Cameron Champ speaks out, PGA Tour issues statement on Black Lives Matter

Cameron Champ is wearing one black golf shoe and one white to voice his solidarity with the Black Lives Matters movement.

As sporting events across the NBA, WNBA, MLB, MLS, and WTA took back seats to player-led protests in the wake of the police shooting of Jacob Blake on Sunday in Kenosha, Wisconsin, the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup Playoffs resume today, about an hour away (88 miles) in Chicago.

At least one Tour player expressed his frustration at seeing yet another Black man being shot – seven times – while trying to enter his vehicle with his children. Cameron Champ, one of four Black golfers on Tour, is making a statement against racial injustice. The PGA Tour posted a video on social media on Wednesday and Champ re-tweeted, that he will once again be wearing one Nike golf shoe that is black on his left foot and the other that is white, the latter with the words “Jacob Blake” and “BLM” in black marker. Champ, 25, previously wore the shoes in 2019 during Black History Month at the Waste Management Phoenix Open as a tribute to his heritage.

“It’s just spreading awareness and sticking by what I believe in and what I believe needs to be changed,” said Champ, the son of bi-racial parents, in the post. “And so, I’m going to do as much as I can. I’ve seen a bunch of other athletes speak out about it. It’s a situation where people don’t want to talk about it, which I get, but at the same time it’s reality. It’s what we live in.

“People ignore it for so long. And then it gets to a point where it just blows up,” added Champ, who will defend his title at the Safeway Open in two weeks. “This is just the tipping of the iceberg. Change needs to happen. I feel like it’s going in the right direction, but again, with all the stuff that’s going on, it has to end.”

On Thursday morning, the Tour issued the following statement:

The MLB, MLS, NBA, WNBA and WTA protests are player-led, peaceful, powerful ways to use their respective platforms to bring about the urgent need for change in our country. There have been a number of efforts in the past to send a message that the current climate is unacceptable, and these teams, leagues and players now taking this step will help draw further attention to the issues that really matter. The PGA Tour supports them – and any of our own members – standing up for issues they believe in.

The PGA Tour made a pledge over the summer to be part of the solution, and we have been actively working to make deeper and more specific commitments to racial equity and inclusion in the communities where we play, as well as supporting national organizations within this movement that we had not previously engaged with.  However, we understand that now is not the appropriate time to highlight our programs and policies, but rather to express our outrage at the injustice that remains prevalent in our country.

Sports have always had the power to inspire and unify, and we remain hopeful that together, we will achieve change.

The BMW Championship is the second of three events in the FedEx Cup Playoffs. Cameron Champ is scheduled to tee off at 1:58 p.m. ET at Olympia Fields.

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MLS y MLB también cancelan juegos. El deporte alza la voz y lo celebramos

Sin proponérselo los Milwaukee Bucks desataron una revolución en el deporte, la MLB y la MLS siguieron los pasos y cancelaron partidos

Sin proponérselo los Milwaukee Bucks desataron una revolución en el deporte en Estados Unidos al negarse a jugar su quinto partido de primera ronda de playoffs como protesta por los nuevos hechos de abuso racial por parte de la policía de Kenosha Wisconsin en contra de Jacob Blake.

MLS y MLB también cancelan juegos. El deporte alza la voz y lo celebramos
© Pool Photo-USA TODAY Sports

Los Bucks se negaron a jugar contra Magic e inmediatamente los otros dos partidos programados para el miércoles también se suspendieron.

El beisbol se suma a las protestas

Pero la protesta no quedó ahí, los Milwaukee Brewers de la MLB respaldaron la decisión de sus vecinos los Bucks y se negaron a jugar su partido contra los Cincinnati Reds. El Padres contra Mariners y el Dodgers ante Giants también fueron cancelados.

El futbol no nos ciega

La jornada siete de la MLS también sufrió cancelaciones, pues primero el Inter Miami contra Atlanta United se canceló y se pudo ver a los jugadores de ambos equipos abrazarse en el centro del campo, algunos de ellos con playeras de Black Lives Matter.

MLS y MLB también cancelan juegos. El deporte alza la voz y lo celebramos
© Sam Navarro-USA TODAY Sports

Posteriormente el LA Galaxy contra Seattle Sounders se suspendió y así otros tres partidos más se pospusieron en una jornada histórica en el deporte en Estados Unidos.

