Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ The biracial son of a sheriff, the Knights’ Ryan Reaves knows both sides of police protests.

Biracial son of sheriff at center ice on protests, police

- ED GRANEY

CONFLICT IS INEVITABLE when your heart beats for both sides of a polarizing movement.

That’s where Ryan Reaves finds himself after the death of African American George Floyd that resulted in a second-degree murder charge against a white Minneapoli­s policeman.

A forward for the Golden

Knights and one of the few black players in the NHL, Reaves is also the son of Willard Reaves, a former sergeant with the Manitoba Sheriff Services in Winnipeg.

He is also the great-great-great-grandson of Bass Reeves (his last name spelled differentl­y when he was born a slave in 1838), the first black deputy U.S. marshal

west of the Mississipp­i. Nearly a century before the fictional character was introduced as a white man wearing a mask and sitting atop a white horse, history has viewed Bass Reeves as the first Lone Ranger.

“(Law enforcemen­t) in our family dates a long, long ways back,” Willard said. “We have several who chose this as (a profession). Because of this, Ryan can see all of this from both sides. He’s mixed race (his mother Brenda is Caucasian). He can analyze and internaliz­e from either point. He will come to his conclusion­s. He will deal with the facts and what he sees and hears. “And there is internal conflict.” It can’t be easy. It has to be gut-wrenching at some level. Whatever the number of profession­al athletes whose family members serve in law enforcemen­t, they must be dealing with a whole different set of emotions than their teammates right now.

For all the moments of levity Reaves provides on and off the ice, all those skirmishes in which he happily engages opposing players, there isn’t a more thoughtful and perceptive player within the Knights locker room. None are more willing to talk.

Hockey has forever been viewed as a world enveloped in racism. Advancemen­t on this front has been excruciati­ngly slow. Even as the issue seemed to generate progress of late, intoleranc­e remains a central characteri­stic.

But with recent NHL incidents regarding racial injustice and those protests following Floyd’s death, some players have gone public with their feelings and opinions. That’s a good thing.

But most haven’t. That’s an expected thing.

Athletes speaking out

It was Thursday when Golden Knights forward Mark Stone told reporters the team had spoken internally about the tumultuous reaction to Floyd’s death, but that for now it preferred to sit back and listen instead of entering a public conversati­on.

In the moment, it was such a hockey thing to say. Just another example of a reluctance by NHL players to take on the most controvers­ial issues. Most don’t even take on the trivial ones.

Reaves sees it differentl­y. His brother, Jordan, a defensive lineman in the Canadian Football League, has been extremely outspoken on racial issues across Twitter.

“My brother plays a predominan­tly black sport and that can add fuel to the fire when you have a black issue among a lot of black people. They get a little more fired up because they’re in it together,” Ryan said.

As a result, he said his brother “is a little more outspoken than I am. He’s very passionate about this. I’ve had multiple conversati­ons with him and in one, I just sat there and listened. Even though he’s my brother and we’re both black, sometimes we need to just sit down and listen. I think that’s a very big message that needs to keep getting thrown out there. It’s time for people to listen.”

That’s certainly true in hockey. “You’re coming from two different sides of the fence here,” Ryan said. “In hockey, it’s a predominan­tly white sport, so for a bunch of white hockey players to come out and speak about black issues, it’s probably tough for them. It’s not an easy subject to talk about, but I like how a lot of players are going about it.

“They don’t like what has been going on and now it’s time for them to listen. That’s a powerful thing. They’re saying, ‘We need to listen and learn from this.’ And they have a platform that will reach hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people.”

Reaves and … Kane?

The videos of those rioting and looting and injuring others trying to protect what they spent lifetimes building shake Ryan Reaves. The images of police shooting rubber bullets into crowds and forcefully restrainin­g those protesting anger him. The ones of officers walking hand-in-hand with those doing so peacefully encourage him. An internal conflict rages on.

In the most ironic of ways, what has become one of the more extensive beefs among two NHL players has forged a common bond.

Reaves and Evander Kane of the San Jose Sharks won’t be sharing Christmas cards any decade soon, but it is the latter who led the formation of an alliance meant to “eradicate racism and intoleranc­e in hockey while promoting diversity at all levels of the game.”

“I spoke to Evander and told him I want to jump in on this powerful message,” Reaves said. “We have to put aside our difference­s on the ice and come together for a much bigger cause.

“You definitely have to understand what your beliefs are and where you stand. At the same time, I do kind of toe both lines because I have had great experience with cops. I’m also very aware of what’s going on around the United States.

“A lot of it stems from undertrain­ed ignorance that every police force seems to have some — 1, 2, 3, 4 cops — whatever the number is. The thing is not to let those bad apples trickle through an entire force.”

Lone Ranger

It was in 1875 when a legendary lawman of the Wild West was tasked along with 200 other deputy marshals with bringing in countless thieves, murderers and fugitives who had overrun an expansive 75,000-square-mile Indian territory in what is known today as Oklahoma.

A faithful defender of the government that failed to protect his freedom at birth, the lawman was said to have killed 14 outlaws, arrested 3,000 more and all without sustaining a single wound.

He was the great-great-greatgrand­father of Ryan Reaves.

“The world is different now than at that time and in many ways the same over what we’re fighting for,” said Willard Reaves, who grew up four hours from Las Vegas in Flagstaff, Arizona, and played football at Northern Arizona University. “Every single person on this planet saw what happened to George Floyd. A police officer murdered a person. Pure murder. It’s something we all have to deal with internally and finally acknowledg­e what has been happening for way too long. This was not serving and protecting.

“This will change everything. This has struck a nerve like nothing before. Ryan is like myself and his family and everyone else right now.

“Plain and simple, we all have to put a stop to this.”

 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal ??
Las Vegas Review-Journal
 ?? Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-Journal @csstevensp­hoto ?? Knights right wing Ryan Reaves is surrounded by children during a youth street hockey clinic Feb. 27 at Doolittle Recreation Center.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-Journal @csstevensp­hoto Knights right wing Ryan Reaves is surrounded by children during a youth street hockey clinic Feb. 27 at Doolittle Recreation Center.
 ?? Wayne Glowacki Winnipeg Free Press ?? Former CFL running back Willard Reaves, father of the Knights’ Ryan Reaves, at the Winnipeg Blue Bombers Hall of Fame in June 2016.
Wayne Glowacki Winnipeg Free Press Former CFL running back Willard Reaves, father of the Knights’ Ryan Reaves, at the Winnipeg Blue Bombers Hall of Fame in June 2016.
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 ?? Ruth Bonneville Winnipeg Free Press ?? Former Winnipeg Blue Bombers running back Willard Reaves, father of Knights right wing Ryan Reaves, with son and Ryan’s brother, Jordan, in an undated photo.
Ruth Bonneville Winnipeg Free Press Former Winnipeg Blue Bombers running back Willard Reaves, father of Knights right wing Ryan Reaves, with son and Ryan’s brother, Jordan, in an undated photo.

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