Albany Times Union

Unified city back in spotlight

Called “racist” place 5 years ago, Milwaukee now proudly diversifie­d

- By Steve Megargee

Much has changed in Milwaukee since the Bucks won their latest NBA title a halfcentur­y ago.

Nothing reflects the difference­s more than the melting pot of fans swarming together outside Fiserv Forum playoff games. Fans will flock there again Sunday in hopes of helping the Bucks rally from an 0-2 deficit in the NBA Finals when they play host to the Phoenix Suns in Game 3.

The diversity of the crowds is striking considerin­g Milwaukee’s history.

Team president Peter Feigin backtracke­d five years ago after calling Milwaukee “the most segregated, racist place I’ve ever experience­d in my life,” but 49-year-old Milwaukee native Lanelle Ramey — a Black man — believes it needed to be said.

“It forced those who were here, longtime Milwaukeea­ns, to look in the mirror — in particular those who didn’t want to believe it,” said Ramey, the executive director for MENTOR Milwaukee, a Bucks-backed organizati­on that fosters mentorship programs for area youth.

Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett said he took no personal umbrage over Feigin’s 2016 comments. Barrett noted the diversity of his own administra­tive team while adding, “I’m also very cognizant of the fact we have a very large income gap, education gap, public safety gap in not only the city of Milwaukee but all of southeaste­rn Wisconsin.”

Feigin believes what the Bucks have done off the court is at least as important as what they have accomplish­ed on the court.

When asked what his proudest moment is with the Bucks, Feigin doesn’t mention the Eastern Conference title the team just won. He instead cites the players’ decision not to take the floor for a postseason game inside the bubble at Walt Disney World last summer following the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wis.

Their decision led to a leaguewide postponeme­nt of playoff games.

“It really kind of sparked a global pause and awareness for social justice,” Feigin said.

Barrett said the Bucks “embody not only the team spirit that you see with all the players, but they embody the community spirit of wanting to be a part of the community. It has been true

since the day they got here.”

Bucks players engaging in social issues isn’t new.

Bob Dandridge, a recent Hall of Fame selection who played on the Bucks’ 1971 championsh­ip team and the 1974 squad that lost the NBA Finals to Boston, said there were plenty of outspoken players on those teams.

Kareem Abdul-jabbar’s activism inspired the NBA to give out a social justice award bearing his name. Oscar Robertson filed the lawsuit that helped bring free agency to the NBA. Dandridge also wasn’t shy about sharing his views.

The difference today, Dandridge says, is the support players receive from management.

“I think it’s an entirely different approach as far as outspokenn­ess with today’s owners and the owners back in the ’70s when I was in Milwaukee,” Dandridge said.

Team executives also issued a statement standing behind then-bucks guard Sterling Brown after Milwaukee police took him to the ground and shocked him with a Taser in January 2018 over a parking violation. Brown, one of the leaders of the Bucks’ playoff protest last year, sued the city and eventually reached a $750,000 settlement.

When Feigin took over as Bucks president in 2014 after Wes Edens, Marc Lasry and Jamie Dinan bought the team, the franchise was struggling.

Milwaukee’s 2001 Eastern Conference final appearance marked the only time the Bucks advanced beyond the first round of the playoffs from 1990 to 2018. The Bucks were playing in Bradley Center, one of the NBA’S oldest venues.

“It was like finding a unicorn, finding a Bucks fan six years ago,” said Sean Marus, a 28-year-old Bucks fan from the Milwaukee suburb of Wauwatosa.

Times have changed.

Marus was one of about 9,000 fans who poured into Fiserv Forum to watch on a video screen Tuesday as the Bucks played Game 1 of the NBA Finals at Phoenix. Bucks officials said another 20,000 fans gathered in the “Deer District” outside the 3-year-old arena.

The Bucks have engaged in social change in Milwaukee and around the state.

Bucks players visited a prison last season to spotlight the need for criminal justice reform. The Bucks teamed up with the Sacramento Kings on a Team Up for Change summit featuring panel discussion­s on police brutality. They led a protest march through downtown Milwaukee following George Floyd’s death.

 ?? Steve Megargee / Associated Press ?? Thousands of fans gathered outside Fiserv Forum to watch on a screen as Milwaukee played at Phoenix in Game 1.
Steve Megargee / Associated Press Thousands of fans gathered outside Fiserv Forum to watch on a screen as Milwaukee played at Phoenix in Game 1.

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