El deporte en favor de la justicia social

Muchas veces criticamos el comportamiento de algunos deportistas pues suele estar vinculado a los escándalos y excesos pero esta vez, la comunidad del deporte en Estados Unidos ha alzado la voz en un hecho sin precedentes, pues varias ligas se unieron a la protesta y ya son muchas las voces en redes sociales exigiendo justicia.

MLS y MLB también cancelan juegos. El deporte alza la voz y lo celebramos
© Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports

Algunos podrán pensar que no sirve de nada, que no tiene caso protestar. Por supuesto que no, el deporte está respondiendo de manera unida, no son ‘algunos jugadores revoltosos’, son las ligas completas las que exigen un alto al racismo sistemático.

No sabemos hasta donde llegará todo esto, pero siéntanse orgullosos los jugadores de basquetbol, beisbol y futbol que hoy decidieron no ejercer la profesión que aman por buscar un bien común. La historia les reconocerá este día. Y aquí lo celebramos.

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Steph Curry and Klay Thompson react to Doc Rivers’ powerful response to the shooting of Jacob Blake

Klay Thompson and Stephen Curry shared praise for Doc Rivers’ passionate response to the shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

On Tuesday, the Los Angeles Clippers took a 3-2 series lead over Luka Doncic and the Dallas Mavericks with a 154-111 blowout victory.

After the game, Clippers head coach Doc Rivers was asked about the shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Blake, a 29-year-old Black man, was shot in the back seven times by police in Kenosha on Sunday.

When speaking about the Blake shooting, the veteran coach delivered an emotional response inside the Orlando Bubble.

Via @NBAonTNT on Twitter:

It’s just so sad. What stands out to me just watching the Republican [National] Convention, and they’re spewing this fear. All you hear is Donald Trump and all of them talking about fear. We’re the ones getting killed. We’re the ones getting shot. We’re the ones that were denied to live in certain communities. We’ve been hung. We’ve been shot. And all you do is keep hearing about fear. It’s amazing to me why we keep loving this country, and this country does not love us back.

Golden State Warriors guard Klay Thompson thanked Rivers for his powerful message. Thompson shared prayers for Blake and his family, along with those demanding justice in Kenosha.

Via @KlayThompson on Twitter:

Golden State’s two-time Most Valuable Player Steph Curry tweeted he was “proud” to know the Clippers coach, saying there is “so much truth” in every word of his comments.

Via @StephenCurry30 on Twitter:

On Wednesday, the Milwaukee Bucks boycotted game five of their playoff series against the Orlando Magic in response to the Blake shooting in Kenosha.

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Following the Bucks’ decision, players from the Los Angeles Lakers, Portland Trail Blazers, Oklahoma City Thunder, and Houston Rockets boycotted their scheduled games. The league later postponed all three playoff contests.

In wake of the Blake shooting and NBA protests, the Golden State Warriors released a statement.

Via @warriors on Twitter:

Golden State Warriors release statement in response to the shooting of Jacob Blake

The Golden State Warriors have released a statement following the NBA’s playoff protests in response to the shooting of Jacob Blake.

In a historic move on Wednesday, the Milwaukee Bucks stopped the sports world with the decision to boycott game five of their playoff series against the Orlando Magic.

In response to the shooting of Jacob Blake, Bucks players did not take the court against the Magic at the NBA’s Disney World campus. Blake, a Black man, was shot in the back seven times by police in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Sunday. 

After the Bucks protest, two other playoff games were boycotted. Game fives between the Trail Blazers-Lakers and the Thunder-Rockets were postponed. Players and teams from around the NBA shared messages of support for the Bucks’ decision.

The Golden State Warriors released a statement in the wake of the NBA protests and Blake shooting.

Via @warriors on Twitter:

The recent events in Kenosha, Wis., where yet another young Black man, Jacob Blake, was shot by police, are appalling. Unfortunately, this is yet another example of an unacceptable pattern across our country, not only in recent months with George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, but for many painful years. We support NBA players in taking actions designed to shed light and send a loud and clear message: enough is enough. We are united in our stance against racial injustice.

