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Sport-by-sport snapshot of racial injustice protests

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MOVED by the videotaped shooting of Jacob Blake, many profession­al athletes—some who had previously donned Black Lives Matter t-shirts and knelt for the national anthem to protest racial injustice—made a more dramatic statement. They refused to play.

National Basketball Associatio­n (NBA) players led the way Wednesday and Thursday by sitting out of scheduled playoff games in the “bubble” in Florida, the league’s answer to finishing up the season amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. The movement quickly spread to the other profession­al sports.

“We are scared as Black people in America,” Lebron James said. “Black men, Black women, Black kids. We are terrified.”

Athletes similarly came together after the death of George Floyd, another Black man who died when an officer pressed his knee into his neck for more than seven minutes. Some players knelt during the national anthem or stood in silence, fists raised, while others wore Black Lives Matter t-shirts or had names of Black people killed by police on their jerseys.

But then the cell-phone video of Blake getting shot in the back seven times by police in Kenosha, Wisconsin, about 40 miles south of Milwaukee, emerged.

Athletes say the moment has forced them to act. Here’s a look at what they are doing across the major profession­al sports to call for an end to racial injustice:

NBA: The Milwaukee Bucks set off a wave of postponeme­nts in profession­al sports Wednesday, when players refused to take the court for a playoff game against Orlando. The two other playoff games for that day were also postponed, as were the three games set for Thursday.

NBA Executive Vice President Mike Bass issued a statement that said: “We are hopeful to resume games either Friday or Saturday,” and added that a group of players and representa­tives from the teams in the bubble were going to hold a videoconfe­rence call with the league’s front office and union officials about the next step.

“We don’t want lip service anymore,” said San Jose’s Chris Wondolowsk­i, who is of Native American descent. “It’s time for actual actions to be made, and time for a change.”

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL: Seven games were postponed Thursday, a day after three games were called off.

“In this world, I’ve always believed, there’s two things you can’t live without. It has nothing to do with food and water. It’s love and hope. And I don’t think we’re doing a good job in our country giving that to everyone and I think that needs to be the focus here,” Philadelph­ia Phillies Manager Joe Girardi said.

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE: Nine teams canceled practice Thursday. The league is set to start its season on September 10.

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE: Announced Thursday that it postponed two days of playoff games. The league’s games went on as scheduled Wednesday. San Jose Sharks forward Evander Kane, who is Black, was vocal about the issue on Twitter, saying it would send “a clear message that human rights take priority over sports.”

GOLF: The Profession­al Golfers Associatio­n Tour event at Olympia Fields outside Chicago—less than 100 miles from Kenosha, Wisconsin—went on as scheduled Thursday. Cameron Champ, who has a Black father and a white mother, wore a black show and a white shoe. On the white shoe he wrote: “Jacob Blake BLM.” The LPGA Tour is set to begin play Friday in Rogers, Arkansas.

WNBA: The six WNBA games set for Wednesday and Thursday were postponed in the league’s bubble in Bradenton, Florida. Players from the Washington Mystics wore t-shirts that had Blake’s name on the front and seven holes in the back. Later, players held a candleligh­t vigil. The league had just passed its halfway mark of the 22-game season.

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER: Five of six scheduled matches Wednesday were postponed. Players for the other game, between Nashville SC and Orlando City, said they had already taken the field in preparatio­n for their game before a collective decision was made. The MLS had no games scheduled for Thursday.

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