The camp, which concludes Friday, is free for participants from several local youth organizations that include the YMCA; the Power Project, which uses hockey to provide guidance to girls from underserved communities; the Hawthorne Force, a youth hockey program created by the community affairs bureau of the Hawthorne police department; Playworks, a nonprofit that focuses on learning and physical health for low-income students and urban schools; and the Norwalk-La Miranda Unified School District.
The campers spend one hour a day on the ice at the Toyota Sports Performance Center, the Kings' practice facility in El Segundo, California, and 30 minutes off ice playing ball hockey, shooting, practicing stick handling and doing agility drills.
The Kings provided skates, sticks and equipment for campers to use for the week.
"We just wanted to open up our doors for nontraditional ice hockey players. Half of these kids have never played ice hockey before, never put on a pair of skates," Bolden said. "The goal is to get these kids interested in the game of hockey. Maybe they'll love it. Maybe they'll stick with it. And maybe our sport can be a little bit more diverse because of it."