Blake Bolden
Blake Bolden (born March 10, 1991) is an American former professional ice hockey defenseman and scout for the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League (NHL).[1][2] She achieved pioneering status as the first Black woman to play in the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL), debuting with the Boston Pride in 2015.[2][3] Bolden captained the Boston College Eagles women's ice hockey team during her senior year, earning Hockey East Defensive Player of the Year honors and All-American recognition while contributing to three Frozen Four appearances and the 2011 NCAA championship.[2][1] In professional leagues, she won the Clarkson Cup with the CWHL's Boston Blades in 2015 and the inaugural Isobel Cup with the NWHL's Boston Pride in 2016, later playing for the Buffalo Beauts where she was named Defensive Player of the Year in 2019.[2][1] Internationally, she secured gold medals with the U.S. under-18 team at the IIHF World Junior Championships in 2008 and 2009.[3][1] Since 2020, Bolden has served as a pro scout for the Kings, becoming the first Black woman and second woman overall to hold an NHL scouting position.[4][3] She has also worked as a broadcaster, including roles with ESPN and the Kings' local broadcasts.[4]Early life and education
Upbringing and family background
Blake Bolden was born on March 10, 1991, in Euclid, Ohio, a suburb of Cleveland.[5] She grew up in a working-class family environment marked by economic demands, as her mother, LaTanya Bolden, raised her as a single parent while holding three jobs to provide stability.[6] [7] When Bolden was six years old, her mother began dating Leslie Dean, a police officer who became her stepfather and a key family figure; Dean also worked for the Cleveland Lumberjacks of the International Hockey League, exposing the household to professional sports operations.[8] This blended family dynamic emphasized perseverance, with LaTanya Bolden modeling resilience through her relentless work ethic and efforts to insulate her daughter from external prejudices, including racism and sexism, by framing such ignorance as stemming from others' lacks rather than personal failings.[9] Her guidance fostered a home environment of protection and trust, helping Bolden develop emotional fortitude amid potential societal challenges faced by Black families in the region.[9] The parental emphasis on self-belief and boundary-setting, drawn from their own experiences with hardship, shaped Bolden's early character without initial focus on athletics, prioritizing instead a foundation of independence and optimism grounded in familial support.[6] [8]Youth hockey development
Blake Bolden first took up hockey at age six in the Cleveland area, motivated by a local Cleveland Lumberjacks game her family attended, where her mother's boyfriend was employed part-time.[10][11] Initially lacking skating proficiency, she advanced rapidly through structured youth training and joined elite local programs, including the Cleveland Barons and Ohio Flames.[12][3][13] For high school, Bolden transferred to Northwood School in Lake Placid, New York, a prep institution known for competitive hockey, where she honed defensive skills and contributed to team successes leading to national recognition.[13][12] Her performance earned her a spot on the U.S. Under-18 women's national team, which secured gold medals at the IIHF World Women's U18 Championships in 2008 in Switzerland and 2009 in Germany.[14][3][15] These victories marked early international milestones, with Bolden logging defensive minutes in tournament play against top global youth competition.[2]College education and NCAA playing career
Bolden enrolled at Boston College in 2009, joining the women's ice hockey program while studying in the Lynch School of Education, with a focus on psychology and human development.[5][16] She balanced academics with a four-year NCAA Division I career as a defenseman for the Boston College Eagles in the Hockey East conference, appearing in 109 games from the 2009–10 through 2012–13 seasons.[1] As a freshman in 2009–10, Bolden earned Hockey East Rookie of the Week honors on November 23 after recording a goal and an assist, plus the shootout winner in a 3–3 tie against an opponent.[5] In her sophomore year (2010–11), she played 35 games, contributing 8 goals and 11 assists for 19 points, helping the Eagles secure the Hockey East regular-season title.[17] Her junior season (2011–12) saw 37 appearances and 21 points (goals and assists combined), ranking second among Hockey East defensemen in scoring.[5] As a senior captain in 2012–13, Bolden skated in all 37 games, amassing 6 goals and 23 assists for 29 points with a +38 plus-minus rating, including seven multi-point outings; she finished her career sixth all-time among BC defensemen in points (82), fourth in goals (26), and sixth in assists (56).[5][1][18] Bolden's defensive reliability and offensive output from the blue line earned her the 2012–13 Hockey East Defender of the Year award, recognizing her performance metrics such as point production and plus-minus among conference blueliners.[19] She also received Second Team All-American honors that season for her contributions to a team that reached three Frozen Fours during her tenure.[1][2]Professional playing career
Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL)
Bolden was selected fifth overall in the first round of the 2013 CWHL Draft by the Boston Blades, becoming the first Black woman drafted in the first round of a professional women's hockey league.[20][3] As a defenseman, she transitioned from her NCAA career to the CWHL, a league featuring teams from Canada and the United States with a focus on competitive play amid limited player compensation structures that often supplemented incomes through sponsorships and off-ice jobs.[12] In her rookie 2013–14 season, Bolden played 23 regular-season games for the Blades, tallying 5 goals, 14 assists, and 19 points, while accumulating 44 penalty minutes and a -1 plus-minus rating.[21][22] Her performance included 1 power-play goal, 4 power-play assists, and 1 game-winning goal, contributing to the team's defensive efforts in a league where seasons typically spanned 20–24 games per team. The following 2014–15 season saw Bolden appear in 22 games, recording 3 goals and 10 assists for 13 points, with 22 penalty minutes and a +8 plus-minus rating.[22] These contributions helped the Blades advance through the playoffs to win the Clarkson Cup on March 8, 2015, defeating the Calgary Inferno 3–2 in the final, securing the league's championship title.[2][1] Bolden's role emphasized physical play and defensive reliability, aligning with the CWHL's emphasis on team-oriented strategies in a era before expanded professional opportunities in women's hockey.National Women's Hockey League (NWHL)
Blake Bolden made history as the first Black player in the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL) upon joining the Boston Pride in October 2015.[23] In her debut season of 2015–16, she recorded 1 goal and 8 assists in 18 games, contributing to the Pride's inaugural Isobel Cup championship after sweeping the Buffalo Beauts in the finals.[1] [24] The following year, 2016–17, Bolden appeared in 17 games for the Pride, tallying 1 goal and 5 assists with a +18 plus/minus rating, while earning selection to the NWHL All-Star Game and winning the hardest shot competition with an 87 mph slapshot.[1] [25] After a stint overseas, Bolden returned to the NWHL in 2018–19 with the Buffalo Beauts, where she posted 1 goal and 12 assists in 16 games, achieving a +11 plus/minus and earning her third All-Star nod.[1] She reclaimed the hardest shot title at the All-Star Skills Competition with an 80 mph shot and was named the league's Defensive Player of the Year for her on-ice performance, highlighted by strong defensive metrics and offensive contributions from the blue line.[26] [18]| Season | Team | GP | G | A | P | +/- | PIM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015–16 | Boston Pride | 18 | 1 | 8 | 9 | - | 10 |
| 2016–17 | Boston Pride | 17 | 1 | 5 | 6 | +18 | 14 |
| 2018–19 | Buffalo Beauts | 16 | 1 | 12 | 13 | +11 | 4 |
Overseas and international play
Bolden represented the United States at the inaugural IIHF Women's U18 World Championship in 2008, held in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, where the team defeated Canada 3–1 in overtime to win gold. She returned for the 2009 tournament in Chicago, Illinois, contributing to another gold medal victory for Team USA, which defeated Canada 3–2 in a shootout in the final.[15] These appearances marked her primary international competitive experience with the national team program.[3] Following her time in the National Women's Hockey League, Bolden signed with HC Lugano of the Swiss Women's Hockey League for the 2017–18 season, seeking a new professional challenge abroad.[2] As a defenseman, she excelled offensively, tallying 16 goals and 11 assists for 27 points in 20 games, leading her team's scoring from the blue line despite the league's smaller roster sizes and differing competitive style compared to North American professional circuits.[29] [2] This stint provided Bolden with exposure to European women's hockey logistics, including travel across Switzerland and integration into a club system emphasizing development over high-volume scoring, before she returned to North American play.[25]Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA)
