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Scott Procter Scott Procter 海角社区 Senior Editor/Journalist
Blake Bolden helping cultivate next generation of diverse hockey stars

Blake Bolden helping cultivate next generation of diverse hockey stars

LOS ANGELES (BVM) 鈥 Blake Bolden鈥檚 illustrious hockey career was nearly over before it really got going. After an impressive tenure at Boston College where she appeared in all 37 games as a captain during her senior season, was named the Hockey East Defenseman of the Year and a first team Hockey East All-Star, Bolden鈥檚 spirit and aspirations were dashed.

The Cleveland native said she had wanted to play in the Olympics since she was a little girl and with her 2013 graduation from Boston College coming just months before the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, it appeared to be perfect timing.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 make the cut and my whole life kind of blew up in my face,鈥 Bolden said. 鈥淚 graduated with a degree from a reputable university and I didn鈥檛 have any clue of what I wanted to do.鈥

Bolden returned home to Ohio, cried a bit and worked three different jobs before she finally got a call. Legendary coach Margaret Pearl 鈥淒igit鈥 Murphy was on the other end to deliver Bolden the news that the Boston Blades would select her in the first round of the 2013 Canadian Women鈥檚 Hockey League (CWHL) Draft.

鈥淭hat is when I said, 鈥楳y job isn鈥檛 done, I love this game, I鈥檓 still great at it鈥 and lo and behold, I鈥檓 where I am because of that phone call,鈥 Bolden said.

Bolden鈥檚 selection as the fifth overall pick in the 2013 CWHL Draft was not only a smart move for the Blades, but it was also a historical one. She became the first Black player taken in the first round in CWHL Draft history. A year later, Bolden competed in the first CWHL All-Star Game and a year after that, she helped Boston win the Clarkson Cup.

When the National Women鈥檚 Hockey League (NWHL) — the first women鈥檚 hockey league to pay a salary — announced its inaugural season in October of 2015, Bolden made even more history. She signed with the Boston Pride and became the first Black player to compete in the NWHL before helping the team win the inaugural Isobel Cup.

Bolden played pro hockey for seven years, made history and multiple All-Star games, but it鈥檚 the inspiration she was able to offer young children who look like her that holds the most weight.

鈥淚鈥檓 proud of that, I鈥檓 proud of the championships I鈥檝e won but I think the relationships that I鈥檝e cultivated, the young boys and girls I鈥檝e been able to inspire means way more to me than a slapshot competition or a trophy that I won,鈥 Bolden said.

After a short stint playing in Switzerland and then back in the NWHL where she was named the 2019 NWHL Defensive Player of the Year, Bolden recently added another 鈥渇irst鈥 to her impressive resume.

She became the first Black woman pro scout in the NHL when the Los Angeles Kings hired her in February 2020 as a Scout and Growth Inclusion Specialist. Now that she has entered the NHL where people of color make up just 3% of the player pool, the goal is to continue helping that number grow.

鈥淲hen I started playing hockey, it was because of a happenstance,鈥 Bolden said. 鈥淚t was because my mom met a man whose favorite sport was ice hockey, not because I grew up and thought that I could play ice hockey. That鈥檚 the mindset I would love to change.

鈥淚 would love a young boy or girl to say, 鈥楬ey, I see that sport on TV, how do I start to play that?鈥 or, 鈥業 see someone that looks like me and that looks really cool; I want to join.鈥欌

Bolden isn鈥檛 just hoping for increased diversity in her favorite sport, she鈥檚 doing something about it.

She recently launched 鈥淓mBolden Her,鈥 a women鈥檚 hockey mentorship program, with Play it Again Sports. Bolden鈥檚 personal slogan is to 鈥渂e bold.鈥 It鈥檚 a part of her last name and it鈥檚 something she constantly reminds herself of.

鈥淎s I was growing up in this sport, I conformed a lot, I wanted to be liked a lot, I was a people-pleaser and I didn鈥檛 challenge myself or embrace my differences,鈥 Bolden said. 鈥淚 really think that is what these young kids need, especially right now with the distractions that are going on in the world.鈥

The six-month virtual program began in September and focuses on mental toughness, mindset coaching, nutrition and 鈥渁ll the things, if you put them in a pot, that make you the best player you can be on and off the ice.鈥 Last month, Bolden called on Meghan Duggan 鈥 women鈥檚 ice hockey great and captain of the U.S. team at the 2018 Winter Olympics which won gold 鈥 to join 鈥淓mBolden Her鈥 and allow the mentees to pick her brain.

Bolden has been nothing short of a trailblazer in the sport of hockey and through 鈥淓mBolden Her,鈥 the hope is that she can help cultivate the next generation of diverse hockey stars.

鈥淚 want these girls to learn how to be authentically themselves, to have the mindset to overcome any challenge on and off the ice and to develop a community for them to feel empowered in speaking their truth or communicating their feelings,鈥 Bolden said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been such a pleasure and honor to be a part of this group.鈥

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