The Commercial Appeal

Cowboys’ Prescott is a social justice warrior

- Jarrett Bell

You can’t say Dak Prescott is still languishin­g in a “sunken place” while mesmerized by Jerry Jones.

Not after the Dallas Cowboys quarterbac­k stepped out in the name of social justice like never before by sending a passionate letter on Thursday to Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt and the state’s parole board, advocating for the release of death row inmate Julius Jones.

What a bold statement, quite the contrast to the message Prescott sent a couple of years ago when he vehemently supported Jones’ backward, “toes on the line” stance that not only denounced but threatened any Cowboys player who dared to take a knee during the national anthem.

“Current events are shining a muchneeded light on deep-seated prejudices and systematic mistreatme­nt of Black people, and it is my sincere hope that the cultural movements of today will lead to significant social changes that will create a better tomorrow,” Prescott, 27, wrote in the letter that was obtained exclusivel­y by TIME. “To that end, you all are in the unique position of being able to make a direct impact by addressing a specific miscarriag­e of justice.”

Think about it: The high-profile quarterbac­k for the most popular franchise in America’s most popular sports league using his name and platform to fight for the cause of a Black man convicted of a 1999 murder of a White man, with apparently shaky legal circumstan­ces in play.

Is Prescott suddenly “woke” amid the racial reckoning that is seemingly afoot in America? Maybe he was never completely in a “sunken place” — the term for the sad plight of the protagonis­t in Jordan Peele’s blockbuste­r film, “Get Out” — but that was surely the perception of some. In addition to a torrent of social media brushback as debate raged in 2018 over NFL player protests, Prescott was depicted with tears streaming from his eyes on a “Get Out” mural in Dallas.

Prescott’s willingnes­s to publicly engage in a significant social justice case might also reflect a personal evolution.

It’s 2020, a year when all of us have been challenged by the COVID-19 pandemic and perhaps forced to assess life through a different lens. For Prescott, the year has also included the tremendous personal tragedy of losing a brother in April. And on his career track, 2020 is the year that Prescott still hasn’t been able to secure the security of a longterm contract with the Cowboys.

No, Prescott isn’t in the poor house. Assuming the NFL manages to get in a full season, he’ll earn $31.4 million in 2020 while playing on the franchise tag. That’s astonishin­g, sure, for a player who entered the NFL as a fourth-round pick. Yet it is also strange that after he led the NFL’S top-ranked offense last season, there’s still no long-term contract.

Then there’s the George Floyd factor. I’m wondering how the killing of a Black man on the street in Minneapoli­s by a White, now former police officer, affected Prescott. The NFL players (including Chiefs phenom Patrick Mahomes and star Saints wideout Michael Thomas) who appeared on the video that prompted NFL commission­er Roger Goodell to respond with his own video shortly after Floyd’s death, hadn’t previously done anything publicly on the social justice front. Yet, like so many of us, they were so moved. And they were inspired to use their names and platforms to make a statement. If Prescott — a model citizen who so ably touted the Cowboys’ company line but was still unable to land a long-term deal like most star quarterbac­ks — has been influenced by the factors in his personal and profession­al life against the social backdrop of America that would make him, well, human.

Shortly after Floyd’s death, Prescott, stating that he was “disgusted and unsettled,” pledged to donate $1 million to improve police training and address systematic racism.

Now he’s taken another step in pushing for the release of Julius Jones. Maybe, too, he can inspire Jerry Jones to join the cause.

“As a Black man in this country right now, I experience injustices firsthand day in and day out, even as an athlete with ‘celebrity status,’” Prescott wrote in his letter to the authoritie­s in Oklahoma.

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