Making hockey more diverse has been a mission for Meredith and her daughters. They, along with Laura Janzig de la Luz and her daughters, Elisa, 9, and Adelyn, 12, formed a squad about two years ago, calling themselves the Hockey Niñas.
"My daughters and their best friends, who are Mexican-American, they want to encourage other girls of color to play the game," Lang said. "And so that's kind of how it started, just posting their pictures, having fun playing and connecting with other girls. They really just want to normalize Black and brown faces in the game."
Tournament organizers and the hockey community embraced the entry of the all-POC girls' teams. Os Hockey Training, a girls' hockey company that operates the 60-team tournament, is sponsoring the teams.
The Richfield Ice Arena, Bloomington Ice Gardens and ETS Sports Performance have provided reduced rates for practice ice time and dry-land training facilities for the girls ahead of the tournament.
"For me, it's all about growing the game," said Winny Brodt Brown, Os Hockey Training's founder and director, a Whitecaps defenseman and a former member of the United States women's national team. "Any way that I can help out, get more girls playing, giving more opportunities, I think that's the greatest thing. I think it's a great cause and I think it's going to be super-fun for these kids."
Meredith Lang said it would be great if MN Unbounded + Hockey Niñas win their Os Shootout divisions the way the NextGen players won the Beantown tournament, but she stressed that fellowship and bonding among the players is more important than taking home trophies.
"But give us a year under our belt and we're going to be unstoppable," she said.
Photos courtesy of Cyndi Nightengale Photography