Call & Times

Trump’s comments about anthem, Curry inflame sports stars

-

SOMERSET, N.J. (AP) — President Donald Trump denounced protests by NFL players and rescinded a White House invitation for NBA champion Stephen Curry in a two-day rant that targeted top profession­al athletes and brought swift condemnati­on from league executives and star players alike on Saturday.

Wading into thorny issues of race and politics, Trump's comments in a Friday night speech and a series of Saturday tweets drew sharp responses from some of the nation's top athletes, with LeBron James calling the president a "bum."

Trump started by announcing that Curry, the immensely popular twotime MVP for the Golden State Warriors, would not be welcome at the White House for the commemorat­ive visit traditiona­lly made by championsh­ip teams after Curry indicated he didn't want to come. Later, Trump reiterated what he said at a rally in Alabama the previous night — that NFL players who kneel for the national anthem should be fired.

The Warriors said it was made clear to them that they were not welcome at the White House.

Curry had said he did not want to go anyway, but the Warriors had not made a collective decision before Saturday — and had planned to discuss it in the morning before the president's tweet, to which coach Steve Kerr said : "Not surprised. He was going to break up with us before we could break up with him." Others had far stronger reactions. "U bum @StephenCur­ry30 already said he ain't going!" James tweeted in a clear message to the president — a post that Twitter officials said was quickly shared many more times than any other he's sent. "So therefore ain't no invite. Going to White House was a great honor until you showed up!"

Curry appreciate­d James' strong stance.

"That's a pretty strong statement," Curry said. "I think it's bold, it's courageous for any guy to speak up, let alone a guy that has as much to lose as LeBron does and other notable figures in the league. We all have to kind of stand as one the best we can. For me, the questions how things have gone all summer if I wanted to go to the White House or not, I told you yesterday being very transparen­t what my vote would have been in a meeting had we had one, based on just trying to let people know I didn't want to be applauded for an accomplish­ment on the court when the guy that would be doing the patting on the back is somebody I don't think respects the majority of Americans in this country."

James also released a video Saturday, saying Trump has tried to divide the country. "He's now using sports as the platform to try to divide us," James said. "We all know how much sports brings us together. ... It's not something I can be quiet about."

The Warriors said that when they go to Washington this season they will instead "celebrate equality, diversity and inclusion — the values that we embrace as an organizati­on." General manager Bob Myers said he was surprised by the invitation being pulled.

"The White House visit should be something that is celebrated," Myers said. "So we want to go to Washington, D.C., and do something to commemorat­e kind of who we are as an organizati­on, what we feel, what we represent and at the same time spend our energy on that. Instead of looking backward, we want to look forward."

Added Kerr after his team's first practice of the season, "These are not normal times."

As a candidate and as president, Trump's approach has at times seemed to inflame racial tensions in a deeply divided country while emboldenin­g groups long in the shadows. Little more than a month ago, Trump came under fire for his response to a white supremacis­ts' protest in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. Trump also pardoned Joe Arpaio, the former sheriff of Arizona's Maricopa County, who had been found guilty of defying a judge's order to stop racially profiling Latinos.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States