In a separate Tweet, the Warriors demanded change in their “Justice for Jacob” call. Golden State shared contact information for places to demand action for Blake.

Following the NBA player’s lead, Golden State’s Bay Area neighbors, the San Francisco Giants were apart of one of the three MLB games not to be played on Wednesday due to boycotts. The Giants game at Oracle Park in San Francisco against the Los Angeles Dodgers was postponed. 

Via @SFGiants on Twitter: 

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Members of the Warriors react to Bucks boycotting Game 5 vs. Magic in response to the shooting of Jacob Blake

After the Bucks decided to boycott game 5 of their playoff series in response to the shooting of Jacob Blake, Warriors players showed their support on Twitter.

In response to the shooting of Jacob Blake, the Milwaukee Bucks boycotted game five of their postseason series against the Orlando Magic. 

On Sunday, Jacob Blake, a Black man, was shot in the back seven times by police in Kenosha, Wisconsin. The city of Kenosha is located just 40 miles south of Milwaukee. 

The historic day in sports history caused a chain of reactions from players across the NBA. After the Bucks tilt against the Magic did not tipoff, a trio of members from the Golden State Warriors chimed in on Twitter. 

Via @Dami0nLee on Twitter: 

Via @epaschall on Twitter: 

Via @quese on Twitter: 

Former Golden State point guards Shaun Livingston and Baron Davis praised the players for standing in unity. 

Via @ShaunLivingston on Twitter: 

Via @BaronDavis on Twitter: 

After the postponement of NBA games at Disney World, the Golden State Warriors released a statement in response to the shooting of Blake. 

Via @warriors on Twitter: 

The recent events in Kenosha, Wis., where yet another young Black man, Jacob Blake, was shot by police, are appalling. Unfortunately, this is yet another example of an unacceptable pattern across our country, not only in recent months with George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, but for many painful years. We support NBA players in taking actions designed to shed light and send a loud and clear message: enough is enough. We are united in our stance against racial injustice.

Following the Bucks protest, two other playoff games were boycotted by players in the Orlando Bubble. The league has postponed postseason game fives of the Los Angeles Lakers-Portland Trail Blazers and Oklahoma City Thunder-Houston Rockets series.

 According to Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN, NBA players are meeting in the Orlando Bubble to discuss how they’ll progress from Wednesday’s protests. Former Warrior and current NBPA VP Andre Iguodala is slated to speak at the meeting. 

The league has yet to announce if Thursday’s three playoff games will start as scheduled. News surrounding the status of Thursday’s games should follow after Wednesday night’s meeting in Orlando. 

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Rockets, Thunder boycott Game 5 in wake of Jacob Blake shooting

The decision by Houston and Oklahoma City to boycott Game 5 followed a similar choice earlier in the afternoon by the Milwaukee Bucks.

Players on the Houston Rockets and Oklahoma City Thunder jointly decided not to play Wednesday’s Game 5 of their first-round series in the NBA playoffs, as first reported by Shams Charania of The Athletic.

The decision follows a choice by the Milwaukee Bucks to boycott Game 5 of their series against the Orlando Magic over the shooting of Jacob Blake, which occurred in the greater Milwaukee area.

Blake, a 29-year-old Black man who lives in Kenosha, Wisconsin, was shot multiple times in the back by police officers Sunday while he was leaning into an SUV. Police were responding to a domestic dispute call.

Blake is in stable condition, paralyzed from the waist down, according to his father and Ben Crump, the family’s attorney. Blake was unarmed. Three of his six children were in the car when the shots were fired.

The outrage over shooting of Blake comes approximately three months after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis and an associated wave of protests in early June, which had some NBA players questioning whether to restart the 2019-20 season at all — out of fear that it could distract from the “Black Lives Matter” movement.

As for the Rockets and Thunder, whose series remains deadlocked at two games apiece, it is unclear when it will resume. The mutual decision to boycott came after All-Star guards and NBA veterans Russell Westbrook and Chris Paul met in a back hallway at the Disney World arena site, seemingly as the lead representative for each of their teams.

The NBA issued a statement late Wednesday saying that the games would be rescheduled, though a new date has yet to be released.

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LeBron James reacts to police shooting of Jacob Blake in Wisconsin

Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James reacted with disgust and horror at Wisconsin police shooting an unarmed Black man seven times.

Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James could not stay silent as he saw yet another unarmed Black citizen shot by police. James reacted to the video that has emerged from the police shooting unarmed Jacob Blake in the back seven times, in Wisconsin over the weekend. James went on to illustrate why the moment shows the reasons why the NBA has been so vocal in continuing the conversation about police brutality towards Black people, which often goes unpunished. James expressed his anger about how ‘wrong and sad,’ the situation is and ended his statement by demanding justice.

James shared the video, which is very graphic and could be triggering.

The conversation about police brutality, as well as actions including donations from the NBA and its many teams, as well as social justice messaging both on uniforms and on the court, have been major components of the NBA restart. The Milwaukee Bucks, who play in the state where Blake was shot, also released a statement on Monday.

The Lakers continue their first-round series against the Portland Trail Blazers later this evening.

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Kirk Triplett on Black Lives Matter sticker: ‘This message isn’t out here’

Triplett put a Black Lives Matter sticker on his PING golf bag for the Bridgestone Senior Players Championship, which opens Thursday

Kirk Triplett wouldn’t call the Black Lives Matter movement his new passion.

He and wife Cathi’s devotion to the cause of adoption will likely remain his priority because that’s how they brought two of their four children into the family.

But those two worlds intersected after George Floyd’s May 26 death while in custody of the Minneapolis police. The Triplett’s youngest son Kobe is African-American, his biological mother Japanese, his biological father Black.

Watching the ensuing protests worldwide, Triplett realized the discussions he needed to have with Kobe, 18. Triplett also knows that the message is not part of the PGA Tour Champions, which has no Black players among its regulars, and he thought it needed to be.

So Triplett put a Black Lives Matter sticker on his PING golf bag for the $3 million Bridgestone Senior Players Championship, which opens Thursday at Firestone Country Club.

“I’m not trying to make a big statement,” Triplett explained Wednesday. “For the first time I was kind of motivated that I don’t think we’re thinking enough about this in the circles that I travel in. I think we see it. We’re well-read. We understand. But I don’t think things are going to get accomplished until the circles that I travel in really understand it better. Sometimes it’s too easy to really not even think about it. I guess that’s why I put it on there.

“This message isn’t out here. It’s in other sports, it’s in the NBA, it’s in MLS, it’s in the women’s soccer league, it’s in the WNBA. I don’t see it in golf, so I put it on there.”

Kirk Triplett prepares for the Senior Players Championship in Akron, Ohio. (Photo by Phil Mastruzo/Akron Beacon Journal)

Kobe was 10 days old when the Tripletts took him in. He and Cathi had already adopted Alexis, now 20, a Latino who some prospective parents passed over because her 40-year-old biological mother had used methamphetamines. After three in vitro attempts, Cathi Triplett became pregnant with twin boys, Conor and Sam, now 24, but subsequent treatments failed as they tried to expand their family.

Staying at home with Champions Tour events canceled during the coronavirus pandemic gave Triplett time to think about things, he said.

“Being at home, reading the news a lot … A lot of times things in the world don’t affect me very much, but the protests and the stuff affected me this year,” Triplett said. “Not just in the sense of what’s going on in the world, but in the sense of ‘Oh, these are discussions I need to have with my son.’

“I thought, ‘Well, I don’t have to have the same discussion with my other sons.’ Since the discussion is going to be different, I don’t think that hits home and resonates with people unless it’s them.”

Triplett isn’t sure how Kobe feels about the sticker on his bag. Triplett said Kobe, a high school senior in Scottsdale, Arizona, might not like the attention if classes were in session.

“I don’t know, he doesn’t always share. He’s a teenage boy, he likes to be under the radar,” Triplett said. “I think if there was a lot of publicity surrounding this or publicity that affected him or if he was in school, he’d be uncomfortable with it. But he’s not, he’s learning from home and he’s a pretty quiet kid. When we have these conversations, I know he’s listening, but teenagers don’t always let you know that they’re listening.”

Triplett said he didn’t wait until the protests began to bring up systemic racism with Kobe.

