The girl, who wishes to remain anonymous, was crudely heckled by an opposing student section while in net for Mars Hockey Club on Oct. 28. Less than two weeks later, the goalie and her teammates, who are all boys, were welcomed to UPMC Lemieux Sports Complex, the Penguins' practice facility, for their game against South Fayette.
"I'm extremely proud of the stance our whole organization has taken, our players have taken, to reach out and try to make a difference," said Penguins assistant Todd Reirden, who is serving as coach with Mike Sullivan in NHL COVID-19 protocol. "It's sad that the whole situation had to occur. ... This type of behavior is not appropriate at any time, let alone at a hockey rink."
As Mars took the ice, it was greeted by a capacity crowd partially made up of players from local girls youth hockey teams. Each rink at the facility is estimated to hold 1,500, but there were likely more in attendance Monday.
The main rink has stands to one side, which were full, with an overflow of fans standing around the outer edge down to and past the entrance of the Penguins locker room. Signs supporting the goalie were taped to the glass next to each bench.
The game was officiated by two female referees.
South Fayette won 8-1, with the Mars goalie making 21 saves. But the outcome wasn't the point. With each save the Mars goalie made, no matter the difficulty, the crowd cheered and pounded on the glass.
Since a video of 50 to 60 Armstrong High School students shouting vulgarities at the goalie surfaced, several Penguins players have sent the girl video messages of support.
The Penguins also invited the team from Mars Area High School, which is located about six miles from Pittsburgh's practice rink in Cranberry, to their 5-4 shootout loss to the Minnesota Wild at PPG Paints Arena on Saturday. The players were seated in a luxury suite and recognized on the big screen.
"I am quite aware of the situation, and it was a real shame," Reirden said. "Just extremely disheartening to see something like that. There's no place for that type of behavior in the world, let alone in our sport of hockey.
"Hockey is way better than that. That was, like I said, extremely discouraging."