Rockets hold company service day at Houston’s historic Freedmen’s Town

Rafael Stone, Ime Udoka, Jabari Smith Jr., and Kevin Porter Jr. joined numerous #Rockets staffers to take part in Friday’s company-wide service day at Freedmen’s Town in Houston.

In appreciation of Juneteenth, Rockets and Toyota Center employees took part Friday in a company-wide day of service at historic Freedmen’s Town, which is located in Houston’s Fourth Ward.

Young players Jabari Smith Jr. and Kevin Porter Jr. were joined at the site by general manager Rafael Stone, new head coach Ime Udoka, president of business operations Gretchen Sheirr and dozens of other staffers to conduct cleanup tasks at Saulnier House, Wiley Park and Freedmen’s Town Association. In 2020, the Rockets produced a video highlighting the area’s historical significance.

Saulnier House was one of the original homes built in Freedmen’s Town after emancipation was proclaimed in Texas on June 19, 1865.

After taking part in Friday’s service work, Stone, Udoka, and the players all met with lodal media members. Scroll on for a roundup of quotes, photos, and videos related to the organization’s service day, and click here for their responses to basketball-related questions.

McTelvin Agim, a Texas native, talks about Juneteenth holiday

Juneteenth became a federal holiday last year.

An 11th federal holiday was added on June 19, 2021.

Juneteenth was first recognized last year after president Joe Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act into law. June 19, 1865 marks the day when African American slaves in Galveston, Texas, were among the last to be told they had been freed.

For reference, 1865 was over two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation outlawed slavery and two months after the Civil War ended.

On June 19, 1865, Major General Gordon Granger delivered General Order No. 3 in Galveston, Texas. In other words, he informed residents of President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and that the army now intended to enforce the law in the state.

Third-year defensive lineman McTelvin Agim is a Texas native.

“When it was explained to me, it was that, us, as slaves, we were sold so many times we lost contact with a lot of our family,” Agim said in an interview with DenverBroncos.com. “So when we were finally able to have our freedom, they reached out to those families and got together and then celebrated being able to be around each other. So when I found out the meaning of that, it just put Juneteenth and our family reunions in a whole different light for me.”

Agim added that Juneteenth celebrations typically include “old-school music” playing at barbecues. Celebrations usually take place at grandmother’s house or the park. While kids are running around, older family members play spades or dominoes.

To learn more about Juneteenth, check out the league’s official website.

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Chiefs’ Justin Reid, Trent McDuffie visited Negro Leagues Baseball Museum for Juneteenth

A pair of new #Chiefs celebrated #Juneteenth by taking a trip to @NLBMuseumKC with over a dozen football players from Lincoln College Preparatory Academy.

June 19th (commonly referred to as Juneteenth) is a federal holiday that commemorates the official end of slavery in the United States. To celebrate the holiday this past weekend, a pair of new Kansas City Chiefs were out in the community, educating and being educated at the historic Negro Leagues Baseball Museum (NLBM) in Kansas City, Missouri.

Joined by the president of the NLBM, Bob Kendrick, and over a dozen football players from Lincoln College Preparatory Academy, Chiefs CB Trent McDuffie and S Justin Reid learned about the history and importance of the Negro Leagues.

“I don’t care what sport you might play,” Kendrick said. “All roads lead to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.”

Both Reid and McDuffie had never been to the NLBM before. They had the opportunity to learn about how many of the athletes who played in this league were pioneers for professional sports as we currently know them. Both players had some revelations from their experience at the museum.

“America’s game was baseball at the time,” Reid said. “So, a lot of the greatest athletes played in this league. Their love and passion for playing their sport bled into culture and ended up making revolutionary changes in society.”

“One thing that I really found interesting was that at the Negro League games, the crowd was not segregated,” McDuffie said. “Everybody sat together. Compared to other Major League Baseball games at that time — they were segregated. To me, that was really cool, because you never really hear about that and those certain things that morphed society into what it is today.”

Kendrick emphasized that the story of the Negro Leagues teaches us about overcoming adversity. That’s a good lesson for both McDuffie and Reid to be reminded of ahead of the start of the season. It also served as an opportunity for both players to learn a bit about their new home and those who came before them.

“For me, Kansas City now is home,” McDuffie said. “Just being able to come here and feel like I’m a part of the community is special.”

McDuffie spoke at length to Chiefs team reporter Matt McMullen from the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum for the “Defending the Kingdom” podcast. You can watch that interview here. To find out more about the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, you can visit their website here.

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Houston native, former Texans S Michael Thomas reflects on Juneteenth

Former Houston Texans safety and Nimitz High School product Michael Thomas reflects on what Juneteenth means to him in a new Inspire Change video.

Saturday marks the first time in United States history that Americans observe Juneteenth as a federal holiday.

