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This column continues the Only One series in which this reporter shares his experiences as the only African American journalist on the scene.

Minnesota might be the so-called state of hockey, but itโ€™s also the state of invisibility when it comes to Black hockey fans. The Only One again used the one-hand counting method and spotted hockey fans of color at two recent contests.

Gladys Kudzaishe Hlatywayo had the time of her life at her first-ever hockey game. โ€œIโ€™m enjoying it,โ€ exclaimed the Harare, Zimbabwe visitor between periods of Minnesotaโ€™s January 31 shootout win over Ohio State.

Gladys Kudzaishe Hlatywayo
Gladys Kudzaishe Hlatywayo Credit: Photo by Onika Nicole Craven

She and her husband caught on very quickly and cheered each time the Gopher women pucksters scored and moaned when they didnโ€™t. She is a visiting Humphrey International Fellow. โ€œI think this team is a very good team.โ€

Gladys recalled that she didnโ€™t get out to sporting events the last time she was in the States during a 2010 visit to the University campus. This time around, โ€œOne of the things we are encouraged to do is to get out and visit some of the sports that are here in Minnesota and [see] how people spend their time,โ€ she said. โ€œI am going to see the culture of the people and interact with the people. Thatโ€™s the reason why I am here.โ€

She also got to see the good and the bad as far as local sports is concerned. โ€œIโ€™ve gone to see the Timberwolves. They are not a very good team,โ€ assessed Hlatywayo.

Gladys Kudzaishe Hlatywayo (right) and her husband enjoyed watching Gopher women's hockey.
Gladys Kudzaishe Hlatywayo (left) watching Gopher womenโ€™s hockey. Credit: Photo by Charles Hallman

Gladys also asked where the Black U of M women hockey fans are. โ€œI [am] not seeing people of color. It was something I was thinking about: Why is it that Black people donโ€™t come and support games like this? But I see more at basketball games.โ€

Washington Post On-Line Columnist Clinton Yates once wrote that itโ€™s not easy being a U.S.-born Black hockey fan. โ€œItโ€™s awkward and embarrassing to walk through an arena and enjoy a game when 90 percent of the people in the building who look like me are working [there],โ€ he noted.

โ€œItโ€™s apparently still jarring for a Black guy toโ€ฆtalk about hockey,โ€ continued Yates. โ€œAnd if youโ€™re a Black woman? Forget about it.โ€

Donโ€™t tell that to Nedy Windham, an unabashed sports fan.

โ€œI grew up in Detroit, and I grew up on hockey. I love hockey better than baseball,โ€ she said before a recent Minnesota Wild contest โ€” she attends โ€œa couple of games a year. I donโ€™t have season tickets, but I have friends who have tickets.โ€

Asked how many Blacks she sees at these games, Windham easily counted, โ€œAbout one or two.โ€

โ€œHockey is not a big part of the Black sports community, and thatโ€™s unfortunate,โ€ noted Yates. โ€œThe worst part is having to defend your knowledge of the game in public settings.โ€

This reporter has lost count how many stares he gets from non-Black media types and others when working in the hockey press box.

I watched Hockey Night in Canada growing up, and I watch NHL hockey on television as much as watching hoops. Sometimes I enjoy it more. I also can follow the game as well as any non-Black reporter out there.

โ€œI donโ€™t think it is as unusual [seeing Blacks at hockey games] today as it was 20 years ago,โ€ concluded Windham. Weโ€™re out there, but weโ€™re still seen only in single-digit numbers.โ€

Charles Hallman welcomes reader responses to challman@spokesman-recorder.com.

Updated 9/28/2017 โ€“ A previous version of this story incorrectly identified a person in the above photo. The error has been corrected.