TORONTO -- Players of colour in the Greater Toronto Hockey League, the world鈥檚 largest minor hockey league, say they are routinely targeted with verbal insults because of their race鈥.

鈥淚鈥檇 probably say, like, half of the games someone said something, but no one ever heard,鈥 said Myles Douglas, a 16-year-old Black player from Georgetown, Ont.

鈥淭hey always say it when the refs backs are turned, or when they know the refs or no one else will hear them.鈥

Douglas says he hears racial slurs directed at him in half of the 45 games he has played this season. It is difficult to say how many players experience racism on the ice, but CTV News spoke with other GTHL players who also said they were targeted but declined to appear on camera.

While the 40,000-player league said the data is tracked internally and players are penalized, it refused to disclose how often these incidents are occurring.

 鈥淲e don鈥檛 publish stats about minors on an anonymized or aggregated basis, since that may damage the reputation of the vast majority of the young players in our league whose good sportsmanship is beyond question,鈥 said the League鈥檚 executive director, Scott Oakman.

But professional hockey players, including active and retired NHL and AHL players, say the league鈥檚 position is unacceptable.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e not being honest and open then you鈥檙e essentially -- you鈥檙e sheltering it, you鈥檙e hiding 鈥 You can鈥檛 hide any more. This is out there. We need to be able to be open, transparent,鈥 said J.T. Brown, a player in the American Hockey League.

 Anson Carter, a former NHL player in Los Angeles, agrees.

鈥淚 always tell people that Toronto is the most diverse city in North America. Without a doubt. And by not releasing those numbers and by not being transparent, they are covering something up,鈥 he said.

Racism in the sport has been happening for decades, players of colour say, but conversation around the issue is still relatively new.

, only 43 players, or about six per cent, of the league鈥檚 700 are players of colour,  noted earlier this year.

NHL star Evander Kane of the San Jose Sharks says the same focus on racism in major league hockey needs to happen at the minor level as well. He recalled being targeted by the parents of players of an opposing team when he was only 10 years old. 

 "There are probably four to five parents banging on the glass behind me, screaming at me: 鈥榃e should cut your f-ing legs off. You monkey. Somebody should kill you,鈥" he said.

Last year, former Calgary Flames player  said ex-Calgary Flames head coach Bill Peters used a racial slur toward him multiple times in the locker room because of his choice of music back when he was a minor league rookie.

after the team launched an investigation into his conduct. 

In Nova Scotia, Indigenous hockey player Logan Prosper, who is a member of the Waycobah First Nation,  that a player told him 鈥渁ll natives look like turds in their helmets,鈥 that they should go back to where they came from, and shouldn鈥檛 be playing hockey.

Prosper said these types of comments were coming from parents as well. Hockey Nova Scotia eventually found that the 鈥溾 following an investigation.