It's time to take the next step for female players. Parker's credentials of five years as an NCAA assistant coach (at Brown and the University of Connecticut) and four seasons before that as a Colgate University player (last two as captain) will no doubt fuel the instruction and development of both the program and its players.
The decision to start the program starts with a humble and respectful nod to all other girls' programs and teams in the region and state. Parker was part of a travel group that conducted hockey clinics (both beginner and advanced) across Washington last summer, meeting coaches and players from other associations. The fundamental desire for Parker and the Kraken is to grow the female game at the grassroots level and "give girls another opportunity to play hockey within the greater Seattle area."
"Our teams will participate in the MHL [Metropolitan Hockey league - Seattle area] and compete against others," says Parker. "Currently, the MHL is a league with male and female players, but we want to continue to expand girls' hockey and create weekends that will allow all players who participate on girls' teams to play in a girls jamboree each month."
With input from other associations and girls' hockey leaders, Parker and the Kraken's primary objective is to continue to build the base of female participants in order to have "enough girls playing hockey that each association can support the option for a girls-only team." From there, the dream would expand to start an MHL girls division."
Like NHL star T.J. Oshie and other young Seattle-area players with promising hockey futures, Parker, 28, moved to a private school starting 2010 in the Midwest to find a higher competitive and player development experience on an all-girls high school team. While Mountlake Terrace native Oshie attended school in Minnesota, Parker attended Gilmour Academy in suburban Cleveland, subsequently gaining the interest of the Colgate women's hockey program.