In May 2019, Bolden joined the Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA), aligning with approximately 200 top players who boycotted the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL) over inadequate salaries, lack of health benefits, and unsustainable working conditions that often required players to hold secondary jobs.[10] The PWHPA's #ForTheGame initiative sought to establish a fully professional league with equitable compensation, prompting Bolden to forgo NWHL play to participate in player-led exhibitions that highlighted elite talent without league affiliation.[30] Bolden contributed to PWHPA advocacy through active involvement in the organization's Dream Gap Tour, a series of showcase events featuring 3-on-3 games, skills competitions, and public demonstrations designed to build fan interest and pressure stakeholders for systemic change.[31] In early 2020, she competed in tour stops, including events in Philadelphia and New Jersey on February 29 and March 1, where players performed at high levels to underscore the viability of professional women's hockey independent of existing structures.[32] These appearances amplified the boycott's visibility, drawing media attention to demands for minimum salaries exceeding $25,000 annually and comprehensive support, though the NWHL persisted until its rebranding and eventual dissolution in 2023. Her PWHPA tenure bridged her playing career and scouting transition, ending as she accepted an NHL role in January 2020 amid ongoing instability in women's professional hockey.[1] The association's efforts contributed to milestones like the 2023 launch of the Professional Women's Hockey League (PWHL), which secured collective bargaining for improved pay and benefits, though Bolden had shifted to off-ice contributions by then.[33]Transition to post-playing roles
Retirement from competitive play
Bolden retired from competitive ice hockey in early 2020, after concluding her participation in the Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA)'s Dream Gap Tour exhibitions during the 2019–20 season. These events, organized by PWHPA members boycotting established leagues over inadequate pay and facilities, marked the final phase of her on-ice tenure following stints in the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) and National Women's Hockey League (NWHL). The CWHL's dissolution in May 2019 had already disrupted the professional landscape, prompting many players, including Bolden, to seek alternatives amid stalled progress in women's hockey professionalization.[1] In reflecting on her exit, Bolden highlighted the cumulative physical toll of a decade-plus career—spanning college, overseas play, and North American pro leagues—as a key factor, compounded by the instability of low-salaried, travel-intensive seasons that often required supplemental work. She described a shift in priorities toward leveraging her experience for broader impact, noting in a 2021 reflection that post-playing soul-searching led her to explore roles allowing greater involvement in hockey's growth without the daily rigors of competition. This transition aligned with her growing interest in scouting, which she pursued as an immediate next step to remain connected to the sport while addressing its developmental needs.[8][34]Initial involvement in hockey administration
Following the end of her professional playing career after the 2019 season, Bolden entered hockey administration in early 2020. In January of that year, she joined the Los Angeles Kings as their Growth and Inclusion Specialist, focusing on initiatives to broaden access to hockey for underrepresented communities, including Black youth and women.[14][35] This role built directly on her on-ice pioneering as the first Black woman in professional North American women's leagues, emphasizing community outreach and program development to address barriers in player participation and retention.[36] Bolden's early administrative efforts included facilitating events and consultations that connected her advocacy—such as appearances tied to diversity groups like Black Girl Hockey Club—with NHL affiliate programming, helping to identify gaps in inclusion based on demographic data from youth leagues showing low representation of players of color (under 5% in USA Hockey registrations at the time).[30] These steps provided foundational input for organizational reports on equity, predating her deeper scouting responsibilities and contributing to the Kings' broader diversity strategy amid growing league-wide calls for reform.[37]Scouting and NHL roles
Appointment with Los Angeles Kings
