NHL, players unveil inclusion coalition they hope will help make hockey more diverse and welcoming
The NHL and NHLPA launched a new inclusion committee Tuesday that is made up of current and former men’s and women’s players, with minority and LGBTQ+ representation, aimed at diversifying hockey and making the sport more welcoming.
The NHL Player Inclusion Coalition is the latest step in a process started in the summer of 2020, when the police killing of George Floyd led to a worldwide reckoning on matters of race and racism. It comes on the heels of Pride night incidents around the league, when a handful of players refused to wear rainbow-colored jerseys for warmups, leading the league to decide against teams wearing any themed uniforms next season.
“It’s no secret that this is a sport that struggles with diversity and inclusion sometimes,” retired U.S. women’s star Meghan Duggan, who’s part of the coalition, said at an event in Nashville, Tennessee. “That’s why this group is here: to continue to push, to continue to make recommendations, to continue to have players step up and be public allies.”
Duggan, who is openly gay, is one of 20 members of the coalition chaired by former NHL players P.K. Subban and Anson Carter, each of whom is Black. Duggan, now the New Jersey Devils’ director of player development, wants to be on the leading edge of helping a sport that has traditionally been slow to respond to social change.