Texarkana Gazette

To NBA coaches, racial equality is a priority of league’s restart

- By Tim Reynolds

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Dallas’ Rick Carlisle now starts every interview session by reading from a calendar that highlights something that happened on that day in the country’s racial history. Toronto’s Nick Nurse is often wearing shirts to practice proclaimin­g that Black Lives Matter. Orlando’s Steve Clifford, in lieu of pre-practice film, showed his team a documentar­y on the life of John Lewis.

While NBA players are using the season restart to demand change, coaches in the league are not making them walk down that path alone.

Coaches around the NBA — where most players are Black and most coaches are white — have been active participan­ts in the demand societal change around the league. The demands became a flashpoint when George Floyd, a

handcuffed Black man, died when a Minneapoli­s police officer pressed a knee into his neck for several minutes.

“I think it’s just understand­ing the moment and the movement that is taking place,” Atlanta coach Lloyd Pierce said. “That’s what all our coaches are doing, and as white coaches, they’re no fools. I think the beauty of our game is, we coach African American men, myself and the white coaches. We’re around it. We know our league is predominan­tly African American. So why not? If we’re going to ask for others to be empathetic, I think we all have to be empathetic.”

Pierce isn’t at the NBA restart at Walt Disney World — the Hawks aren’t among the 22 teams still playing this season — but he’s been active on regular leaguewide coaches Zoom calls and leads a committee of coaches tasked with how those in the NBA can best aid the societal-change movement.

He also helped get someone to coach the coaches.

Bryan Stevenson is the founder and executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative, an NBA community partner, and is someone who has spent 30 years pushing for social justice. He was scheduled to meet with the NBA’s coaches over a Zoom call for a half-hour a few weeks ago. The call went more than three times that long, and from there a running dialogue was born.

“It was mesmerizin­g,” Carlisle said of that initial call. “It was an education in itself.”

It’s the calendar created by Stevenson’s organizati­on that Carlisle reads from each day. The impact by whatever Stevenson said to coaches that first night has continued resonating.

“You have to believe things you haven’t seen,” Stevenson said. “You have to have hope that we can turn this moment into something more than a moment. I mean, hopelessne­ss is the enemy of justice and injustice prevails where hopelessne­ss persists. And if NBA coaches believe that and if NBA players believe that, then fans can believe it too.”

He’s convinced the coaches believe. Stevenson has been lauded publicly by virtually all the league’s coaches in recent weeks for helping educate them on things that they never knew. In a league where a handful of coaches — Golden State’s Steve Kerr and San Antonio’s Gregg Popovich, most notably — are not shy about sharing political views publicly, this moment has driven other coaches to use their voices as well.

The NBA got permission to make the “John Lewis: Good Trouble” documentar­y available to all head and assistant coaches this week and several teams — including the Magic, at Clifford’s request — screened the film. It was also available as a featured movie on the curated channel within the hotels.

 ?? Sue Ogrocki/Associated Press ?? ■ Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young holds a "Black Lives Matter" sign during a peaceful rally on June 1 in his hometown of Norman, Okla., calling attention to the killing of George Floyd. While NBA players are using the season restart to demand change; coaches in the league are not making them walk down that path alone.
Sue Ogrocki/Associated Press ■ Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young holds a "Black Lives Matter" sign during a peaceful rally on June 1 in his hometown of Norman, Okla., calling attention to the killing of George Floyd. While NBA players are using the season restart to demand change; coaches in the league are not making them walk down that path alone.

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