O'Ree became the NHL's first Black player Jan. 18, 1958, in a game against the Montreal Canadiens at the Montreal Forum. He played 45 NHL games in two seasons (1957-58, 1960-61), all with the Boston Bruins, and continued to play in the minor leagues until 1979. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2018 in the Builders category for his off-ice contribution to the sport, including helping to establish 39 grassroots hockey programs in North America as part of the NHL Hockey Is For Everyone initiative.
"It's huge," said Burton's father, Robert Burton Sr. "We've been at this since 2007 and when we first got involved, you couldn't get that many African American kids on the ice at one time no matter how much you advertised. There just weren't that many involved.
"The first day we came up here and I saw the actual number of kids, I was excited and encouraged because I think the sport of hockey is awesome and it should be more available to kids of color and less affluent families."
Thirty-one players ages 10-18 participated in the academy, mostly from the Pittsburgh Amateur Hockey League (PAHL) and the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Hockey League (PIHL). They participated in on- and off-ice training sessions during the week and enjoyed special guest instructors, including Penguins defenseman Pierre-Olivier Joseph and former defenseman Trevor Daley, who was named a Penguins hockey operations adviser in Oct. 2020 after playing 1,058 NHL games over 16 seasons with the Penguins, Dallas Stars, Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Blackhawks.
After their workouts, the players listened to speeches from guests like Phillips and Eustace King, who is one of the few Black agents representing NHL players.
Phillips, who is also director for cultural diversity and inclusion for the Ontario Hockey League, said his chat addressed the sometimes-lonely path that Black players travel in hockey and how to deal with racist encounters.
"What I'm trying to express to them is how to have tools in the toolbox to cope with the potential of being the only person of color on teams, the only person of color being called racial slurs, what that feels like, from my own experience, and what it feels like from their own experiences," he said. "That what kind of today was about, to set kids in motion with confidence and pride so that they can cope with any situation, whether it's on the ice or off."