The holiday landmarks the official ending of slavery in the United States. Civil War Union General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston on June 19, 1865 to declared that all slaves were free due to the Emancipation Proclamation Act — two years after its passing.

As part of the league’s Inspire Change program, Houston native and former Texans safety Michael Thomas took part in an NFL feature that showcases the importance of Juneteenth and its history.

“I’m looking forward to having a conversation with a couple of historians who can teach me about Juneteenth,” Thomas said. “Being from Texas, I’ve learned about it in school. But to be here on the ground, it’s going to be amazing.”

Galveston Historical Foundation’s Tommie D. Boudreaux joined the former Pro-Bowl safety to discuss the significance and revisit Juneteenth’s famous locations within the city. The Reedy Chapel AME Church was one of several historic locations Thomas and Boudreaux visited during the 4:23 video, where General Granger proclaimed the end of slavery.

Boudreaux said Juneteenth is an American story and is part of the nation’s history. Al Edwards was the first American politician to present a bill to make Juneteenth a state holiday. But on June 17, President Joe Biden signed the bill marking Juneteenth as a federal holiday — the 11th in American history.

Click here to watch Michael Thomas explore the history of Juneteenth in Galveston with Tommie D. Boudreaux.

Daelin Hayes Named Semifinalist for Jason Witten Man of the Year

After missing almost all of last season, Daelin Hayes has more than made up for lost time.

After missing almost all of last season, Daelin Hayes has more than made up for lost time. In fact, he has proven to be a real role model both on and off the field. One reward for that is being named one of 20 national semifinalist for this year’s Jason Witten Collegiate Man of the Year Award. The criteria for the award includes high marks in integrity, courage and sportsmanship.

Returning from a serious injury proved easier said than done when COVID-19 hit and suspended team football activities. But you never would have known that with how dominant Hayes and his fellow defensive linemen have been, and they’ve been crucial in giving Notre Dame the fifth-best rushing defense in the nation. A captain in his fifth season, he also spoke at the Juneteenth Rally on campus, is part of the football team’s Unity Council and also active in the South Bend community. He also regularly leads his team when it performs community service.

Russell Westbrook speaks at Tulsa Juneteenth party opposite Trump

In a Juneteenth celebration, the former NBA MVP delivered strong remarks on the importance of Black lives and the racial justice movement.

At the same day and time as U.S. President Donald Trump held a campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, former Oklahoma City Thunder star Russell Westbrook joined a separate party to promote racial justice.

In a virtual appearance on Saturday night’s Tulsa Juneteenth Block Party celebration, the former NBA MVP and nine-time All-Star discussed the importance of young people standing up for their beliefs.

Now 31 years old and a member of the Houston Rockets, Westbrook offered candid remarks on difficult subjects. He said:

I feel like it’s my duty — not just as an African-American male, but being in this position [and] having this platform — to now be able to show and let people know that it’s okay to stand up for what you believe in. It’s okay to be able to sacrifice. It’s okay to be able to stand up and be strong and understand how important your word, your movement, the youth movement is. Because I believe that with my platform, I’m able to kind of reach that demographic of people and kids around the world to let them know it’s okay to be able to stand up.

Westbrook identified voting, improving the police system, and racism as three critical issues. “Finding ways to be able to lift those three things up to be able to change our world is important,” he said.

Regarding recent issues of police brutality, Westbrook added:

I don’t want my kids growing up to see the police as somebody that is bad for them, to see them as somebody that’s gonna potentially to be able to kill them. That’s something that we need to change.

Regarding the importance of voting, Westbrook said:

I feel like my duty is to be able to get people educated on why you should vote, understand what you’re voting for, understand why you should vote. … That’s where I want to be able to make change in today’s society.

Saturday’s event came on the weekend of an important celebration in Black culture. Known as Juneteenth, June 19 is the oldest nationally celebrated commemoration of the ending of slavery. Dating back to 1865, it was that day when Union soldiers arrived in Galveston, Texas, with news that the U.S. Civil War had ended and that the enslaved were now free.

As with many U.S. locations, Tulsa has seen its share of racial issues, historically. It was the site of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, when mobs of white residents attacked black residents and businesses. Some have called it “the single worst incident of racial violence in American history.”

Westbrook’s Saturday event  — which also featured other speakers such as U.S. Senator Kamala Harris — ran at the same time as Trump’s campaign rally in Tulsa and effectively served as counter-programming. That wasn’t a coincidence, and it’s also not the first time that Westbrook has signaled his disapproval of the president, who has drawn ire from many for the handling of race relations during his presidency.

In September 2017, when Westbrook was a member of the Oklahoma City Thunder, Trump called out NFL players who were protesting police brutality by kneeling during the U.S. national anthem. Westbrook, who at the time was the NBA’s reigning MVP, responded by saying this:

Obviously, the things he’s saying is outrageous, in my opinion. It’s uncalled for, especially due to all the other things we have going on in the world. You know, the people, the families, the people all across the world that are hurting, that need help, that need guidance from our house. But I think it’s unnecessary and uncalled for. I’m definitely not in agreement to anything he says, and I never will be.