In January 2020, Blake Bolden was hired by the Los Angeles Kings as a pro scout tasked with evaluating American Hockey League talent, marking her as the first Black woman to serve in a professional scouting role for an NHL team and only the second woman overall to scout in the league after Cami Granato.[14][36] Her appointment stemmed from prior networking in hockey circles, including a key interaction that positioned her to assess prospects in the Pacific Division.[14] Bolden's initial responsibilities centered on talent identification and evaluation within the AHL, involving attendance at games, analysis of player performance, and reporting on potential NHL fits for the Kings' development pipeline.[37] In July 2020, her role expanded to include Growth and Inclusion Specialist, where she led efforts to implement diversity protocols, such as reviewing scouting processes for equitable outreach and collaborating across departments to foster inclusive hiring practices.[38][39] This dual function emphasized both traditional scouting mechanics—focusing on skills like skating, decision-making, and competitiveness—and integration of broader inclusion strategies, as outlined in team announcements prioritizing underrepresented talent pools.[37]Contributions to team scouting and diversity efforts
As a pro scout for the Los Angeles Kings since 2020, Bolden evaluates American Hockey League (AHL) and professional prospects, focusing on player strengths, weaknesses, and goal-scoring tendencies through game observation, primarily on the West Coast.[4] Her scouting reports contribute to the team's talent identification process, though specific player recommendations leading to Kings signings or drafts remain undisclosed in public records.[9] In her parallel role as growth and inclusion specialist, Bolden leads the Black, Silver & Bold program, a free initiative launched under the Kings' inclusion efforts to develop elite underrepresented youth hockey players aged 9-17 at AAA/AA levels, alongside their families.[40] The program provides year-round activities including leadership training, cultural discussions, attendance at Kings games, summer sessions at the Toyota Sports Performance Center with instruction from former pros and NHL guests, and custom apparel, aiming to build skills and community ties.[40] In June 2025, it received a $20,000 grant from the NHL Player Inclusion Coalition to support these objectives.[41] No public data quantifies participant numbers or direct pipeline effects to professional scouting, such as increased diverse draft-eligible talent identified by the Kings. Bolden also spearheads the Bolden Girls program, an all-girls continuation initiative for participants exiting introductory youth levels like Little Kings, emphasizing sustained female involvement in hockey.[4] She has conducted girls' youth clinics since at least November 2020, hosted by the Kings to promote accessibility.[42] These efforts align with the organization's post-2020 inclusion push addressing recruitment barriers, but empirical metrics on retention rates or scouting yield from diverse cohorts are not available, highlighting a focus on outreach over documented merit-based outcomes in talent acquisition.[39]Broadcasting career
Entry into media
Bolden's initial media appearances occurred in early 2021, including a guest spot on NHL Network's all-female program on March 8, where she discussed women's hockey developments and her scouting role with the Los Angeles Kings.[43] This outing highlighted her as a knowledgeable voice on professional hockey, informed by her on-ice tenure across leagues like the NWHL and CWHL.[44] In June 2021, ESPN announced Bolden as a reporter for its newly acquired NHL coverage under a seven-year broadcast deal, marking her formal entry into regular sports media.[45] She joined alongside reporters Emily Kaplan and Greg Wyshynski, contributing to studio shows and game reporting by applying her player and scout perspectives to breakdowns of team strategies and player performances.[35] This shift from competitive play to analysis allowed her to translate tactical insights—such as defensive positioning and game flow—directly to audiences, with early segments emphasizing her unique viewpoint as a trailblazing professional athlete.[34]Roles with ESPN, Amazon Prime, and other outlets
