Ohashi benefitted from his mother's mentoring. She grew up in Pittsburgh, watching the NHL Penguins among a passel of Irish-American relatives "who were hockey fanatics."
Soon enough, Ohashi was hurrying home from school to pull out his hockey stick and hockey net to shoot pucks. He convinced his older brother to join him at times, agreeing to be the goalie.
"I had to eat some pucks," says Ohashi, light-hearted and, ahem, reflecting what likely thousands of we younger brothers did with older siblings during shooting drills.
Growing up in Bethesda, MD, Ohashi joined a roller hockey league, his best option to play the sport with ice rinks "few and far between." He practiced his balance and agility on newly purchased Rollerblades as much as he could.
Ohashi recalls "not a lot of kids in my neighborhood were interested in hockey," likely different now with the stardom of the Washington Capitals' Alex Ovechkin and a 2018 Stanley Cup title.
When the Kraken video analyst joined his roller hockey squad, he noticed "there weren't a lot of Asian faces on my team or in the league." He was not deterred.
Instead, Ohashi was inspired by a pair of Asian Americans, Paul Kariya and Stan Wong, making their mark in the NHL. Consider it his own version of Asian hockey heritage to pair with the personal history and journey of his loving Japan-born father, who moved to the U.S. in his twenties. Ohashi's story is a stellar one to share as part of the Kraken's content coverage during Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month.