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| Association | Mexico Ice Hockey Federation |
|---|---|
| General manager | Mireya Ayala |
| Head coach | Diego de la Garma |
| Assistants | Héctor Majul |
| Captain | Maria Chávez |
| Most games | Berth González Claudia Téllez (62) |
| Top scorer | Claudia Téllez (49) |
| Most points | Claudia Téllez (84) |
| Team colors | |
| IIHF code | MEX |
| Ranking | |
| Current IIHF | 26 |
| Highest IIHF | 25 (first in 2022) |
| Lowest IIHF | 35 (first in 2014) |
| First international | |
| Argentina (Cuautitlán Izcalli, Mexico; 18 February 2012) | |
| Biggest win | |
| Mexico (Mexico City, Mexico; 6 June 2017) | |
| Biggest defeat | |
| Poland (Bytom, Poland; 13 December 2024) | |
| World Championships | |
| Appearances | 10 (first in2014) |
| Best result | 25th (2023) |
| International record (W–L–T) | |
| 36–28–0 | |
TheMexico women's national ice hockey team is the women's nationalice hockey team ofMexico.[2] They are controlled by theMexico Ice Hockey Federation, a member of theInternational Ice Hockey Federation.
The Mexico women's national ice hockey team played its first game in March 2012 againstArgentina in an exhibition game being held inCuautitlán Izcalli, Mexico.[3] Mexico lost the game 0–1. The following day they played their second of two exhibition matches against the Argentinian women's national team inLerma, Mexico, which they won 7–1.[3] The team is controlled by theMexico Ice Hockey Federation.[4] Forward Claudia Tellez was claimed by theCalgary Inferno in the2016 CWHL Draft.