Ottawa Citizen

While Silver cautiously straddles a line on China, NBA misses opportunit­y

Idea of sports as driver of social progress mostly a fallacy, writes Kevin Blackiston­e.

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In 1968, the Mexican army opened fire on students protesting the authoritar­ian regime of president Gustavo Diaz Ordazan in Tlatelolco Plaza, the death toll never released. Ten days later, the 1968 Summer Games in Mexico City commenced. Like nothing happened.

While no deaths have been reported among Hong Kong protesters objecting to China’s attempt to impose its authoritar­ian rule, police shot a protester at close range, and a reported 1,100 people have been injured in the four-month-long standoff.

But the NBA maintained its pre-season games in China scheduled to tip off Thursday. Like nothing happened.

At least until it was discovered that Houston general manager Daryl Morey retweeted a slogan in support of those demonstrat­ing in Hong Kong.

NBA commission­er Adam Silver, who last year counted a Chinese audience 2.5 times that of the U.S. population watch his league’s games on TV, tablet or smartphone, issued an apology to any offended Chinese, such as Joseph Tsai, the billionair­e co-founder of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba and owner of the NBA’s Brooklyn Nets. Tsai wrote on Facebook: “The hurt that this incident has caused will take a long time to repair.”

Chinese sponsors of Morey’s team pulled their advertisem­ents. Chinese broadcaste­rs said they wouldn’t show Rockets games. The Chinese Basketball Associatio­n, headed by former Rockets star and Chinese legend Yao Ming, announced it was suspending its relationsh­ip with Ming’s former team.

Morey abruptly deleted his tweet.

It was the latest reminder the notion of sport as being fearless on the front lines of social change is more fallacy than reality. It should be remembered that the original big sports in the United States — horse racing, boxing and baseball — racially segregated themselves in accordance with Jim Crow laws rather than fight the apartheid system those laws inflicted.

And when billions of dollars are involved, as with the case of the NBA and China, the blindness is even more complete.

“If the NBA had no business in China, I’m sure it would probably be saluting Daryl Morey as a human-rights advocate,” said Robert McChesney, a University of Illinois scholar who critiques media’s intersecti­on with politics. “But the money is just so astronomic­al, you can buy someone for that sort of money, clearly.”

That is what China did. It purchased whatever soul the

NBA had. It bought off a league many observers thought in recent years was some sort of paragon to progressiv­ism despite evidence to the contrary, such as its owners’ historical preference of supporting Republican presidenti­al candidates over Democratic hopefuls.

Although longtime Clippers owner Donald Sterling was infamous as this country’s biggest offender of fair housing laws, the supposedly enlightene­d didn’t call for his ouster until he was discovered sharing bigoted beliefs with his mistress.

“It’s easy to be progressiv­e on civil rights issues when 80 per cent of your players are African-American,” McChesney observed. “Let’s face it, if you’re a white supremacis­t, you’re probably not an NBA fan.”

But the league that stood up for LeBron James when reactionar­y media pundits argued he should shut up and dribble, rather than stand up and protest, effectivel­y told Morey this week to sit down and manage after he spoke up to tyranny. Morey complied.

It was disingenuo­us at best on the NBA’s part, and cowardly at worst.

To be sure, Turkish NBA centre Enes Kanter on Monday tweeted apparent support for Morey. It was significan­t because Kanter long has voiced sharp rebukes of Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has cracked down on dissidents and journalist­s and cast such a shadow over his opposition, such as Kanter, that Kanter refused to travel to Europe last season with his team out of fear of being kidnapped by Erdogan’s forces.

At the time, NBA commission­er Silver said: “We live in a world where these are issues that he is dealing with. And I recognize that for the NBA, because we’re a global business, we have to pay attention to these issues as well.”

The NBA doesn’t have a billion-dollar tie to Turkey as it does to China. Maybe if it did, Kanter wouldn’t feel so comfortabl­e with his employer. On Tuesday, Silver again sought to claim some middle ground.

“It is inevitable that people around the world — including from America and China — will have different viewpoints over different issues. It is not the role of the NBA to adjudicate those difference­s,” he said. “However, the NBA will not put itself in a position of regulating what players, employees and team owners say or will not say on these issues.”

While that seemed to be supportive of the rights of NBA employees, it ignored the considerab­le influence the league could wield if it so chose.

“The NBA is a uniquely positioned sports league,” McChesney, an avowed NBA addict, pointed out. “Basketball in the course of the last 40 years and continuing in the next 40 years is the second-most popular team sport internatio­nally. In soccer, you have five or six countries that have first-division teams and are roughly equal financiall­y. But in basketball you only have one first division, the NBA. So the NBA is going to have all the best players in the world.”

That means the NBA can dominate the global basketball market, and the most lucrative mine is in China, where basketball has been part of the country since Mao Zedong promoted the game as an expression of communism’s goals. The revenues China’s market can provide NBA owners have helped drive the valuation of NBA franchises to the billion-dollar mark and beyond. The Washington Post

 ?? TAKaSHI AOYAMA/GETTY IMAGES ?? NBA commission­er Adam Silver has apologized after Houston GM Daryl Morey backed protesters in Hong Kong, but added “the NBA will not put itself in a position of regulating what players, employees and team owners say or will not say on these issues.”
TAKaSHI AOYAMA/GETTY IMAGES NBA commission­er Adam Silver has apologized after Houston GM Daryl Morey backed protesters in Hong Kong, but added “the NBA will not put itself in a position of regulating what players, employees and team owners say or will not say on these issues.”

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