Toronto Star

Altidore tackles U.S. political turmoil

American-born TFC star makes case for a nation where it’s OK to disagree

- NEIL DAVIDSON THE CANADIAN PRESS

“We need to find a way, a peaceful way to sit down and voice our difference­s.” JOZY ALTIDORE TFC STRIKER

U.S. soccer captain Michael Bradley has shared his political views in recent days. Now Jozy Altidore, his teammate with Toronto FC and the U.S. national team, is having his say on trying to end the division south of the border.

Speaking in an MLS Black History Month roundtable video, Altidore made an eloquent plea for Americans to find a way to discuss their difference­s.

“It’s hard to talk about politics with people. Everybody has a different view. It’s a passionate topic,” he says. “But I think that’s the first step in terms of reaching, hopefully one day, a place where everybody can be kind of OK with somebody’s else’s opinion. You have to be. Right now, the country is so divided in a way that a country like the U.S. shouldn’t be.

“And that’s because we haven’t been listening to each other, whether it be blacks or whites, whether it be Republican­s and Democrats. Whatever it is. We need to find a way, a peaceful way to sit down and voice our difference­s. I know it sounds very cliched but it needs to happen. Because things are going to get worse before they get better. And we don’t want that.”

The 27-year-old Altidore, who recently won his 100th cap for the U.S., calls America the greatest country in the world. But he says the exchange of views is sorely needed given the current political landscape.

“I love (the U.S.) but I think that conversati­on needs to happen. It’s a strong conversati­on, it’s an awkward one but it makes for a better tomorrow, for sure.”

In an interview after training Wednesday, Altidore said people may not agree after that conversati­on, “but at least you understand what is going on on that side and why that side believes what they believe. And I think that’s something that really important and we need to get back to.”

In the video, Altidore says growing up he was inspired by NBA point guard Allen Iverson. “Just the way he played the game, the way he was so competitiv­e and he had such a big heart.”

Soccer in the U.S. has not traditiona­lly offered a way out of poverty the way that sports such as basketball or boxing have, but Altidore — who made $4.8 million (U.S.) last season according to the MLS Players Union — says MLS is “reaching a new plateau now.”

He also talks about the pride he takes in young black kids calling him a role model. “It means a lot,” he said.

Altidore credited MLS for organiz- ing the Black History Month video.

“I thought it was different, I thought it gave a different perspectiv­e and I thought it was enlighteni­ng. I hope people enjoy it.”

Altidore got his break at age 8 when the late Josef Schulz, an Austrian coach who ran a soccer academy in Florida, saw him playing in the park. Schulz, seeing a star in the making, gave Altidore a free ride at the academy when he learned the family couldn’t afford it.

“He let me in. He let me train there for free at a place that was pretty expensive for my family, that they couldn’t afford,” Altidore said. “So I was lucky. If somebody thinks there aren’t many cases like me, then you’re crazy. There’s probably better kids, playing in more rural areas that just don’t have that opportunit­y.”

“Big dreams” can lead to good landings, he added.

Altidore, whose parents grew up in Haiti, experience­d racism while playing in the Netherland­s and says simply that it’s sad that it still happens.

“All you can do is hope that those people educate themselves and educate their kids so that they don’t continue to live that kind of lifestyle . . . It’s a topic that we have to keep talking about unfortunat­ely until we find a way to move forward with it.”

Altidore says athletes like him are in a “great position” to speak out at the right times. “You can always do more,” he said. While he acknowledg­ed that people don’t tune into a Toronto FC game to hear him speak on Donald Trump, he said conversati­ons on big topics can only help.

Bradley has used interviews and social media to share his views on moves by the Trump administra­tion, from the attempted travel ban to restrictin­g media access.

 ?? MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Toronto FC’s Jozy Altidore calls America the greatest country in the world, but says it is “divided in a way that a country like the U.S. shouldn’t be.”
MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES Toronto FC’s Jozy Altidore calls America the greatest country in the world, but says it is “divided in a way that a country like the U.S. shouldn’t be.”

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