Weekend Herald

Kiwi Hobbs’ NFL mate hurt by anthem drama

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Former Highlander­s and Blues rugby player Michael Hobbs has weighed into the US debate on refusing to stand during the national anthem.

Hobbs, now involved in humanitari­an work in Africa, wrote an editorial in the New York Times about the NFL’s announceme­nt it would fine teams whose players refuse to stand for the anthem on the field.

Hobbs, who is doing an MBA at Stanford University, is the son of former All Blacks great Jock Hobbs. One of his friends and colleagues is former New Orleans Saints player Kenny Vaccaro, whom he met when studying at the University of Texas.

“Among those protesting police brutality and racial injustice were 10 players from the New Orleans Saints who sat on the bench during the national anthem. My good friend Kenny Vaccaro was one of them,” wrote Hobbs. “We had no idea, however, that Kenny’s decision would incite such rage in our donors that it would hinder our project to help kids in Kenya.

“I was a profession­al rugby player from New Zealand recovering from spine surgery. Kenny was a starting safety on the Texas football team.

”We bonded quickly. Kenny had lost his father to emphysema at a young age and my father was battling leukemia that proved fatal. We felt the same passion for our sports, and we talked of one day using our platform as athletes to make a difference in the world. I was with Kenny’s family at Radio City Music Hall when the Saints selected him in the first round of the 2013 NFL draft.

“My father became involved in philanthro­py towards the end of his life, and I remember him saying he wished he hadn’t waited so long. Almost three years to the day after his death, I took his advice. I retired from rugby at 28. I flew to Kenya to volunteer at Blessed Hope Primary School in the Kibera slums of Nairobi.

“All of a sudden, I was reimaginin­g who I was. The identity I had built over my eight-year profession­al sports career had been solely as an athlete. But my volunteer work in Kenya showed me the impact I could have, using the same determinat­ion that I once reserved for rugby. The values I admired in my father and in sport lived on beyond the field. And the amazing children of Blessed Hope who came to school every day with beaming smiles showed me I still had so much to be thankful for.

“I began the Blessed Hope Project and my mission was to raise $300,000 to buy land in Kibera and build a primary school for the more than 200 children I had been teaching in a dirty, overcrowde­d church hall.

“Kenny wanted to help. As a celebrity in Louisiana, he could raise money. So we launched the Kenny Vaccaro Foundation in March 2017 with a personal contributi­on from Kenny of $25,000. Within six months, the foundation had received pledges totaling $50,000. I had raised an additional $125,000 from outside donors. Kenny pledged another $100,000.

“Things were going well until, at a game in Charlotte last September, Vaccaro and his teammates stayed on the bench during the anthem to protest the appalling treatment of blacks by police. After the protest, half the members on our foundation’s board resigned and asked that their donations be returned. Our fundraisin­g banquet, scheduled for last October 17, was cancelled.

“Kenny wrote to our board members: ‘What our country is going through is not something that I have ever experience­d in my lifetime. I did not take my decision on Sunday lightheart­edly, nor would I expect everyone to agree with it. However, my teammates and I felt an obligation to use our platform to show support for the communitie­s that have been marginalis­ed within our country, some of which we grew up in. Our actions were not intended to be disrespect­ful; instead, were intended to bring attention to issues that we care deeply about’.

”It didn’t make a difference. The board members had made up their minds. Eight months on, we still haven’t made up the deficit. Constructi­on of our new school is scheduled to begin in a few weeks, but we are still staring down a $75,000 hole. Our goal is to open the school next January. I’m not sure if we’ll have the money in time,” wrote Hobbs.

”While finishing my MBA at Stanford, I’m trying to leverage my network here to deliver on our promise to the children of Blessed Hope. For his part, Kenny has not been signed by any NFL team, even though he was considered one of the premier free agents heading into the off-season. Does this have anything to do with his protest?

”We have both learned a lesson about the collateral damage of pettiness and polarisati­on. Kids in a Nairobi slum

pay the price.”

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Kiwi rugby player Michael Hobbs.
Photo / Photosport Kiwi rugby player Michael Hobbs.
 ?? Kenny Vaccaro ??
Kenny Vaccaro

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