LeBron James says President Trump 'trying to divide through sport'
- Published
Basketball star LeBron James has praised the American football players who have protested against Donald Trump, and accused the US president of "using sports to try and divide us".
Trump said on Friday that NFL players who fail to stand during the national anthem should be sacked or suspended.
In widespread protests at the weekend, players responded by kneeling, linking arms or staying in the locker room.
James praised the players' unity, and said: "The people run this country."
The 32-year-old added: "I'm not going to let one individual, no matter their power, ever use sport as a platform to divide us.
"Sport is so amazing, what it can do for everyone. No matter the shape, size, weight, ethnicity, religion or whatever - people find teams, players and colours because of sport. It brings people together like none other."
James, who plays for the Cleveland Cavaliers and has won three NBA championships, campaigned for Hillary Clinton, Trump's rival, during the 2016 presidential election campaign.
How did we get here?
Quarterback Colin Kaepernick was one of the first players to kneel during the national anthem last year, in protest at the treatment of black Americans.
Speaking at a Republican rally on Friday, Trump described those who knelt as "sons of bitches", adding they should be sacked by team owners.
More than 20 players and staff from the Baltimore Ravens and the Jacksonville Jaguars knelt or linked arms before their match at Wembley on Sunday.
There was a similar response at all of the weekend's NFL matches, with three teams remaining in the locker rooms or tunnel for the duration of the anthem.
And on Monday, Dallas Cowboys players were joined by team owner Jerry Jones in taking a knee before the singing of the national anthem in the build-up to their game against the Arizona Cardinals.
Jones was one of seven NFL owners to donate to Trump's inauguration.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell praised the players, saying Trump's comments "demonstrate an unfortunate lack of respect for the NFL, our great game and a failure to understand the overwhelming force for good our clubs and players represent in our communities".
Trump said on Monday his previous comments had "nothing to do with race" but were about "respect for our country, flag and national anthem".
How did James respond?
As well as his comments about NFL players, Trump had said the Golden State Warriors were no longer invited to the White House to mark their NBA title after Steph Curry said he did not want to attend.
James responded by describing the president as a "bum".
Speaking on Monday, he added: "We know this is the greatest country in the world - the land of the free - but we still have problems just like everybody else.
"When we have those problems, we can't forget how great we can be as a people, because the people run this country."
James added he wanted to do his best to make a difference for those who were struggling.
"I will lend my voice, my passion and my money to the youth, to my inner city and those outside my inner city," he said.
"I want to let these kids know there is hope and not one individual, no matter if it's the president of the United States or someone in your household, that can stop your dreams from becoming a reality."
How have other sportspeople reacted?
Oakland Athletics catcher Bruce Maxwell, whose father is in the military, knelt before a Major League Baseball game, saying he did so "for the people that don't have a voice".
Elsewhere, singer Rico Lavelle knelt and raised his first after performing the national anthem at an NFL game in Detroit.
Owners of Nascar teams, however, have threatened to sack employees who protest.
Ice hockey's Pittsburgh Penguins, meanwhile, have accepted Trump's invitation to the White House to mark their championship win.
American writer Warner Todd Huston, who works for right-wing publication Breitbart, told BBC Radio 5 live public opinion was "decidedly split".
"What he [Trump] said was indelicate, certainly, but we all know that that's Trump being Trump," Huston added.
"We have the conservative side, Republicans who think all the protests are an anti-American protest, whereas people on the left feel it is just a protest against endemic racism in the country.
"It's definitely been divisive. There are two camps and almost no-one in between."
- Attribution
- Published25 September 2017
- Published25 September 2017