“We’ve been talking to him for many years about the fact that, ‘You may get in some situations where you don’t understand why people are coming at you the way they are,’” Triplett said. “He’s experienced it a few times, so he knows it. He doesn’t see it I don’t think on the scale that some people … depending on which part of the country they live in or what their economic situation is. Your economic situation can shield you from so many of these things.

“We’ve talked about it and it usually sort of gets shrugged off and how could it not, because it really isn’t part of his day-to-day life.”

The Tripletts adopted Kobe and Alexis with the help of Debi Rolfing, wife of longtime NBC golf announcer Mark Rolfing, now with the Golf Channel. The Rolfings live in Kapalua, Hawaii, on the island of Maui, where Debi is a foster care parent.

“We’re not trying to change the world, we just wanted to have more kids and these were two kids we thought we could make a difference in their lives,” Triplett said. “More importantly, they’ve made a difference in ours.”

Triplett laughed when asked how his son got the name Kobe, saying Mark Rolfing initially wanted to name him Tiger.

“He goes, ‘No, that’s too big of a name,’ so Mark named him Kobe,” Triplett said. “When we adopted him, we were like, ‘Should we change his name? They’ve already been calling him Kobe for 10 days.’”

Triplett said he doesn’t know if his feelings about Black Lives Matter will ever rival how strongly he feels about adoption. But that wasn’t the point of the sticker prominent on his white golf bag.

“I don’t envision that being the case. For me it was more, ‘Think about this,’” Triplett said. “If somebody will just go on the web site and look. More of the stories that we have about this are anecdotal and we don’t really know the true depth of the issues and I don’t profess to. I have no answers at all.

“But I do know when you have a segment of the population that is frightened of the people that are there to help with their public safety, you have an issue. You have an issue.”

Marla Ridenour can be reached at mridenour@thebeaconjournal.com. Follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/MRidenourABJ.

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How a Black PGA club pro from Delaware is trying to make golf more diverse

Delaware golf pro Earl Cooper is working to make golf more diverse.

The golf course can be a lonely place for a Black man or woman.

“You still often feel like you’re the only one,” said Earl Cooper.

The Wilmington, Delaware resident is exactly that — a solitary figure.

The Professional Golf Association has 29,000 certified pros. Just 165 of them are African-American, including just Cooper, according to the PGA.

“There’s this common thread that we have that brings us all together in loving golf,” Cooper said. “But, at the end of the day, golf has a very racial background. Segregation and exclusivity has definitely been within that sport.’’

In 1961, the PGA actually removed a “Caucasian-only” clause from its bylaws that belatedly opened the doors for minority golfers. Many more opportunities were available by the time Cooper, now 31, became a PGA teaching pro.

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Yet, he still inexperienced episodes of unfairness which he attributed to his race. He recalled a tournament in his mid-teens when, after returning home, directors called to say he’d been disqualified for signing an incorrect scorecard. Another golfer said he’d written down a nine when he scored a 10 on a hole.

“If I’m getting nines and 10s I’m not winning,” Cooper said, able to laugh at the memory now. “It hurt because nobody wanted to hear my side of the story.”

As a pro, Cooper was mistaken several times for a caddy, valet or member of the wait staff, he said.

While the PGA has had a diversity and inclusion program aimed at growing the sport, it has long been branded as the domain of affluent and white participants.

Former Wilmington Country Club pro Earl Cooper is now Wilmington mayor Mike Purzycki’s community referral specialist but continues to teach golf.

After George Floyd’s May death and the national outcry for racial justice that followed, Cooper sought to bring the PGA more into the BlackLivesMatter conversation. He found a receptive audience after putting together a video in which he and other PGA pros, Black and white, made “Black Lives Matter” statements. It ended with Cooper asking the PGA of America “to stand with us” and make the same proclamation.

It led to the PGA making a video as part of the “8:46” campaign CBS has launched to raise awareness about racial injustice. Floyd’s death came after a Minneapolis policeman put a knee to his neck for what was initially reported to be 8 minutes and 46 seconds.

The video is airing during telecasts of this weekend’s PGA Championship on ESPN Friday and CBS Saturday and Sunday at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco.

Earl Cooper in his youth golf days. (Delaware News Journal)

“When you go through these experiences,” Cooper said in the video, “it’s like, man, I love the game so why are you treating me this way?”

