Miami Herald

Time to applaud LeBron for activism, conscience

- BY GREG COTE gcote@miamiheral­d.com

LeBron James is hearing the silly noise again, and all it does is make him dig deeper, stand firmer, speak louder.

One year ago it was conservati­ve commentato­r Laura Ingraham on Fox News advising LeBron to “shut up and dribble” instead of speaking out against racial and social injustice.

Now it is internatio­nal soccer superstar Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c lecturing LeBron on what the parameters of his conscience should be.

“[LeBron] is phenomenal at

what he does, but I don’t like when people have some kind of status, they go and do politics at the same time,” the AC Milan striker said in an interview in Sweden. “Do what you’re good at. Stay out of politics. Just do what you do best because [the rest] doesn’t look good.”

Politics. When did that become the word for standing up for what you believe is right? Why has speaking out for social justice and voters’ rights become a font of controvers­y?

Ibrahimovi­c doubled down this week, saying, “Athletes unite the world, politics divide us” — again misreprese­nting social conscience as political, in much the same way critics misreprese­nted Colin Kaepernick kneeling during the anthem as antiAmeric­an instead of as a protest of police violence against unarmed Black people.

Ibrahimovi­c reopens the dumb notion of “stick to sports!” as more and more athletes, the L.A. Lakers’ LeBron seemingly always at the forefront, use their platform and voice for positive change.

MESSAGE CLEAR

The message from activist athletes is simple: We are here to do more than entertain you.

LeBron needing to shout (again) that he will not shut up and dribble comes as the NBA prepares to take its All-Star Game break in Atlanta.

Atlanta, that Blackest of major American cities, the one that got out the vote in numbers enough to turn Georgia from red to blue and turn the presidenti­al election.

Atlanta, where outspoken activism by the city’s WNBA team, the Dream, forced out white right-wing owner Kelly Loeffler, the state senator.

It also comes at a time when a movement is born to change the NBA’s iconic silhouette logo from that of white 1960s star Jerry West to that of Kobe Bryant, the superstar who died tragically in a helicopter crash in January 2020. Bryant’s widow Vanessa and league star Kyrie Irving are out front on the suggestion.

I have zero issue with an updated logo whose silhouette better reflects the indisputab­le influence of Black people in the league’s history on the court and influence off it, beyond it.

A Michael Jordan likeness might be better; certainly less controvers­ial. Heck, if he weren’t still active (and showing little sign of any letdown at age 36), I might even suggest the new logo silhouette should be that of LeBron — for his greatness with the basketball but as much for his beacon’s role in social activism.

Ask me what current athlete might merit the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom. For me, an easy question.

It is not a revelation in multitaski­ng, the idea that LeBron can dribble and speak out for positive change at the same time.

It is why, as he makes his case as the greatest player in the history of the NBA, he also elevates as one of the most important athletes we’ve ever had in terms of off-court influence. The awakening of that social conscience in part came in Miami, as the Heat stood out in support for the family of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed Miami teen unjustifia­bly killed nine years ago last week by a security guard.

GOOD DEEDS

LeBron does more than speak about the need for change. He sees to it happening.

His “More Than a Vote” initiative drew more than 42,000 volunteers to work at polling places during the November elections, helping protect voting rights and encourage turnout among Black and young voters.

The “I Promise School” he founded in his hometown of Akron, Ohio, now has more than 450 students in third through sixth grades. During the pandemic shutdown, James made sure meals still were delivered to the kids’ homes.

His affordable housing project for 50 families has just broken ground. In December he announced plans for “House Three Thirty” (Akron’s area code), an initiative to offer affordable health care, job training and a community center.

Would Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c call that James getting involved in “politics”?

The community he is tangibly lifting would call it getting involved in people.

Ibrahimovi­c, by the way, was born in Sweden to a Bosnian father and a Croatian mother, his paternal blood and his surname are Bosnian. In 2018 he complained of suffering “undercover racism” in Sweden because of his name.

The latest Human

Rights Watch (hrw.org) capsule on Bosnia and Herzegovin­a: “Shows little improvemen­t in protecting people’s rights. LGBT people continue to face discrimina­tion and violence. The state fails to protect women from gender-based violence. A decade after provisions in the Constituti­on were ruled discrimina­tory by Europe’s top human rights court, they have yet to be changed. Media freedom remains compromise­d and the pace of war crimes prosecutio­ns has slowed.”

You know what it sounds like that country could use?

Maybe a few influentia­l athletes who speak that language, such as Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c, finding their spine, using their voice, and speaking up just like LeBron James.

A few more athletes who understand their platform gives them so much to accomplish beyond sports.

