The Guardian (USA)

LA Lakers and Utah Jazz squeak by as NBA reopens amid player protests

- Associated Press

Black players were next to white players. Coaches from one team were next to their compatriot­s from the opposing side. Many locked arms with the man next to them, some shut their eyes tightly, a few raised their fists into the air.

The NBA had a strong, powerful reopening night message.

When it comes to demanding change, the league stands united and on Thursday, the Utah Jazz and New Orleans Pelicans showed that by not standing.

An unpreceden­ted image for the league in unpreceden­ted times: The Jazz and Pelicans knelt alongside one another during “The Star-Spangled Banner,” their way of joining the chorus of those demanding racial justice and equality in society.

The NBA has a rule that dates back to the early 1980s decreeing that players must stand for the national anthem, and Commission­er Adam Silver quickly announced that the policy is being adjusted.

“I respect our teams’ unified act of peaceful protest for social justice and under these unique circumstan­ces will not enforce our long-standing rule requiring standing during the playing of our national anthem,” said Silver, who watched from a plexiglass-enclosed suite because he has not been quarantine­d and therefore cannot be around players and coaches who are living inside the NBA’s so-called bubble at Walt Disney World.

The coaches, New Orleans’ Alvin Gentry and Utah’s Quin Snyder, were next to one another, their arms locked together. The scene, which occurred with the teams lined up along the sideline nearest where “Black Lives Matter” was painted onto the court, was the first of what is expected to be many silent game-day statements by players and coaches who will kneel to call attention to many issues foremost among them, police brutality following the deaths of, among others, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd in recent months.

Even the game referees took a knee during the pregame scene. The Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers repeated the demonstrat­ion before the second game of the re-opening night doublehead­er later Thursday.

“I think it’s critical that all of us, in a unified way, turn attention to social justice,” Snyder said during a televised in-game interview. “And all the players, all the coaches, are united in that fact and committed to do what we can do to effect long-term change.”

Many players warmed up wearing shirts that said ‘Black Lives Matter’. Thursday also marked the debut of new jerseys bearing messages that many players chose to have added, such as ‘Equality’ and ‘Peace’.

The NBA season was suspended when Rudy Gobert who also scored the first basket of the restarted season of the Jazz tested positive for the coronaviru­s and became the first player in the league with such a diagnosis.

Gobert was diagnosed on 11 March; two days later, Taylor, a 26-year-old black woman, was fatally shot when police officers burst into her Louisville, Kentucky apartment using a noknock warrant during a narcotics investigat­ion. The warrant was in connection with a suspect who did not live there and no drugs were found.

Then on 25 March, Floyd died after a white Minneapoli­s police officer pressed a knee into the Black man’s neck for nearly eight minutes. That happened on a street, with the images and sounds of the man saying he couldn’t breathe, then crying out for his mother all captured on a cell phone video.

NBA players have used their platforms both in the bubble and on social media to demand equality, to demand justice for Taylor. Coaches have also said it is incumbent on them to demand change and educate themselves and others. And the pregame actions by the Jazz and the Pelicans were just the start of what is expected to be a constant during the remainder of this season.

“We want our lives to be valued as much as everybody else,” Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum said in a video that aired before the game, a project organized by both the NBA and the National Basketball Players Associatio­n. “We don’t think that we’re better. We want to be seen as equals.”

Added Chris Paul, the Oklahoma City Thunder guard and president of the NBPA, speaking in the same video:

“Things aren’t going to change until we sort of make them change.”

Gentry said he appreciate­d the accidental symmetry that came from the first games of the restarted season coming only hours after the funeral for US representa­tive John Lewis, who died July 17 at the age of 80.

Lewis spent most of his life championin­g civil rights and equality and was the youngest speaker at the 1963 March on Washington the one where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech. Gentry said he believes this movement, like the one Lewis helped spark six decades ago, will endure.

“If you talk to some of the younger generation, I think this is here to stay. I really do,” Gentry said. “I have a 20year-old son and a 22-year-old son, and I know that they feel like this is the most opportune time for us to try to have change in this country.”

LA Clippers 101-103 LA Lakers

LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers showed some rust.

They knocked it off with time to spare.

Anthony Davis scored 34 points, James had the go-ahead basket with 12.8 seconds left and the Lakers moved closer to clinching the No 1 seed in the Western Conference playoffs by topping the Los Angeles Clippers 103-101 on Thursday night in the second game of the NBA’s re-opening doublehead­er.

James had 16 points, 11 rebounds and seven assists to help the Lakers move six and a half games ahead of the Clippers in the West with seven games remaining. Kyle Kuzma added 16 points.

“It felt like a real game to me, two teams battling . ... Can’t complain for the first game,” Davis said.

Paul George had 30 points and Kawhi Leonard scored 28 for the Clippers, who had an 11-point lead midway

through the third in a game with deep ebbs and flows. The Clippers got that lead after a 26-5 run; the Lakers immediatel­y rebutted with a 36-14 run to reclaim control.

And it still came down to the final moments.

George’s three-pointer with 1:50 left cut the Lakers’ lead to 99-98. James muscled his way to a layup on the next possession, and then George hit another three to tie the game at 101 with 29 seconds remaining.

James followed his own miss down the lane for the go-ahead basket, then was brilliant on the last defensive possession – forcing the ball out of Leonard’s hands and covering George as his three-point try at the buzzer misfired.

“We can’t have self-inflicted wounds and I thought we had too many of them,” said Clippers coach Doc Rivers, whose team – which remains shorthande­d

 ??  ?? Members of the New Orleans Pelicans and Utah Jazz kneel together around the Black Lives Matter logo before Thursday’s first game. Photograph: Ashley Landis/USA Today Sports
Members of the New Orleans Pelicans and Utah Jazz kneel together around the Black Lives Matter logo before Thursday’s first game. Photograph: Ashley Landis/USA Today Sports

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