Chicago Sun-Times

‘All Redbird lives matter’ comment leads ISU athletes to skip sporting events, practices

- BY NADER ISSA, EDUCATION REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

Athletes at Illinois State University are refusing to attend team practices and sporting events after the head of the athletics department reportedly said “all Redbird lives matter” when discussing the Black Lives Matter movement on a conference call last week with players and coaches.

Students in all but one of the university’s 17 athletics programs have said they won’t return to their teams until their list of social justice demands are met, including a concrete, comprehens­ive plan of action to support racial justice protests and a commitment to diversity in the athletics administra­tion. The missed team events are mostly practices because competitio­ns are postponed or canceled because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The athletics department released a plan Monday afternoon that partially addressed some of those issues but that athletes quickly said was insufficie­nt.

The strike started after Athletics Director Larry Lyons said on a department­wide preseason call last Wednesday that “all Redbird lives matter,” referencin­g the university’s mascot in a play on the “all lives matter” slogan often used by critics of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Students who said they were offended by the comments took to social media to list their demands, which also included hiring mental health profession­als who specialize in “minority struggles” and more diversity among athletic trainers. Athletes have said coaches and alums have been supportive.

A coach on ISU’s track and field team wrote on Twitter that Lyons’ comment was “insensitiv­e and frankly one that attempts to drown the movement.” An assistant coach with ISU’s men’s basketball program posted a message that called “all lives matter” comments “hurtful and cruel.” Davontae Harris, an NFL player and ISU alum, said in a tweet that he was going to have to “disassocia­te myself with Illinois State as a whole” and that Lyons “was fully aware of what he was doing ... we can’t keep allowing people to pretend like they don’t know any better.”

Lyons, through a spokesman, declined to comment Monday. The spokesman said Lyons would wait to see athletes’ response to the plan released that afternoon before speaking again publicly. The plan includes a review of hiring practices “with the goal of creating a more diverse and equity-minded staff,” diversity and inclusion training for administra­tors and a commitment to hire a therapist “with specific skills and experience providing counseling and mental health services to student-athletes of color.”

In a story published Friday by the student newspaper, the Vidette, Lyons said, “I know I hurt a significan­t number of them by the choice of these words. That was not my intention, and I am truly sorry for that.

“Black lives do matter, and I am serious when I say that, and all Redbird student-athletes’ lives matter equally. I should have said that, and I did not. I have a lot of trust to build back,” Lyons told the student newspaper.

Jordan Wilkerson, a decathlete for the track and field team and one of the leaders of the athlete strike, said students felt offended and disrespect­ed when they heard Lyons’ comments, which they felt minimized the social justice movement and their experience­s as Black people. He said Lyons’ apology in the days since isn’t enough.

“It’s just a hard time, but I feel like Black people have always faced a hard time living in this country, and all we know is to be resilient and keep fighting,” Wilkerson said. “We don’t have a lot of minorities in the athletics administra­tion . ... It’s really hard for Black students or students of color to really feel safe and comfortabl­e when people in positions of power don’t look like them.”

Of the athletics department’s 15 administra­tors, 14 appear to be white.

“Our boycott is only going to stop if they meet [our demands],” Wilkerson said. He added that he doesn’t find the initiative­s released Monday to be adequate because they were “quickly and poorly put together” in an attempt to stop the strike, and that he’s “had outlines for class assignment­s that were more thorough.” The athletics department didn’t list out a step-by-step action plan or consequenc­es for not following through, he said.

“That’s going to be up to our discretion if they meet that,” he said. “It’s not going to be up to some things that they just check off boxes. We need a thorough, implementa­ble plan. We need to see change, we need to see resources being moved around.”

Wilkerson said he and other athletes are giving Lyons a chance to meet their demands and aren’t calling for his job. But if “Larry Lyons can’t do that, then we want someone else who can do it.” He said students are willing to hold out of competitio­ns when the time comes.

 ?? CLARE PROCTOR/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Illinois State University athletes are demanding a series of changes from their athletics department.
CLARE PROCTOR/SUN-TIMES FILE Illinois State University athletes are demanding a series of changes from their athletics department.
 ??  ?? Larry Lyons ILLINOIS STATE ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT
Larry Lyons ILLINOIS STATE ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT

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