Bolden joined ESPN in June 2021 as a reporter for its NHL coverage, contributing alongside Emily Kaplan and Greg Wyshynski starting with the fall broadcast schedule.[46] Her responsibilities expanded to include rinkside reporting and analysis on ESPN's weekly NHL studio programming, as well as in-game reporting for select matchups.[47] By the 2023-24 season, she had debuted as an NHL in-game reporter, providing on-ice insights during live telecasts.[48] In September 2024, Bolden was named an analyst for Amazon Prime Video's Monday Night Hockey broadcasts, covering pre-game, intermission, and post-game segments for the 2024-25 and 2025-26 NHL regular seasons in Canada.[49] She anchored the sports desk alongside hosts Adnan Virk and Andi Petrillo, incorporating local guest analysts for select games.[50] During a November 4, 2024, intermission interview on the Edmonton Oilers broadcast, Bolden questioned general manager Stan Bowman about his "time off" over three years and its impact on his outlook, a phrasing that drew criticism for downplaying Bowman's 2021 NHL ban and resignation amid the Chicago Blackhawks' Kyle Beach scandal investigation.[51] Bolden's multi-platform work has extended to other outlets, including analysis stints with NHL Network and NBC Sports.[35] Reception of her broadcasting has included praise for her pioneering perspective as a former player but also critiques of Amazon Prime's studio production quality, with some observers noting uneven execution in segments like the Bowman exchange as emblematic of broader challenges in the new broadcast package.[52]Awards and honors
Athletic achievements during playing career
Bolden represented the United States at the IIHF Women's U18 World Championships, earning gold medals in both 2008 and 2009 as a defenseman.[25][53] At Boston College, she received the Hockey East Defenseman of the Year award in her senior season of 2012–13.[19] That year, she was also named a Second Team All-American by the American Hockey Coaches Association.[1] Additionally, Bolden earned First Team All-Hockey East honors during her collegiate career.[5] In the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL), Bolden was named Defensive Player of the Year for the 2018–19 season while with the Buffalo Beauts.[18] She appeared in three NWHL All-Star events and won the hardest shot competition at the 2019 NWHL All-Star Skills Competition with a slapshot recorded at 80 mph.[31][54]Post-career recognitions and firsts
In February 2020, Bolden became the first Black woman hired as a professional scout by an NHL franchise upon joining the Los Angeles Kings organization.[55] This milestone followed her appointment as the team's growth and inclusion specialist, marking her as only the second woman overall to serve in an NHL scouting capacity, after Cami Granato.[2][4] In January 2023, Bolden received the Human Dignity Award from the YMCA of Metropolitan Los Angeles during its 52nd Annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Brotherhood Breakfast, honoring her efforts to promote inclusion and diversity within professional hockey.[56][57] The award recognizes community leaders advancing human dignity through advocacy and professional contributions, aligning with Bolden's post-playing roles in scouting and broadcasting that emphasize barriers faced by underrepresented groups in the sport.[58]Legacy and impact
Pioneering contributions to women's and diverse hockey
Blake Bolden achieved several pioneering firsts in women's professional hockey, including becoming the first Black player to compete in the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL) in 2015 with the Boston Pride.[3] She was also the first Black player selected in the first round of the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) draft.[48] These milestones marked initial breakthroughs for Black women in elite North American women's leagues, where participation by minorities had been negligible prior to her entry.[12] Post-retirement, Bolden has focused on youth development programs targeting underrepresented groups in hockey. She leads "Black, Silver & Bold," a free initiative providing skill and community development for elite youth players from diverse backgrounds, which secured a $20,000 grant from the NHL Player Inclusion Coalition in June 2025.[41] As a member of the NHL Player Inclusion Coalition, she has participated in youth clinics aimed at broadening access, such as events held in 2023 to promote inclusivity in the sport.[59] These efforts align with broader NHL initiatives to diversify participant demographics, where Black youth registration in USA Hockey programs grew from under 1% in early 2010s to approximately 2.5% by 2022, though direct attribution to individual contributors remains unquantified in available data.[3] Bolden's visibility as a trailblazer has been acknowledged by industry observers, with some likening her impact to that of Jackie Robinson in women's hockey for opening pathways for subsequent minority players.[60] Peers in the NHL, including scouts and executives, have cited her role in inspiring increased involvement from women of color, evidenced by her three NWHL All-Star selections and subsequent transition to scouting, which highlighted persistent underrepresentation—women comprised less than 5% of NHL scouts as of 2020.[54][9]