Waterloo Region Record

Als coach Jones says he received death threats while playing for Blue Bombers

- DAN RALPH

Khari Jones doesn’t have to look far for a reminder that racism exists in Canada.

The Montreal Alouettes head coach has divulged he received death threats while he was the quarterbac­k of the Canadian Football League’s Winnipeg Blue Bombers because of his interracia­l marriage. Jones is Black and his wife, Justine, is white.

An emotional Jones — speaking just over a week after a white policeman knelt on the neck of a Black man, resulting in a tragic death in Minneapoli­s — said the threats came in the form of letters that remain in his possession.

“It’s just a reminder you always have to be on alert a little bit,” Jones said. “It could’ve been one person but one is still too many and to do that on the basis of a person’s skin colour is horrible.

“Every once in a while, every blue moon, I take a look at them. They never found the person who wrote the letters — he used a fake name — but he’s still out there, people like him are still out there. That was 20-something years ago and it’s still happening.”

Jones, 49, played parts of five seasons with Winnipeg (2000-04).

The soft-spoken and amiable Jones was named the CFL’s outstandin­g player in 2001 after leading the Bombers to a 14-4 regular-season record and Grey Cup appearance.

The five-foot-11, 195-pound Jones played for B.C., Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary and Hamilton from 1997 to 2007. He rejoined the Bombers in October ’07 and retired as a member of the franchise. Jones began his CFL coaching career in ’09 as Hamilton’s quarterbac­k coach.

Sadly, the threatenin­g letters weren’t Jones’s first exposure to racism.

In the early 1990s during Jones’s college days at University of California, Davis, Jones said himself, his brother and some friends were wrongly arrested at gunpoint, forced to the ground and handcuffed by white policemen in Sacramento, Calif.

“It was a case of mistaken identity but we called it, at the time, being Black while walking,” Jones said. “That’s just something that had happened with people you knew and it happened to me, four or five of my friends, my brother was there.

“It’s a horrible feeling to be pointed out for something like that.”

Jones’s eyes welled up discussing the tragic death last week of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man who died in Minneapoli­s while in police custody. With Floyd handcuffed and lying face down, Derek Chauvin, a white policeman, kept his knee on Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes, the final two minutes 53 seconds after Floyd became unresponsi­ve.

Video of the incident was readily available on television and social media. After watching, Jones took to Twitter on Monday — a rarity for the Alouettes coach — to express his pain, anger and sadness over Floyd’s death.

“I can’t stop thinking about George Floyd,” Jones tweeted. “He is me. Breonna Taylor (a Black woman fatally shot March 13 by Louisville police officers) is my daughter. I’m angry, hurt, and sad.”

Jones, entering his second season as Alouettes head coach, said he posted the tweet after talking with Montreal starting quarterbac­k Vernon Adams Jr. Following the Floyd incident, Jones wrote his players about what he’d experience­d in his life. “That’s just what I felt when I saw the video,” Jones said. “The inhumanity of it was something that struck a chord in me, for sure, and I think in a lot of the world.”

Last weekend, the CFL and its nine teams all issued statements condemning racism. Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s linebacker Solomon Eliminian, the president of the players’ associatio­n, also outlined his experience­s in a letter to union members.

Montreal running back James Wilder Jr. has been a vocal advocate, as well. The former Florida State star has participat­ed in peaceful protests in Houston, where he’s currently training. .

“I think James is a smart person, I’m going to talk with him,” Jones said. “I never want to push the players one way or the other. I think these are smart men, they see what I see and they have brains, too. I want them to do what they feel is necessary and some things go beyond your job. I’m proud of the players for their responses. I want to go protest, too. I want to be out there, too. I understand his (Wilder’s) pain and frustratio­n with everything.”

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Khari Jones

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