Global Times

US basketball legend Jordan defends ‘selfish’ reluctance on politics

- Page Editor: luwenao@globaltime­s.com.cn

Michael Jordan has defended his infamous reluctance to be drawn into taking political sides during his NBA career, saying he never viewed himself as an activist.

In comments made on the latest episode of the hit documentar­y series “The Last Dance” on ESPN, Jordan addressed his oft-quoted quip that he had steered clear of politics because “Republican­s buy sneakers, too.”

Jordan said the remark, which came during the 1990 US Senate race in North Carolina between Republican Jesse Helms and Democrat challenger

Harvey Gantt, had been a flippant comment made as a joke.

Helms was a controvers­ial figure who had been accused of racism throughout his career, a staunch opponent of the 1964 Civil Rights Act who also opposed the establishm­ent of Martin Luther King day as a US federal holiday.

“I don’t think that statement needs to be corrected because I said it in jest on a bus with Horace Grant and Scottie Pippen,” Jordan said.

“It was thrown off the cuff. My mother asked to do a PSA (public service announceme­nt) for Harvey Gantt, and I said, ‘Look, Mom, I’m not speaking out of pocket about someone that I don’t know. But I will send a contributi­on to support him.’ Which is what I did.”

Jordan added that he never saw himself as an activist athlete in the vein of former heavyweigh­t boxing champion Muhammad Ali.

“I do commend Muhammad Ali for standing up for what he believed in,” Jordan said. “But I never thought of myself as an activist. I thought of myself as a basketball player.”

Jordan conceded that his apolitical stance might be viewed as selfish in some quarters.

“I wasn’t a politician when I was playing my sport. I was focused on my craft,” Jordan said. “Was that selfish? Probably. But that was my energy. That’s where my energy was.”

Jordan, now 57, insisted he had no regrets, saying he had sought to set an example by his achievemen­ts as an athlete.

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