Chanel Keenan, the Seattle Kraken's intersectionality consultant, said announcing the Kraken's selection of former Carolina Hurricanes forward Morgan Geekie in front of a TV camera during the 2021 NHL Expansion Draft on July 21 was one the coolest things she has ever done.
And the most stressful.
"It was live TV, I'm not equipped for that," said Keenan, who was flanked by members of the Western Washington Female Hockey Association's Washington Wild when she announced the choice. "I was so nervous."
Keenan hasn't been shy when it comes to advocating for people with disabilities, women and people of color in her part-time role with the Kraken, who have vowed to make diversity, equity and inclusion a key component of their culture.
The 22-year-old Dorchester, Massachusetts, native said she brings a unique perspective to Seattle, which will begin play this season as the 32nd team in the NHL. She's a female diehard hockey fan of Cambodian heritage who negotiates life with Osteogenesis Imperfecta, also known as Brittle Bone Disease, and uses a motorized wheelchair to get around.
"Disability doesn't care what you look like or where you come from," she said. "I just kind of give my perspective as a physically disabled person who started as a fan of the sport but also understands the history and the culture and how the sport was built. I'm coming from it from a bunch of weird angles being a woman, not actually playing the sport, being a minority, all these different things that we kind of seem like the opposite audience of who [hockey] markets to now."
From her Massachusetts home, Keenan said at least five committees put together by the Kraken will deal with everything from overall diversity to the game presentation at Seattle's Climate Pledge Arena and impact people with disabilities.