Bolden said having her own stick line and working the nationally televised PWHPA game at Madison Square Garden on Sunday with NBC Sports broadcaster Kenny Albert is emblematic of a change occurring in hockey.
She's the latest women's player of color to land endorsement or personal branding opportunities. Forward Sarah Nurse partnered with CCM Hockey shortly after playing for Canada in 2018, was featured in an ad campaign by adidas last year and was the inspiration for a Black hockey-themed Barbie doll sold by Canada's Tim Hortons doughnut chain.
"It's great," Bolden said. "We're beautiful, marketable women in our sport. This is what should be happening. … we should be helping these companies reach a market."
Neil McOstrich, founding partner and chief storytelling officer of Cleansheet Communications, agreed.
"They're getting their due," said McOstrich, whose Toronto-based marketing agency has worked with Edmonton Oilers center Connor McDavid, Chicago Blackhawks center Jonathan Toews, Hockey Hall of Famers Wayne Gretzky and Eric Lindros and other athletes. "In some cases, these endorsement and branding deals are reflecting not just the skill but the gestalt around that player -- the barriers they had to overcome to be there, the things they say and do when they're there, what they do for the community outside the game."
Angela James, who became the Hockey Hall of Fame's second Black player when she was inducted in 2010 and was named to the Order of Hockey in Canada for 2021 on Friday, said she's thrilled to see Bolden and Nurse are getting endorsement and branding offers and urged them and other top women of color in the game to seek more.
"It's very hard to get to your status, your level," James said in a recent episode of the NHL's Soul on Ice: The Podcast, hosted by Bolden, Nurse, Metropolitan Riveters defenseman Saroya Tinker and Arcadia University women's hockey coach Kelsey Koelzer. "If you get an opportunity, take advantage of it … do those advertisements … because that's only going to help the other young girls that are aspiring or are even afraid to attempt to play the game of hockey."