Orlando Sentinel

President Donald Trump

President calls Ball an ‘ungrateful fool’ in taunting tweets

- By Jill Colvin

again taunts the father of a UCLA basketball player detained for shopliftin­g in China, saying he was an “ungrateful fool.”

PALM BEACH, Fla. — President Donald Trump started off his first day of Thanksgivi­ng vacation Wednesday by resuming his taunts of the father of a UCLA basketball player detained for shopliftin­g in China, calling him an “ungrateful fool.”

In a series of tweets fired off before dawn, the president complained again that LaVar Ball, father of Li Angelo Ball, hasn’t given him credit for the release of his son and two other UCLA basketball players after they were accused of shopliftin­g while in China for a basketball game.

Tweeting from his Florida vacation home, Trump said: “It wasn’t the White House, it wasn’t the State Department, it wasn’t father LaVar’s so-called people on the ground in China that got his son out of a long term prison sentence - IT WAS ME.”

“Too bad! LaVar is just a poor man’s version of Don King, but without the hair,” he said, referencin­g the flamboyant boxing promoter whom Trump once saluted as “a phenomenal person” despite a conviction for manslaught­er.

Trump also warned that Ball “could have spent the next 5 to 10 years during Thanksgivi­ng with your son in China, but no NBA contract to support you” had it not been for his interventi­on.

“But remember LaVar, shopliftin­g is NOT a little thing. It’s a really big deal, especially in China,” he wrote.

The president also retweeted a post from Joey Mannarino, a U.S.-born radio host living in London, who echoed the statement: “The ungrateful­ness is something I’ve never seen before. If you get someone’s son out of prison, he should be grateful to you. Period.”

Li Angelo Ball and two UCLA teammates were released after a brief detention in China while Trump was visiting the country. Trump has taken credit for the release, saying he discussed the situation with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing.

Trump had previously said he should have left all three players in jail because LaVar Ball hadn’t thanked him publicly for his interventi­on.

LaVar Ball, whose eldest son, Lonzo, plays for the Los Angeles Lakers, has repeatedly minimized Trump’s involvemen­t in winning the players’ release, telling CNN earlier this week: “If I feel nobody did anything, I don’t have to go around saying thank you to everybody.”

All three players have been suspended from the team.

Trump is spending the holiday at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, where he stressed he’ll be “having meetings and working the phones” and not just vacationin­g.

Trump also spoke out against the idea of keeping NFL players in the locker room during the playing of the national anthem as a response to some players refusing to stand to protest racial inequality and police brutality.

“That’s almost as bad as kneeling! When will the highly paid Commission­er finally get tough and smart?” Trump wrote. “This issue is killing your league!”

The timing of Trump’s tweet about a divisive issue being bad for business was certainly ironic. On Wednesday, his company announced it would remove the Trump name from its hotel in lower Manhattan and give up management of the property.

It’s the most visible sign yet of the toll his presidency has taken on his brand.

The decision follows signs that business has flagged for months at Trump Soho, beginning during his polarizing campaign last year. The hotel’s sushi restaurant closed. Profession­al sports teams began to shun the property. The hotel struggled to attract business for its meeting rooms and banquet halls, according to reporting by radio station WNYC.

Trump Soho has emerged as an example of how Trump’s divisive politics have redefined his luxury hotel and real estate company, which spent years courting upscale customers in liberal urban centers where he is now unpopular.

The Trump name change was first reported Wednesday by The New York Times.

 ?? AFP ?? LaVar Ball, father of UCLA basketball player LiAngelo Ball, said earlier this week that “If I feel nobody did anything, I don't have to go around saying thank you to everybody.”
AFP LaVar Ball, father of UCLA basketball player LiAngelo Ball, said earlier this week that “If I feel nobody did anything, I don't have to go around saying thank you to everybody.”

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