NBA players protest racial
injustice as league returns to action
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[July 31, 2020]
By Rory Carroll
(Reuters) - NBA teams bowed their heads
and knelt during the playing of the U.S. national anthem while
wearing Black Lives Matter T-shirts on Thursday as the league
returned for the first time since the coronavirus halted play in
March with two thrilling games.
Coaches and game officials joined players from the Utah Jazz, New
Orleans Pelicans and Los Angeles Lakers and Clippers in taking a
knee to protest against racial injustice and police brutality in the
first games in 140 days.
Black Lives Matter was also written on the courts at the ESPN Wide
World of Sports Complex in the Walt Disney World Resort near
Orlando, where the NBA plans to finish its season with 22 teams
inside a bio-secure bubble.
"The game of basketball has always been bigger than just the ball,
the rim, 10 guys on the floor and referees," the Lakers LeBron James
said after hitting the game-winning shot in his team's 103-101 win
over the Clippers.
"It's an opportunity to use this platform to spread a lot of
positivity and love throughout the whole world."
He said that while there has been progress in the fight against
systemic racism, the key was to maintain the momentum.
"We want to keep our foot on the gas," he said. "We're dealing with
a lot of racism, a lot of social injustice and a lot of police
brutality, not only in my neighborhood and not only with Black
people, but with all people of color."
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Members of the New Orleans Pelicans wear Black Lives Matter
references on their jerseys and shirts during the first half of an
NBA basketball game against the Utah Jazz. Mandatory Credit: Ashley
Landis/Pool Photo via USA TODAY Sports
Some players had messages like "Equality," "Education Reform" and
"Say Their Names" on the backs of their jerseys in place of their
names.
Athletes from around the world have united behind anti-racism
protests sparked by the death of George Floyd, a Black man in police
custody in Minneapolis in May.
In the first game, the Jazz came from behind to defeat the Pelicans
106-104 after the Pelicans' Brandon Ingram's three-pointer at the
buzzer rimmed out.
The games are being played without fans, but "virtual fans" appeared
on LED screens wrapped around the court and a simulation of a
crowd's cheers and jeers could be heard.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Editing by Ed Osmond and
William Mallard)
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