Against a backdrop of anger over killings of black suspects by white police officers, National Basketball Association (NBA) star LeBron James and other US athletes are making their opinions known in an arena sometimes hostile to activism.
Deference to sponsors, fans and sports bosses has long been the norm in US sports, with athletes expected to do their stuff on court or field, but stay out of the issues of the day — particularly when it comes to something as sensitive as race.
Tommie Smith and John Carlos, the US athletes famed for their black-gloved protest at the 1968 Olympics, are now honored for their gesture of solidarity, but at the time, it sparked outrage in the Olympic movement and they were sent home from the Games.
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In the 1960s, Bill Russell and others used their stature in the NBA to promote civil rights, but Muhammad Ali was vilified not only for refusing to serve in the Vietnam War, but also for changing his name from Cassius Clay.
The murky, unwritten rules are not always enforced from above.
Whether Michael Jordan ever really said: “Republicans buy sneakers, too,” in declining to back a Democratic political candidate, the NBA icon certainly maintains a reputation of shying away from discussing contentious issues.
So does Tiger Woods, another marketing juggernaut who came of age in an era when sports and politics rarely seemed to mix.
However, four-time NBA Most Valuable Player James and other 21st century US athletes are slowly breaking that mold, and the arrival of the 24-seven news cycle and social media only makes it easier to get their views across.
“Obviously, as a society we have to do better,” James said of his decision to support the current protests by donning a T-shirt reading: “I can’t breathe” for warm-ups prior to a game in Brooklyn on Monday.
The words were the last uttered by Eric Garner, a black father of six who died after he was put in a chokehold by a New York police officer.
James, toeing a fine line, said his gesture was mainly a “shout-out” to Garner’s family.
Cleveland teammate Kyrie Irving was among the players who wore similar shirts prior to Monday’s game, which received special scrutiny thanks to the attendance of Britain’s Prince William and his wife Catherine.
“It’s really important to us that we stand up for a cause, especially this one,” Irving said of wearing the shirt first sported on Saturday by Chicago’s Derrick Rose.
NBA players are not the only US athletes to express their opinions on the race issue.
In the NFL, which like the NBA has a large number of African-American players, Lions running back Reggie Bush wore a top with “I can’t breathe” written on it prior to a game on Sunday, as did the Browns’ Johnson Bademosi.
Davin Joseph, a St Louis Rams guard, wrote the same words on his cleats and tweeted it, along with the caption: “RIP Eric Garner.”
A week earlier, five Rams players angered a St Louis police organization when they entered the field with the same “hands up, don’t shoot” gesture adopted by protesters in Ferguson, Missouri, where a white policeman shot dead an unarmed black teenager.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver issued a measured response, saying in a statement that the league respects “Derrick Rose and all of our players for voicing their personal views on important issues, but my preference would be for players to abide by our on-court attire rules.”
In less than a year on the job, Silver has already negotiated rough waters of racism much closer to home, successfully steering the league through the saga of former Clippers owner Donald Sterling.
James was a vocal critic of Sterling when his racially charged comments became public, and James showed in 2012 that he was not afraid to act on his conscience when he tweeted a picture of himself, Dwyane Wade and other Miami Heat teammates with their heads bowed under black hoodies in a team picture protesting the shooting death of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin.
No fines or reprimands will be handed down to James, Irving and others who wore “I Can’t Breathe” shirts during warm-ups for a Cavaliers-Nets game on Monday night, NBA sources said on Tuesday.
Additional reporting by Reuters
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