Recognized for its efforts to increase diversity and inclusion in hockey, the Penguins are nominated alongside the Denver Broncos of the NFL, the Miami Heat of the NBA and the Seattle Storm of the WNBA. The winner will be announced during the Sports Humanitarian Awards presented by ESPN, as part of the 2022 ESPYs on Wednesday (8 p.m. ET; ABC).
"It's a tremendous honor. Really, it is," said Jim Britt, executive director of the Penguins' charitable and community outreach program, the Pittsburgh Penguins Foundation. "Across our organization there's a mission statement that we see often. Every employee is handed it [on] their first day here. That mission statement has two goals; those two goals are to win the Stanley Cup and make a positive impact in our community."
That second goal recently has focused on making the sport more accessible to young players of color.
On June 15, 2021, the Penguins introduced the Willie O'Ree Academy, named after the 2018 Hockey Hall of Fame inductee who became the first Black person to play in the NHL on Jan. 18, 1958, with the Boston Bruins. The academy provides training, social and mentorship opportunities for Black youth hockey players aged 10-17. Five months later, in conjunction with the city of Pittsburgh, the Penguins opened the Hunt Armory Ice Rink in the Shadyside neighborhood Nov. 26. It was the first public hockey rink built in the city in almost 25 years, providing free hockey and diversity programming for children.
"Leading into the last few years, we've really taken a lot of pride as an organization in trying to push the bar forward in creating more diversity in our game," Britt said. "We've taken a lot of pride in taking that community investment to the next level, I think. Frankly, that has been recognized, echoed."