Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Player kicked off team over anthem

Muslim student confronted by team supporter

- By Roxana Hegeman

Associated Press

WICHITA, Kan. — A Muslim student athlete who refused to observe the national anthem for religious reasons at a basketball game in Kansas has been kicked off the team after altercatio­ns with a team supporter, who accused him of disrespect­ing the American flag, and a coach.

The case has ignited concerns over whether Garden City Community College violated the First Amendment rights of 19-year-old Rasool Samir, who continued shooting balls after his teammates returned to the locker room during the anthem at a Nov. 1 game against Sterling College.

Samir withdrew from classes after losing his athletic scholarshi­p and has since returned home to Philadelph­ia, said Lauren Bonds, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas.

The ACLU contends Samir did not participat­e in the anthem because he believes his Muslim faith prohibits acts of reverence to anything but God.

The college’s attorney, Randall Grisell, told The Associated Press that Samir’s dismissal stems from a violation of team rules and had “nothing to do with his conduct during the national anthem, as far as the protest or any stance that he might have taken.”

Samir was confronted on the court by longtime fan Jim Howard, who said he told the player to “respect the flag or leave.”

Both sides agree that a security guard eventually intervened and escorted Samir to the locker room, where coach Brady Trenkle told Samir to return to his dorm.

Instead, the college contends, Samir followed the team onto the floor and yelled at the coach, threatenin­g to fight him, and responded with an obscenity when Trenkle told him to leave.

Athletic director John Green did not respond to phone and email messages from the AP seeking comment. Samir hung up when called by the AP for comment and did not respond to a text message.

Howard, the 74-year-old fan who confronted Samir, said he has been attending games at the school for 32 years.

He said teams routinely stay in the locker room during the national anthem and come out a few minutes after the anthem ends. Howard said he did not touch Samir, but the two exchanged words.

“I just told him to respect the flag or leave — that I had the right to listen to my national anthem and respect the flag without him out there playing. And if he couldn’t handle that then he should leave and get off the court,” Howard told the AP in a phone interview.

The college said the encounter between Samir and Howard was still under investigat­ion by local law enforcemen­t.

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