Regina Leader-Post

NBA GM’S political tweet on Hong Kong draws ire

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BEIJING The Houston Rockets’ Chinese sponsor and a Chinese sportswear maker have suspended work with the NBA team after its general manager sent a tweet in support of Hong Kong protests during the weekend.

Although Rockets GM Daryl Morey quickly deleted the tweet, sportswear brand Li-ning and sponsor Shanghai Pudong Developmen­t Bank (SPD Bank) Credit Card Center said on Sunday they were suspending co-operation with the team.

The Rockets are widely followed in China, partly because they drafted Chinese basketball player Yao Ming in 2002, who became a star for them and helped build the NBA’S following there.

“We want to express our indignatio­n and strong condemnati­on,” read a statement from Li-ning, published on the Twitter-like Weibo platform. “We have already stopped our co-operation with the Houston Rockets and continue to urge them to give a clear answer on this matter.”

China’s SPD Bank also said on Sunday it has suspended related marketing activities and publicity.

“SPD Bank Credit Card Center expresses strong protest and opposition to the wrong remarks made by Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey,” the bank said in a statement on its Weibo account.

Neither statements said whether the decisions were permanent.

The pressure on the Rockets has not purely been about business.

Shortly after the announceme­nt by both businesses, Chinese state broadcaste­r CCTV’S sports channel also said it would suspend any further broadcasts of the Rockets’ matches starting Sunday.

The Chinese consulate general in Houston also issued a statement Sunday, condemning Morey’s remarks.

He said it had “made stern representa­tions to the Rockets and requested them to clarify, to immediatel­y correct any mistakes, and to eliminate any negative influences.”

Morey’s tweet included an image captioned, Fight For Freedom. Stand With Hong Kong.

The post has since been removed and team owner Tilman Fertitta went on Twitter to distance the team from the statement.

“Daryl Morey does not speak for the Houston Rockets,” he said on Saturday.

“Our presence in Tokyo is all about the promotion of the NBA internatio­nally and we are not a political organizati­on.”

The Rockets, currently playing games in Japan, could not be reached for comment outside of business hours.

The business’s announceme­nts follow one earlier in the day from the Chinese Basketball Associatio­n that said it was suspending “exchanges and co-operation” with the Houston Rockets.

In a statement posted on Weibo, the associatio­n, chaired by Yao, said it opposed Morey’s comment, which it called inappropri­ate.

Basketball fans in China voiced criticism of the Rockets on Weibo.

“I watched the Rockets for 21 years, but I’m still a Chinese person first and foremost,” said one user in response to the basketball associatio­n’s announceme­nt.

Another said: “We Chinese basketball fans call on either Morey to apologize or the Rockets to fire Morey. If this doesn’t happen, then we call on fans to boycott watching Rockets games.”

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Daryl Morey

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