"My first season someone mentioned to me that the team photo was going to be the first team photo for the Flyers that ever featured a female executive, and I thought, 'Wow!" Camillo exclaimed.
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Wearing her nicest pair of stiletto heels, she headed down to the ice and realized that her choice of shoes wasn't so practical.
"I'm like, I'm gonna die. I'm gonna wipe out in front of the entire team," she recalled. "And Paul Holmgren, instantly saw my dilemma, got up and came over and offered a hand."
Camillo knew she broke the glass ceiling when the Flyers quite literally helped break the ice. She took over the business operations for the team in 2019.
Jamie Apody goes one-on-one with Flyers President Valerie Camillo, the first female team president in NHL history
"It's an honor and a blessing. It's something I want to do a phenomenal job at so I can be a standard bearer and a success, and break down some of those mental barriers that some might have. (I) also want to be an inspiration to young women and young girls in their careers," she says.
Camillo understands what it's like to be the only woman at the table. Before the Flyers, she was the chief revenue and marketing officer for the Washington Nationals and a consultant in the NBA before that.
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So this position marks a hat trick of sorts.
"She's very bright, very analytically inclined," said Flyers GM Chuck Fletcher. "(She's) great with numbers, intelligence off the charts, just the way she works with people, the way she collaborates, she's a progressive leader."
While women in management positions in pro sports is rare to begin with, hockey seems to lag behind them all.
A survey taken in 2019 pointed out that while females make up 40% of the fan base, they hold less than 5% of the jobs in hockey operations.
SEE ALSO: Horsham woman becomes first Black head hockey coach in NCAA history
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Horsham woman becomes first Black head hockey coach in NCAA history
"This is a business job, I didn't grow up playing hockey," she says. "There is nothing about my job that requires me to be an expert at identifying talent or players, and so this job at the highest levels can be a fit for any woman, and should be a fit for any woman."
"You're starting to see some women starting to take on positions not just on the business side but also on the hockey side," says Fletcher. "It's been too slow for sure but I think we're starting to see some progress."
To that end, as young girls who love the game slowly realize they too can someday help run a team, Camillo says the key is not to conform as the sports world continues to evolve.
"I'm a woman and I don't want to be one of the guys," Camillo says. "Twenty years ago in my career, you felt that pressure to conform, but who enjoys living like that. So to do your best, you have to be yourself."