Fall 2021 Quarterly

Page 12

ON THE HILL

SHINE: SKYLAR ABREGO ’20 Working the Connections BORN INTO HOCKEY AND RAISED THROUGH HER GUSTIE PROFS, SHE’S THE CURRENT GRADUATE ASSISTANT IN GUSTAVUS SPORTS INFORMATION.

It started when communications studies professor Pamela Conners said to her, “I think you’re holding yourself back.” Abrego had planned on becoming a teacher, but she loved Conners’ class Public Discourse far more than she loved her elementary school job shadow experience. Then came professor Sarah Wolter ’02 and her class, Screens. “I kept picking athletic commercials to analyze,” Abrego says. Then Abrego had an idea—a Gustavus sports podcast. Without having every played Gustavus sports, or produced a podcast, or even met Tom Brown, director of Gustavus Athletics, “I put on my big girl pants and knocked on his door,” she says. The result was Behind the Bench, the first campus sports podcast, which Abrego recorded through the audio on a camera placed on a music stand. More firsts followed. She became the first woman intern for the off-season professional hockey league Da Beauty League, where she grew the Instagram account and interviewed professional players. She became one of the first two women broadcast interns at Fox Sports North to cover Northwoods League Baseball in both taped and live segments. She hated the appearance, performance, and lifestyle constraints for on-camera women reporters, not to mention the gross men who trolled her on the Internet, some with photos of their daughters in their feeds. But she loved the video editing, graphics, writing, and social media aspects. Today, among her other duties as Gustavus graduate assistant in sports information, she works with Gustie teams to develop their social media, and she’s pioneered “Women’s Coach Wednesday” profiles on the Gustavus website. Equity and inclusion in sports are central to her work, especially in hockey. “It’s all about connections. But what if you don’t have them?” she asks. As a first-generation college student from a town of 600 people, and as a biracial woman devoted to the predominantly white sport of hockey, these are careerdefining questions. “No one should have to deal with sexism or racism as they play their sport,” Abrego says, stating what should be obvious. Gustavus, she says, is a great place to begin a career as a woman in sports. “The MIAC does a really good job with equity. I’m so lucky at Gustavus to

10

It was a wild spring in Gustavus sports with 11 seasons running simultaneously. “Sometimes we had five home games going on at once.” Despite the long work weeks, Abrego pulled two As and an A- in her master’s program in sports management at Minnesota State University, Mankato. More on the historic Spring 2021 sports season on page 22.

COMMUNITY

GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | FALL 2021

have so many extremely strong women professors and coaches as mentors.”


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.