Saturday’s celebration was the latest in a series of recent events in which Westbrook has helped spotlight the racial justice movement.

After the May 2020 death of George Floyd, who died when a white police officer kneeled on his neck for over eight minutes during an arrest in Minneapolis, the movement has picked up in intensity in recent weeks with demonstrations throughout the country. On June 7, Westbrook spoke at a Black Lives Matter protest in his hometown of Los Angeles.

Tulsa also holds personal significance to Westbrook, who played the first 11 years of his NBA career in nearby Oklahoma City. Earlier this month, Westbrook announced that he would be serving as executive producer of a new documentary series on the Tulsa Race Massacre.

“Spending 11 years in Oklahoma opened my eyes to the rich and sordid history of the state,” Westbrook said. He continued:

When I learned about the heartbreaking events that happened in Tulsa nearly 100 years ago, I knew this was a story I wanted to tell. It’s upsetting that the atrocities that transpired then are still so relevant today. It’s important we uncover the buried stories of African Americans in this country. We must amplify them, now more than ever, if we want to create change moving forward.

It’s clear that Westbrook is intent on using his fame and platform to help promote change in communities, and Saturday’s virtual party was the latest example of him finding his voice away from the basketball court.

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Daelin Hayes Speaks at Notre Dame Juneteenth Rally

Like many locations around the country, Notre Dame served as a location for a Juneteenth rally Friday.

Like many locations around the country, Notre Dame served as a location for a Juneteenth rally Friday. Among the participants in South Bend were members of the Irish football team, coaches from every varsity sport and the Rev. John Jenkins, the university’s president. About 1,500 people gathered on a 90-degree day.

Irish defensive end Daelin Hayes was among the speakers to the crowd. He talked about him and his fiancee visiting Lincoln Elementary School in South Bend twice a week to work on conflict resolution with students there. He hoped his teammates would be involved with community outreach programs, too.

Hayes and offensive lineman Max Siegel also called for Notre Dame to mandate cultural competency classes for the university’s incoming freshmen. While Hayes spoke out against discrimination and called for the university to diversify across the board, Siegel shared some unsettling stories involving his race in the classroom and around campus.

Notre Dame is known for building and fostering leaders. These may be among its important ones yet. Change already is happening, and it’s starting with young people like these.

Watch: Lions collaborate with former players for series of Juneteenth messages

The Detroit Lions collaborated with several former players for series of Juneteenth video messages on social justice.

Earlier in the week, the Detroit Lions released a prepared statement declaring Juneteenth a permanent organizational holiday.

“The Detroit Lions and Ford Field are establishing the observance of Juneteenth as a permanent organizational holiday and closing their offices Friday, June, 19th,” The Lions statement read. “Staff will be encouraged to use the day as an opportunity to reflect and further their awareness around racial inequality and social justice.”

Today, in addition to observing Juneteenth, the Lions used their social media platform to share video messages from former players as a way of “bringing awareness to social injustices in our world.”

You can watch all of the video’s in the tweets below:

Nate Burleson

Stephen Tulloch

Robert Porcher

Dre Bly

Joique Bell

Andre Fluellen

Thunder organization, players post Juneteenth messages

On Juneteenth, the Oklahoma City Thunder and some of its players posted messages to commemorate the end of slavery in the United States.

The Oklahoma City Thunder and some of its players shared messages to honor and celebrate Juneteenth.

This day commemorates the end of slavery in the United States. On June 19, 1865, Union soliders arrived in Galveston, Texas, to the last of the enslaved population.

They informed the African Americans there that they were no longer slaves. It was about two months after the Confederacy surrendered the Civil War and about two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed.

The reason it took two months after the war ended is disputed, according to Juneteenth.com.

Juneteenth became a Texas state holiday in 1980.

Oklahoma State Representative Jason Lowe said he will propose legislation to make it a state holiday in Oklahoma, too, according to 5NewsOnline.

This year’s Juneteenth falls during the midst of protests over racial disparity and injustice. The Thunder posted a message to Twitter to honor the day.

The organization’s podcast, the Thunder Basketball Universe, spoke with Dr. Karlos Hill, chair of African & African American Studies at University of Oklahoma, and Mautra Jones, vice president of Langston University, about the meaning and history of the day and how we can advance as a society.

Chris Paul tweeted a graphic and posted a second to Instagram with the caption “The work continues.”

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Andre Roberson retweeted a short animated video explaining what the day means.

Terrance Ferguson posted a photo to Instagram.

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Luguentz Dort shared two Instagram posts: one from the Thunder organization and the other from Arizona State, where he played college basketball.

