Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

WNBA players were the real leaders

The league, again, brought the biggest change in sports’ social justice efforts.

- By LZ Granderson

The Black community lost several giants in 2020. Few were as respected as they were overlooked as Katherine Johnson, the NASA mathematic­ian whose work made both space travel and landing on the moon possible.

Johnson, who died in February at the age of 101, was so important to John Glenn’s 1962 space mission that he specifical­ly requested her to review his preflight checklist before becoming the first American to orbit the planet. Glenn went on to become a national hero. Johnson went largely unknown to the masses until Taraji P. Henson brought her exceptiona­l story to life in the 2016 film, “Hidden Figures.”

It’s a narrative with which many women, particular­ly Black women like Johnson, are familiar. From the Bible, where their lives are reduced largely to whom they begat, to their unequal pay and underrepre­sentation in corporate America, downplayin­g the achievemen­ts and contributi­ons of women is a tradition like no other.

Before the Lakers hoisted the Larry O’Brien Trophy in the second week of October, an ongoing conversati­on on my radio show centered on this city’s pro championsh­ip drought. It was mostly fun, light talk radio fare, but it started to get chippy over the question of “Who was the last team to win it all?”

I can’t tell you how many times I had to remind listeners that the “drought” did not extend to 2014, when the Kings and Galaxy won it all, but only to 2016, when the Sparks hoisted the championsh­ip hardware.

I still can see the ending in my mind’s eye: Nneka Ogwumike, the season’s most valuable player, grabbing an offensive rebound and hitting the championsh­ip-winning shot over the reach of Minnesota Lynx center Sylvia Fowles, the defensive player of the year, with 3.1 seconds left. This came after Maya Moore, arguably the game’s best player at the time, hit a goahead jumper for the Lynx with 15.4 seconds remaining.

It was everything sports should be: a winner-take-all Finals game, star players at the center of the drama.

All that was missing apparently was the Y chromosome.

That’s the only explanatio­n I can conjure to explain why a championsh­ip game so memorable can be so easily forgotten.

I thought about Johnson and her place in history after rereading some of the tweets that came from WNBA players in their own, lesspublic­ized Florida bubble in early

July. While their NBA brethren complained about the food, the size of their hotel rooms, their general comfort, the WNBA players were sharing images of a mousetrap in the hotel laundry room, a dead worm in a guest room and showers that wouldn’t drain.

League MVP A’ja Wilson tweeted the word “pray” while her Las Vegas Aces teammate Danielle Robinson summed it up best: “The NBA would never…” No DRob, it would not. Then again, there are a lot of things the WNBA does that the NBA, NFL, MLB and others do not — or did not — do. You just didn’t hear about it.

Did you know that a month before Colin Kaepernick took a knee in a 2016 preseason game, WNBA players held a pregame news conference to address police brutality following the deaths of Philando Castile and Alton Sterling?

Later that year, those same players violated league rules by wearing Black Lives Matter Tshirts and were initially fined for it while their NBA counterpar­ts were not.

They held a media blackout day in which they would talk only about social justice issues. It would be four more years before NBA players did the same in Or

lando, Fla., this summer. Tierra Ruffin-Pratt, who lost her cousin to police brutality in 2013, helped organize the protest.

The Milwaukee Bucks justifiabl­y received admiration for launching this summer’s one-day work stoppage following the shooting of Jacob Blake. By then, the WNBA already had dedicated its season to Breonna Taylor and the Say Her Name campaign.

New York Liberty guard Layshia Clarendon called it ”a campaign committed to saying the names and fighting for justice for Black women. Black women are so often forgotten in this fight for justice, who do not have people marching in the streets for them. We will say her name: Sandra Bland, Atatiana Jefferson, Dominique ‘Rem’mie’ Fells and Breonna Taylor. We will be a voice for the voiceless.”

In many ways, the very existence of the WNBA, which is nearly 70% Black, is a protest of a patriarcha­l industry that overwhelmi­ngly celebrates male athletic achievemen­t. The WNBA mirrors our broader culture in which, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, Black women are a key breadwinne­r in more than 80% of their households but take home 62 cents for every dollar a white man does. In California that figure is 59 cents.

The longstandi­ng combinatio­n of racism and sexism Black women have faced throughout the centuries led civil rights activist Pauli Murray to coin the term “Jane Crow” to pair with Jim Crow. “If anyone should ask a Negro woman in America what has been her greatest achievemen­t,” she wrote, “her honest answer would be, ‘I survived!’ ”

But in 2020, Black women did more than just survive. In a year in which Kamala Harris was elected vice president and Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett was at the forefront of developing a COVID-19 vaccine, Black women athletes too led and thrived. I’m saddened Johnson did not live long enough to see 16-yearold tennis sensation Coco Gauff speak at a Florida rally this summer, when she told the crowd, “Yes, we’re all here protesting, and I’m not of age to vote, but it’s in your hands to vote for my future, for my brother’s future and for your future.”

I’m saddened Johnson did not see the WNBA push its collective activism even further than before. The Sparks’ Nneka and Chiney Ogwumike volunteere­d as poll workers in their hometown of Houston, earning the praise of former President Obama. After taking a two-year hiatus from the league, in large part to advocate for criminal justice reform, Moore

worked with grassroots leaders to free an innocent man, Jonathan Irons, from prison, where he was serving a 50-year sentence for a murder he did not commit.

As you read this, in Georgia, players from the Atlanta Dream continue their campaign against their own owner, Kelly Loeffler, in her drive for the U.S. Senate.

There is a good case to be made that Loeffler is in a runoff with the Rev. Raphael Warnock only because Dream players spoke out this summer against the incumbent Republican senator after she labeled the Black Lives Matter movement as Marxist and a champion of violence.

“What a great way for us to get the word out about this man, and hopefully put him in the Senate,” Sue Bird told ESPN in August. It was reportedly Bird’s idea to wear T-shirts that read “Vote Warnock” as players came onto the court.

“If he’s in the Senate, you know who’s not. And I’ll just leave it at that.”

When the WNBA launched in 1997, its clever marketing slogan was “We got next.” And, though plenty of media trained its klieg lights on the NBA, the NFL, even MLB, and their social justice efforts this summer, the fact is, when it came to the most meaningful change, the line formed behind the WNBA.

 ?? Phelan M. Ebenhack Associated Press ?? PLAYERS FROM the Mercury and Sparks in a moment of silence for Breonna Taylor in July, when the WNBA began its seasonlong dedication to her. The league has been a step ahead of other sports on social justice issues but doesn’t get as much attention.
Phelan M. Ebenhack Associated Press PLAYERS FROM the Mercury and Sparks in a moment of silence for Breonna Taylor in July, when the WNBA began its seasonlong dedication to her. The league has been a step ahead of other sports on social justice issues but doesn’t get as much attention.

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