Toronto Star

Boldin changes route after Charlottes­ville

Wide receiver retires to focus on fight for equality, calls on NFL owners to get involved

- BARRY SVRLUGA THE WASHINGTON POST

Anquan Boldin’s pre-season career with the Buffalo Bills amounted to one reception for five yards. Had he retired at any other time for any other reason, the decision would have been noted respectful­ly but quietly. Here is a 14-year NFL veteran fewer than two months shy of his 37th birthday electing to hang up the cleats. Pay homage to his 1,076 career catches. Note his 82 touchdowns. Remember he was an integral part of the 2012 Baltimore Ravens, who won the Super Bowl. And move on.

But Anquan Boldin is retiring in this moment — in Donald Trump’s America, just more than a week after the horror of Charlottes­ville, Va. — because the moment calls for his voice and for his work.

“This is something that I’ve been dealing with for the last couple of years, to be honest with you,” Boldin said in a phone conversati­on Monday morning. “I feel more convicted than ever to step away from the game of football.”

This NFL pre-season has its position battles and injury news. But it also has a striking element, one that offers football players the chance to be at the centre of a national discussion on race and human rights, on what we believe in as a country. In this era in which players are routinely asked to “stick to sports,” Boldin decided to stick to the fight.

“My time will be spent doing exactly what I said I would be doing: fighting for equality, fighting for equal rights in this country,” Boldin said. Boldin has too much else in his head and his heart to concentrat­e on his crossing route on third down.

“I didn’t short football; I gave it my all,” he said. “But I think in order for me to be as effective as I want to be, I don’t think I can split time.”

Boldin is in an unusual position as an athlete to push for discussion and change because he has been pushing for it when people weren’t paying attention. He has spent time on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., talking to politician­s about criminal justice reform and the relationsh­ip between police department­s and the communitie­s they serve. He has headed a foundation that has supported underprivi­leged children. He has endured the pain of losing a cousin, who was shot to death at the side of the road by a plain-clothed police officer.

In the wake of Charlottes­ville, he said he received a call from a Jewish friend who had watched marchers boasting signs adorned with swastikas, who heard them chanting “Jews will not replace us,” that crystalliz­ed his thinking.

“We had a candid conversati­on,” Boldin said. “And like I told him, ‘Trust me, I understand what you feel. I understand what you’re going through.’ . . . As African-American people, we’ve been screaming these same things for I don’t know how long — well before I was born. And we’re still screaming the same things now. Unfortunat­ely, people never really gave it the attention it deserves.

“Every time we talk about inequaliti­es or injustices, the only thing that we get is that we’re complainin­g. What I said now is, it’s the time where it’s not just African-Americans now. You have Jews screaming the same thing. You have LGBT people screaming the same thing. Now is not a war against African-Americans. It’s a war against Americans, period.”

It is a war that NFL players are reluctant to fight, save for the select few. Colin Kaepernick, the quarter- back who began this discussion — as it pertains to athletes and their opinions — by kneeling during the U.S. national anthem a year ago, still doesn’t have a job. There are, of course, encouragin­g signs, because Philadelph­ia Eagles strong safety Malcolm Jenkins, an African-American, stood with a defiant fist in the air during the national anthem prior to a pre-season game last week, only to be joined by white teammate Chris Long in a show of unity. A day later, Seattle centre Justin Britt placed his hand on the shoulder of defensive tackle Michael Bennett as Bennett knelt for the anthem, and the two embraced afterward.

Boldin took note of both moments, and it’s clear to him: There is more, much more, to push for.

“From a societal standpoint, everybody says players need to stand together or there needs to be more white faces that are standing up and championin­g these causes,” he said. “The part people are missing: It also needs to be coaches. It also needs to be owners. It needs to be GMs.”

Boldin points out the history of athletes speaking out. But what if he and Jenkins, who have visited Capitol Hill twice to discuss their concerns, arrived next time with, say, Patriots owner Robert Kraft or Giants owner John Mara?

“I think whenever African-American athletes, or athletes period, go to Washington, we’re afforded different meetings that probably the regular citizen wouldn’t get,” Boldin said. “But I do think, also, there’s a differ- ent respect level if we had owners with us. For us, it’s one thing to get a meeting and for (members of Congress) to tell us to continue to keep the issue at the forefront. But I guarantee you, if you take owners in those meetings, there’s a different respect level that they would have for owners than they do for players. There’s a lot more that we would get from those meetings.”

Anquan Boldin has made his last catch. He has not spoken his last word.

“Those things, they do light a fire under you, at least for myself,” he said. “I think those things do help with that conviction to get things done.”

 ?? MITCHELL LEFF/GETTY IMAGES ?? Anquan Boldin, who tallied more than 1,000 catches across 14 NFL seasons, announced his retirement on Monday.
MITCHELL LEFF/GETTY IMAGES Anquan Boldin, who tallied more than 1,000 catches across 14 NFL seasons, announced his retirement on Monday.

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