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On Juneteenth, DT Gerald McCoy asks Cowboys owner to ‘say something’

The Cowboys’ new defensive tackle is walking the walk on Juneteenth and asking new boss Jerry Jones to finally talk the talk.

Gerald McCoy is already showing himself to be a leader for the 2020 Dallas Cowboys, even though he has yet to set foot in the building. The six-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle, signed by the club in late March, is lending his voice to growing calls to make Juneteenth a national holiday. He called on his new Cowboys teammates to join him in a 2.5-mile walk on Friday, a show of solidarity with Opal Lee, the 92-year-old retired teacher who walked from her Fort Worth home all the way to the nation’s capital (two and a half miles at a time, in 2016 and again in 2019) in an attempt to get the date recognized officially.

But McCoy also had some words for his new boss, Cowboys team owner Jerry Jones, who has yet to weigh in publicly with a stance on the events that have gripped the country since the May 25 death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police.

Appearing on ESPN’s First Take on Friday to mark the occasion of Juneteenth, McCoy was asked about the deafening silence that has come from the owner of America’s Team.

“When you have a franchise as recognizable as the Cowboys, “McCoy said, “people listen when they speak up. And the owner, Jerry Jones- who is one of the most recognizable figures in sports history- when he speaks, everybody listens. Well, I think at this point in time, I feel it would be great to hear him say something positive, or say anything. I love what he’s been to the sport. He’s been excellent to the sport of football. He’s a Hall of Famer. But at this point, it’s bigger than football. We need him to speak up about life. This is about human beings and equal rights. And that’s not what’s happening. And it would be great to hear him say something. Anything.”

Jones has taken considerable heat for his uncharacteristic radio silence. Former Cowboys receiver Dez Bryant tweeted that he’d like to have seen Jones attend one of the many protests that followed Floyd’s death. 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman called out Jones as well, in comments to a San Francisco newspaper.

This week, First Take cohost Stephen A. Smith offered a scathing rant directed at Jones. The team made a mention of Juneteenth via their social media accounts and spotlighted former defensive end Greg Ellis’s theatrical production, “Juneteenth: The Stage Play.” But for Smith, a rabid Cowboys hater, it’s not the same as a formal statement from the man at the top.

“Even more disappointing” than Jones’s silence, Smith said, “is that I haven’t heard one single Dallas Cowboy call for Jerry Jones to speak on this issue. Where the hell are they?”

McCoy’s pointed comments 24 hours later may have come too late and too softly for Smith’s liking. But they were not, in fact, the only ones to have come from a Cowboys notable.

On June 3, quarterback Dak Prescott posted an eloquent series of messages via Instagram detailing his perspective and pledging $1 million in support of police training, education, and advocacy.

Running back Ezekiel Elliott was one of the players featured in the video directed at NFL commissioner Roger Goodell two weeks ago, prompting the commissioner to release a video response of his own condemning racism and admitting the league was wrong to not listen to players’ previous criticisms regarding the issue of race.

Several Cowboys, including Prescott, wide receiver Amari Cooper, Ring of Honor legend Emmitt Smith, former Cowboys defensive star DeMarcus Ware, and three-time Super Bowl offensive lineman Nate Newton were among the hundreds of sports notables who signed a letter supporting the end of qualified immunity for violent police officers.

Speaking with Rich Eisen, Hall of Fame wide receiver Michael Irvin shared personal stories of his own experiences with systemic racism and described it as a problem that “we have to root out.”

The Cowboys organization released a video, the first in a promised series, that, according the team website, “reflects the organization’s statement regarding the recent tragedies in our country while also disclosing interactions between the team, its players, and community leaders.”

And most recently, defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence pledged to join McCoy for local Opal’s Walk events on Friday and Saturday. The two and a half miles of the walk represent the two and a half years that Black Texans waited between the Emancipation Proclamation, which abolished slavery, and the day that message finally arrived in Galveston.

McCoy, who still has not met most of his new teammates or coaches face to face, clearly grasps the club’s unique place in the landscape of professional sports. His conversation with the First Take crew echoes remarks he made to ESPN that show his apparent willingness to use his newly-elevated profile to address the current climate alongside the Cowboys veterans who have already done so.

“You have the players, who have their own brand, but we’re all under the umbrella of the Dallas Cowboys,” McCoy said, per Todd Archer. “The Dallas Cowboys are the most recognized franchise in the world. They can get behind it, whether it’s the players or just being in the movement, period, and showing their support. It would be great to hear a statement from the Cowboys, great to hear a statement from Jerry Jones in support of everything that’s going on. Will that get me in trouble saying that? I don’t know, but the truth is it needs to be said. The problem is people are afraid to have the conversations.”

Gerald McCoy is talking the talk on racial inequality in America. And on Juneteenth, he’s also walking the walk.

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