season games for Boston, including the game-winning goal against the New York Sirens at the Prudential Center on April 20, 2024, deflecting a shot from Nicole Kosta with 3:09 remaining to secure a 2–1 victory and help Boston clinch the fourth and final playoff spot. Boston advanced to the inaugural Walter Cup Finals, where Adzija added one goal in eight playoff games before the team fell to the Minnesota Frost in five games.

On June 21, 2024, Adzija signed a one-year contract extension with Boston. During the 2024–25 PWHL season, now rebranded as the Boston Fleet, she filled a bottom-six forward role, using her 5-foot-10 frame and physical play on the forecheck and penalty kill. She finished second among Fleet forwards in hits with 32 while averaging roughly 10 minutes of ice time, recording two goals and four assists in 29 regular-season games.

Seattle Torrent Era (2025–Present)

On June 17, 2025, Adzija signed a two-year contract with the Seattle Torrent, becoming one of the inaugural signings for the PWHL expansion franchise. She appeared in the Torrent’s first regular-season game on November 22, 2025, against the Vancouver Goldeneyes, recording three shots on goal in a 4–3 overtime loss. In the team’s home opener on November 28 before a record-setting crowd of 16,014 fans at Climate Pledge Arena, the largest attendance for a women’s hockey game in a U.S. arena, she took an interference penalty during a 3–0 shutout loss to the Minnesota Frost.

Adzija contributed defensively with a key penalty-kill play during the Torrent’s first franchise win, a 2–1 comeback victory over the New York Sirens on December 3, 2025. On December 28, she scored her first goal for Seattle at 1:47 of the third period in a 4–3 loss to the New York Sirens in Dallas as part of the PWHL Takeover Tour, assisted by Mikyla Grant-Mentis and Lyndie Lobdell. On January 20, 2026, Adzija scored Seattle’s first shorthanded goal in franchise history at 2:28 of the third period in a 6–4 victory over Toronto, the highest-scoring game of the PWHL season, with the goal triggering the PWHL’s “jailbreak” rule and giving Seattle the lead for good. The Torrent’s six goals set a franchise record and matched the season high for any PWHL team.

Driving Style and Strengths

Adzija is widely recognized for her physical, two-way game and elite faceoff work. Listed at 5-foot-10 and 163 pounds, she uses her size effectively on the forecheck and penalty kill, ranking among the top forwards in hits during her time with the Boston Fleet. Her career faceoff winning percentages at both the college and professional levels have been a defining feature of her playing style, complemented by responsible defensive play and a strong leadership presence in the dressing room.

Notable Events and Milestones

Among Adzija’s signature moments are her game-winning goal against the New York Sirens on April 20, 2024, that helped Boston clinch a playoff berth, and her role in the Walter Cup Finals run that same year. She also reached her 100th collegiate point with a goal against Harvard, scored Seattle’s first-ever shorthanded goal on January 20, 2026, and played in front of the largest U.S. crowd for a women’s hockey game at Climate Pledge Arena.

Lexie Adzija Career Wins

Adzija’s verified championship résumé includes an Oakville Hornets triple crown in the Provincial Women’s Hockey League, two gold medals with Team Ontario Red at the Canada National Women’s U18 Championship in 2016 and 2017, and a bronze medal with Canada at the 2018 IIHF U18 Women’s World Championship in Dmitrov, Russia. At the collegiate level, she captured multiple individual awards rather than team championships.

International Highlights

Adzija represented Canada at the 2018 IIHF U18 Women’s World Championship, helping the team win a bronze medal. She had previously been cut from the 2016 U18 camp at age 16, but rebounded to make the 2018 roster after strong showings with the Oakville Hornets and at the Canada National Women’s U18 Championship, where she tied for the team lead in goals in 2016 and posted six goals and four assists in 10 games in 2017.

Other Wins and Performances

With the Oakville Hornets, Adzija helped the program complete a triple crown by winning the PWHL regular-season title, the Lower Lakes League championship, and the OWHA championship during her junior career. She was a two-time gold medalist with Team Ontario Red at the Canada National Women’s U18 Championship in 2016 and 2017.

Lexie Adzija Family

Family Background and Racing Lineage

Adzija was raised in St. Thomas, Ontario, by her parents, Mandy and Rob. Her father, Rob, built an artificial ice rink inside the family’s barn so that she could continue practicing when she was home. Her older brother also played hockey, and watching him helped inspire her to take up the sport at age four.

Personal Life

Outside of hockey, Adzija works as a model and social media influencer, frequently using her platform to challenge stereotypes about female athletes. She is in a relationship with Tennessee Titans wide receiver Chimere Dike.

2025 Season Performance

The 2025 calendar year was a defining one for Adzija, beginning with her time as a reliable bottom-six forward for the Boston Fleet and culminating in her signing with the PWHL’s newest expansion franchise. During the 2024–25 PWHL season, she finished with two goals and four assists in 29 regular-season games and was second among Fleet forwards in hits with 32, averaging roughly 10 minutes of ice time per game. Her physical, penalty-killing style made her a steady presence in Boston’s lineup.

In June 2025, Adzija joined the Seattle Torrent as one of the franchise’s inaugural signings, agreeing to a two-year contract worth $60,000 CAD. She opened the season on November 22, 2025, against the Vancouver Goldeneyes, and quickly became part of the team’s leadership group. By late December, she had recorded her first goal for Seattle and contributed key defensive plays as the Torrent notched their first franchise win.

Looking ahead, Adzija is expected to remain a core contributor for Seattle as the club continues to establish itself in the PWHL. Her combination of faceoff reliability, penalty-killing work, and physical forechecking should keep her in a featured role for the duration of her two-year deal, which runs through 2027.