Ciao Bella: Daughter’s dream is mom’s inspiration for girls’ gear (Printed Jan. 4, 2007)


By Amanda Estes

Staff Writer

Seven-year-old South Portlander Bela Cloutier believes someday she can play on an Olympic women’s hockey team.

That’s the kind of confidence two South Portland moms hope to instill
in young women with their new line of hockey gear and apparel designed
especially for girls. Joining their mission to attract girls to the
sport is female hockey star Cammi Granato, whose own dream of playing
in the Olympics was fulfilled.

BelaHockey was inspired by Bela Cloutier’s determination to keep up
with the neighborhood boys who were joining an introductory co-ed
hockey league.

Anna Cloutier, a mother of three who co-founded the company with
neighbor Justine Carlisle and Granato, said the hockey equipment sold
in retail outlets is less than inviting for a young girl.

“Everything was geared toward boys from the color to how they fit,”
Anna Cloutier said during an interview at her home. “If you make the
equipment appeal to young girls maybe more girls would try it.”

So Anna Cloutier and Carlisle visited ice rinks and asked girls who
were playing in hockey leagues what they would want to wear and use on
the ice. Cloutier said the girls wanted equipment they could call their
own.

Currently, BelaHockey products are available online and include
long-sleeve T-shirts, pink and purple custom hockey socks, personalized
polka dot hockey sticks, as well as Katie Kaps, a cotton headband
designed to keep girls’ hair out of their eyes – inspired by Granato’s
10-year-old cousin, Katie Granato.

Bela Cloutier happily modeled the Katie Kap that easily fits under her
helmet and showed off the company’s colorful hockey stick, which can be
personalized with the player’s name and number.

When it comes to designing a hockey stick that women will want to use,
Anna Cloutier and Carlisle have a hockey legend in their corner,
offering input and a life’s worth of experience on the ice.

Anna Cloutier said when she and Carlisle met with Granato, also a proud
mom, in Chicago, “right away, it was just a complete click.”

“We completely had the same ideas about what we wanted BelaHockey to be,” she said.

Granato, who up until college only faced boys on the ice, said the company is all about empowering girls.

“I know from experience what it’s like to feel like you are playing a
man’s sport and with BelaHockey, we are telling girls and women that
hockey is as much their sport as anybody’s,” Granato wrote in an email.


Granato, who successfully led the U.S. Women’s National Team to the
first Olympic gold medal in women’s hockey in 1998, took to the ice in
kindergarten.

“My mom started me out in figure skating lessons and I kept leaving the
studio ice during lessons to go watch hockey in the rink beside it,”
she wrote. “I told my mom I wanted to play ‘that game’ instead of
figure skating. We made a deal that if I finished lessons that season,
next year I could play hockey.”

She said winning the gold medal in 1998 was the greatest moment of her sports career.

“We were the underdogs in that tournament having lost to Canada five
times in World Championship play,” she wrote. “Our team thrived on
being the underdogs and gained momentum each game of the Olympics.”

Granato said the win “gave women’s hockey credibility and now women
could walk into the rink with their hockey bags and be confident that
they belonged.”

To help young girls succeed on the ice, the BelaHockey Web site also
offers tips and advice on everything from taping a stick to breaking in
a new pair of skates; from the importance of wearing a mouthguard to
enrolling your daughter in hockey for the first time.

“There’s so much equipment that even as a parent it can be overwhelming,” Carlisle said.

With their product line, however, Anna Cloutier and Carlisle hope to
instill confidence in women of all ages. The company’s namesake, Bela
Cloutier, is helping to prove girls belong on the ice too.

“She went from where she could barely stand on skates to where now
she’s awesome,” said Anna Cloutier, as her daughter broke out into a
smile.

For more information about BelaHockey, visit www. belahockey.com.






 

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