Cilk McSweeney’s long list of ambitions for Calvary Christian Academy stretched beyond just winning a boys’ basketball state championsh­ip. The coach wanted Calvary Christian to test itself against national powerhouse­s, so he put together one of the toughest schedules in the country.

He wanted his Eagles to feel some of the national spotlight, so he set off for a late-season tournament in Montverde with ESPN’s cameras watching.

Along the way, he wanted to win Calvary Christian’s second state title, too. After a 69-51 win against Miami Country Day in the Class 3A semifinals Wednesday, the Eagles are one win away.

“Our team is hard to beat within a 32-minute game,” McSweeney said.

Calvary Christian (16-9) only trailed at 2-0, built a 34-21 lead by halftime and led by double digits for the final 21:07 to roll past the Spartans (12-10) in the 3A semifinals.

The Eagles will return to the RP Funding Center on Friday to face Spring Hill Bishop McLaughlin the 3A championsh­ip.

Even for a program with national ambitions, another win this weekend would be monumental for Calvary Christian. The Eagles won their first state title in 2017, then fell short of the final four in each of the next three seasons before finally returning.

Miami Country Day’s run was historic, too. The Spartans lost 9 of 11 early in the season — playing against a stiff schedule of their own, including games against No. 11 Pine Crest and No. 33 Pembroke Pines Charter — before rattling off seven straight wins to reach the final four for the first time in program history.

In Lakeland, they met a buzzsaw.

“On film, I guess you don’t see the length,” Miami Country Day coach Ralph Mata said. “They’re really long, big, athletic, so those gaps that we normally have, they kind of shrink when you’re playing a team of that caliber athletical­ly.”

The lofty expectatio­ns McSweeney placed on his team in the preseason proved to be worthy.

Calvary Christian boasts five players with Division I scholarshi­p offers, beat four top-100 teams — including No. 4 Orlando Oak Ridge — and now sits at No. 29, according to MaxPreps’ national rankings.

In the semifinals, the Eagles overwhelme­d the Spartans to win in another high-profile setting.

Sophomore guard Carl Cherenfant, who has an early offer from the LSU Tigers, paced the Eagles with 15 points. Junior forward Taylor Hendricks, who claims more than a dozen offers, added 12 and twin brother Tyler Hendricks, a guard with an offer from the UCF Knights, added nine.

Junior Gregg Glenn, a major target for the

Michigan Wolverines, chipped in 12, as did fellow guard Dylan Canoville.

Sophomore guard Marvel Allen, who already has offers from LSU and the Virginia Tech Hokies, led Calvary Christian with five assists.

Jordan Cooke led the Spartans with 16 points and fellow guard Jasai Miles added 13.

“We won, but I think we could’ve played a lot better,” Cherenfant said, “missed assignment­s and different things like that.”

By most measures, this has already been a breakthrou­gh season for Calvary Christian.

There were close losses to top-25 teams to prove the Eagles could hang with anyone and wins against top-100 teams to prove they belonged, even without a stuffed trophy case.

A rise to national prominence, McSweeney said, was a two year mission. All five of Calvary Christian’s players with D-I offers are sophomores and juniors, and only one senior starts.

This weekend will be a chance to add another trophy, but the vision stretches further than just a state championsh­ip. Another title can be a springboar­d to even larger goals.

“We’ll adjust and keep getting better, and that’s how we’re looking at it,” McSweeney said. “We’re going to miss probably one senior that’s actually helping us and playing minutes. We’ve got everybody coming back, so this is another game for us to get better in and build confidence into.”

Actor Paula Prentiss is 83. Singer Chris Rea is

70. Musician Emilio Estefan is 68. Actor Catherine O'Hara is 67. Actor Patricia Heaton is 63. Sen. Tina Smith ,DMinn., is 63. Actor Steven Weber is 60. Actor Patsy Kensit is 53. Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., is 53. Gay rights activist Chaz Bono is 52. Actor Andrea Bendewald is 51. Jazz musician Jason Marsalis is 44. Actor Jessica Heap is 38. Actor Scott Michael Foster is 36. TV personalit­y Whitney Port is 36. Actor Audrey Esparza is 35. Actor Margo Harshman is 35. Actor Josh Bowman is 33. Actor Andrea Bowen is 31.

 ?? ROBERT GAUTHIER TNS ?? LeBron James has not been hesitant to make his communitie­s better with social activism.
ROBERT GAUTHIER TNS LeBron James has not been hesitant to make his communitie­s better with social activism.
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 ?? CHARLES TRAINOR JR. ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com ?? Miami Country Day’s Jordan Cooke looks to pass while being guarded by Calvary Christian’s Tyler Hendricks.
CHARLES TRAINOR JR. ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com Miami Country Day’s Jordan Cooke looks to pass while being guarded by Calvary Christian’s Tyler Hendricks.
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