Today, the Black Hockey Mommies are 185 members strong, a support network of women who share the positive and negative experiences their children encounter on the ice or in the locker room and trade tips and suggestions related to hockey on and off the ice.
"I don't see a lot of Black hockey moms, we're few and far between," said Meredith Lang, a Black Hockey Mommies member and
co-founder of Minnesota Unbounded, a hockey program for girls of color
. "For us to have a community that has continued to grow, and to try and navigate the system of hockey and what that brings, whether it's dealing to racism in hockey or whether it's coming to find out what the best equipment is. We can come to this group from A to Z and feel supported."
And it's a group where Black hockey moms dream, and work to make them come true. Popyon and Scott had long discussed the idea of forming an all-Black team to compete in an elite-level tournament.
"On the Facebook group, we just put the question out there: 'We have an 18U tournament, we set up a tournament team, who's in?'" Popyon said.
Based on the response, Popyon and Scott entered a team in the Minnesota Showcase Hockey Summer Showdown in Richfield, Minnesota, in June.
The roster came together slowly, starting with Popyon's and Scott's 16-year-old sons, defenseman Gibran Popyon II and forward Leon Garrett III. The moms recruited 15 other players from eight states from California to New York to compete in the tournament. The Panthers were born.