WASHINGTON -- Divyne Apollon II and his Metro Maple Leafs teammates never imagined that standing up for each other in the face of racism would lead to all of this.
The players on the 14-and-under travel hockey team based in Odenton, Maryland were only doing what they thought was right.
But it led to them visiting the Washington Capitals locker room on Monday, meeting players such as captain Alex Ovechkin, defenseman John Carlson and forward Devante Smith-Pelly, and going home with the memory of a lifetime.
"It was fun," Apollon II said. "Meeting all the players and having my teammates looking happy and being happy. It was fun."
The Capitals invited the Metro Maple Leafs to their game against the St. Louis Blues at Capital One Arena on Monday after Smith-Pelly and Carlson read the story about what happened to them during a youth hockey tournament on Dec. 29.
When Apollon II faced racial taunts during a game against a team from Pennsylvania, his teammates stood up for the 13-year-old defenseman, which led to a fight. After Apollon II was suspended for the remainder of the tournament for his part in the fight, his teammates put logos on their sticks with the word "Racism" crossed out by a hockey stick.