The siblings are from hockey stock. Their father, Dr. Joel Boyd, is the team physician for the Minnesota Wild and was the NHL's first black team doctor. He also was the first black physician for the U.S. Olympics men's hockey team, working at the 1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan. That was the first Olympics that NHL players participated.
He was also the National Football League's second black team physician, working for the Minnesota Vikings.
"We would go to Wild games, we would go to [University of Minnesota] Gophers games, we went to high school hockey games, we went to minor league games," Boyd-Tyson said. "When you're a kid, that's your 'dad time' -- that was our time for us. He would come home, pick us up and we would get a chance to hang out with him in the car, he would kind of park us in the seats during games and say, 'Don't move, I'll be right back.'"
Dr. Boyd said he was surprised and thrilled by his children not only getting NHL jobs but landing on the same team.
'I think it's awesome, I never imagined," he said. "To have them in the NHL, to me it feels like they're in the family business."
His children grew up playing the game. Kyle skated for the varsity team at the Blake School in Minneapolis and Kendall Boyd-Tyson went on to become captain of a club team at Yale.