During the video, Cooper is shown in a News Journal article written about him when he was 13 by Matt Zabitka. Cooper had gotten his start age 6 when his dad signed him up for the LPGA Urban Youth Program, which is now the First Tee of Delaware.

In that story, Cooper’s father Earl explained how he wanted his son “to play a sport that wasn’t as violent as football or boxing” and would but him “around good company.” By that time, Cooper was already competing in regional tournaments and winning long-drive competitions.

He graduated from A.I. du Pont High, where he was on the golf team, and then attended Wilmington University before transferring to Morehouse College in Atlanta. In 2010, Cooper helped Morehouse, among the nation’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities, win the PGA Minority Collegiate Golf Championship in Division II.

After graduating with a degree in political science, he worked as an assistant pro at golf courses in Florida and Michigan. Wilmington Country Club head pro Joe Guillebeau then hired him as an assistant pro on his staff in 2015. Guillebeau had gotten to know Cooper when he was in high school and A.I. played home matches at Wilmington.

Cooper later left his Wilmington Country Club position to serve as community referral specialist for Wilmington Mayor Mike Purzycki, focusing, he said, on public/private partnerships. Purzycki had befriended Cooper while playing golf at Wilmington CC, where he is a member.

“I’m very proud of him and I’m not the slightest bit surprised,” Purzycki said. “ . . . I always had the sense that Earl wanted to make a much bigger impact on the world.”

Among Cooper’s accomplishments was putting together last September’s HBCU College Fair at Wilmington’s 76ers Fieldhouse, which featured a live airing of ESPN’s “First Take.”

Charma Bell, the program director at the First Tee of Delaware, with Earl Cooper, a certified PGA Professional and former student in the First Tee program. (Delaware News Journal)

“He’s inspirational because of his convictions about things,” said Purzycki, adding that the recent push for racial equality “was made for him.”

Cooper has stayed busy in the sport by operating Earl Cooper Golf, providing instruction, has authored several children’s books and manages his Eastside Golf clothing line.

Charlie Sifford became the first Black to earn a PGA Tour card in 1961. Three years later, Pete Brown’s win at the Waco Turner Open was the first by a Black golfer at a PGA event.

“The struggle is real, the struggle continues,” PGA pro Jeff Dunovant of Atlanta says in the “8:46” video, “and it’s up to us to try and make it easier for everyone else following us.”

The success of Tiger Woods, who won the first of his 15 majors at the 1997 Masters, certainly inched golf closer to the mainstream but not all the way.

“The PGA always says ‘We want our organization to look more like America,’ ” Cooper said. “I think that’s a great statement to have but at this rate it would take 139 years if everything stayed the same.”

Recent breakthroughs are, however, cause for optimism.

“You love the game,” Cooper said, “and you want it to love you back.’’

Contact Kevin Tresolini at ktresolini@delawareonline.com and follow on Twitter @kevintresolini.

Trump cree que es vergonzoso que jugadores de la NBA no respeten bandera

Luego de que la NBA enviara un poderoso mensaje en contra del racismo en la reanudación de a temporada, el presidente Donald Trump consideró estos actos como ‘vergonzosos’. El presidente compartió su postura contra el apoyo de la NBA al movimiento …

Luego de que la NBA enviara un poderoso mensaje en contra del racismo en la reanudación de a temporada, el presidente Donald Trump consideró estos actos como ‘vergonzosos’.

El presidente compartió su postura contra el apoyo de la NBA al movimiento ‘Black Lives Matter’ en entrevista para la cadena Fox y no se mostró muy contento.

“Cuando veo gente arrodillada durante el partido y sin respetar nuestra bandera y nuestro himno nacional, lo que hago personalmente es apagar el partido.

“Creo que es vergonzoso. Trabajamos con ellos (la NBA) para tratar de volver, estuve presionando para que volvieran. Y entonces los veo a todos arrodillados durante el himno. Eso no es aceptable para mí. Cuando los veo arrodillarse durante el partido, solo desconecto. No tengo ningún interés en el partido. Y permítanme decirles esto, muchas otras personas tampoco”, explicó Trump.

La postura de la NBA ha sido clara y contundente, no censurarán ningún tipo de protesta dentro y fuera del campo mientras se mantenga en los límites del respeto.

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