| Date | Opponent | Score |
| Sept. 18 | Wilfird Laurier | 3-2 |
| Sept. 19 | Guelph | 3-0 |
| Nov. 20 | Saint Mary's | 6-0 |
| Date | Opponent | Score |
| Feb. 4 | Montreal Stars | |
- October 23: The Harvard women's hockey team took a 2-1 lead into the third period but allowed a goal for a 2-2 tie at Bright Hockey Center. McGill took advantage of a five-on-three situation early in the first period as Cathy Chartrand took a feed from Gillian Ferrari and beat Bellamy for a 1-0 lead. Harvard had several opportunities on the power play in the 17th minute, but could not score on McGill netminder Andrea Wickman. With less than a minute to play in the game, McGill pulled its goaltender. With an extra skater, Ann-Sophie Bettez and Leslie Oles almost scored. In the end, Katia Clement-Hydra converted from close range to tie the score at 2-2. The overtime stanza did not result in a game-winning goal.[2]
| Number | Position | Player | Years |
| 1. | G | Taylor Salisbury | (2) |
| 2 | D | Stacie Tardiff | (3) |
| 3 | F | Kim Ton-That | (2) |
| 4 | F | Leslie Oles | (1) |
| 6 | F | Caroline Hill | (5) |
| 7 | F | Alessandra Lind-Kenny | (4) |
| 8 | D | Cathy Chartrand | (4) |
| 9 | F | Darragh Hamilton | (2) |
| 10 | F | Jordanna Peroff | (4) |
| 11 | D | Michelle Daigneault | (1) |
| 12 | F | Chelsey Saunders | (2) |
| 14 | F | Alyssa Cecere | (5) |
| 15 | D | Lisa Zane | (5) |
| 16 | F | Logan Murray | (1) |
| 18 | D | Jasmine Sheehan | (5) |
| 19 | F | Katia Clement-Heydra | (1) |
| 20 | F | Lainie Smith | (3) |
| 22 | D | Adrienne Crampton | (1) |
| 24 | F | Ann-Sophie Bettez | (4) |
| 27 | D | Gillian Ferrari | (1) |
| 29 | G | Andrea Weckman | (2) |
| 54 | G | Charline Labonté | (4) |
- On September 18, 2010, Gillian Ferrari, a first-year Martlets player scored her first-ever CIS goal. It was on a 4-on-3 power play versus Wilfrid Laurier University.[11]
- On October 8, 2010, Leslie Oles, a first-year Martlets player scored once and added a pair of assists as the Martlets skated to a 7-4 win over Concordia Stingers in the season opener. The victory extended McGill's win streak to 82 consecutive games over QUHL opponents.[12]
- On February 10, 2011, Melodie Daoust signed a letter of intent to play for the McGill Martlets.[13] She refused offers from numerous Canadian and American universities, including Cornell, Dartmouth and a full scholarship from Boston University.
| Date | Opponent | Location | Score | Record |
| Oct. 8 | Concordia | McConnell Arena | 7-4 | |
| Oct. 20 | Montreal | McConnell Arena | 5-2 | |
| Oct. 30 | Carleton | McConnell Arena | 3-0 | |
| Oct 31 | Ottawa | uOttawa Sports Complex | 3-0 | |
| Nov. 7 | Carleton Homecoming Game | McConnell Arena | 6-1 | |
| Nov. 13 | Montreal | McConnell Arena | 4-3 (OT) | |
| Nov. 21 | Ottawa | uOttawa Sports Complex | 3-0 | |
| Nov. 26 | Montreal | 4-0 | Arena CEPSUM | |
| Nov. 27 | Carleton | 2-1 (OT) | Carleton Ice House | |
| Dec. 4 | Concordia | 4-1 | Ed Meagher Arena | |
| Jan. 7 | 5-1 | Ottawa | McConnell Arena | |
| Jan. 8 | 3-0 | Concordia | Ed Meagher Arena | |
| Jan. 23 | | Montreal | McConnell Arena | |
| Jan. 29 | | Carleton | Carleton Ice House | |
| Jan. 30 | | Ottawa | uOttawa Sports Complex | |
| Feb. 5 | | Carleton | McConnell Arena | |
| Feb. 11 | | Concordia | Ed Meagher Arena | |
| Feb. 12 | | Ottawa | McConnell Arena | |
| Feb. 18 | | Montreal | Arena CEPSUM | |
| Feb. 19 | | Concordia | McConnell Arena | |
[14]
Bison Hockey Holiday Classic
edit
- December 31: Charline Labonte required only 13 saves to post her 59th career shutout as McGill defeated the nationally ranked fifth overall Alberta Pandas by a 3-0 mark in the final game of the Bisons Holiday Classic tournament at Max Bell Arena. In the game, the Martlets held a 31-13 edge in shots. Gillian Ferrari was credited with the game-winner on the power-play at 5:49 of the first period. Jasmine Sheehan, a fifth-year defender scored the second goal of the game. Logan Murray, a freshman from Calgary, scored the last goal of the contest.[15]
| Date | Opponent | Location | Score |
| Dec. 29 | Manitoba | Max Bell Arena | 5-0 |
| Dec. 30 | Saskatchewan | Max Bell Arena | 9-2 |
| Dec. 31 | Alberta | Max Bell Arena | 3-0 |
| Date | Opponent | Location | Score |
| Feb 23 | | | |
| Feb 25 | | | |
| Feb 27 | | | |
| Date | Opponent | Location | Score |
| March 2 | | | |
| March 4 | | | |
| March 6 | | | |
McGill went into the six-team national tournament as the No. 1 seed for the fifth straight year after posting a 20-0 record to finish first in the Quebec conference for the sixth consecutive year and the seventh time in school history.[16] Their CIS final opponents, StFX finished with a 29-1 record in league and playoff action and a silver-medal finish, the best result ever by an Atlantic conference team. The five Martlets goals were scored by Ann-Sophie Bettez, Jordanna Peroff, Caroline Hill, Jasmine Sheehan, and Alessandra Lind-Kenny.
| Date | Opponent | Location | Score |
| March 10 | Alberta Pandas | Waterloo, ON | 4-2 |
| March 12 | Queen's Golden Gaels | Waterloo, ON | 3-1 |
| March 13 | St. Francis Xavier X-Women | Waterloo, Ontario | 5-2 |
- The Martlets will lose five fifth-year seniors, including forwards Caroline Hill and Alyssa Cecere, along with defenders Lisa Zane and Jasmine Sheehan.
- Jordanna Peroff, CIS finals Most Valuable Player[17]
- 2011 CIS Tournament All-Stars
- Defence: Cathy Chartrand, McGill
- Forward: Jordanna Peroff, McGill
- Forward: Leslie Oles, McGill[18]