The Commercial Appeal

Hawks are leading the way off court

- Mike Freeman

There was an interestin­g moment in sports this week, one you may have missed, and it involved the Atlanta Hawks, the organizati­on that continues to put its money where its basketball is.

The Hawks announced on Thursday they were refinancing a constructi­on loan for the Emory Sports Medicine Complex utilizing a network of Blackowned banks. The Hawks said the $35 million loan is the first time a profession­al sports franchise has underwritt­en a significant loan using Black bank credit. The National Black Bank Foundation, a newly formed group, helped create the deal. The Hawks say the main point of the transactio­n is that it’s a good financial arrangemen­t.

“We’re getting a very attractive loan with very attractive terms that we’re proud to have,” Tony Ressler, the principal owner of the Hawks, said at a press conference, “and that’s the message that hopefully we can all make quite clear.”

But there’s more to this story than dollar signs and data. The larger picture is how the Hawks continue to be one of the most aggressive­ly, and unabashedl­y, pro-black franchises in all of American sports.

It’s not unfair to say few teams have done better understand­ing their place in the post-george Floyd universe, securing that place, and then expanding it, moment by moment, transactio­n by transactio­n.

“The way we try to run the Atlanta Hawks, we’re trying to win basketball games,” said Ressler. “So let there be no confusion, we’re trying to run a firstclass organizati­on. Eighty percent of NBA players are African American. We’re trying to do business with our community. We’re trying to be a force of good in the community. We’re trying to help Black economic empowermen­t in our community. We think that’s all good business.”

The Hawks have come a long way since former team general manager Danny Ferry made several racially ugly remarks in 2014.

They were also the first NBA team to hire a diversity and inclusion officer.

After Floyd’s death on May 25, and then following the shooting in the back of an unarmed Black man named Rayshard Brooks by a white Atlanta police officer on June 12, coach Lloyd Pierce and Hawks players became protesting fixtures in Atlanta.

No one knows how good the Hawks will be on the court this season.

What we do know is how historic they continue to be off it.

 ?? THE OKLAHOMAN VIA USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Atlanta Hawks star Trae Young at a Black Lives Matter rally in June.
THE OKLAHOMAN VIA USA TODAY NETWORK Atlanta Hawks star Trae Young at a Black Lives Matter rally in June.

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