Los Angeles Times

Tailgating talk

Trump’s attacks on NFL players’ protests are a hot-button topic before Chargers game.

- By Hailey Branson-Potts hailey.branson-potts @latimes.com

Fans swap views on Trump’s remarks before the Chargers game.

The debate over President Trump’s criticism of NFL players who don’t stand during the national anthem spilled over Sunday into the parking lot of the StubHub Center in Carson, where Los Angeles Chargers fans were gathered to watch the team battle the Kansas City Chiefs.

Tobin Ellis, 43, was sitting with a group of friends a few hours before the game, tailgating in the parking lot outside the stadium. They were drinking beers and grilling carne asada on a small charcoal grill.

Ellis said he had heard Trump’s comments and had been following the response.

“Our president should be spending his time on more important things,” he said from a lawn chair in front of a black SUV with a giant TV propped in its tailgate and tuned to football. “He’s basically politicize­d the game. I’m here to watch football, not worry about manufactur­ed rhetoric.”

His friend, Greg Gilmer, 43, grinned. “I second that!” he said. But their friend Ryan Higgins, 41, disagreed. Higgins said he voted for Trump. He said he finds the president’s willingnes­s to speak his mind refreshing.

“I don’t mind him saying it,” Higgins said. “It’s not a big deal…. This country is phenomenal because of freedom of speech,” and it was Trump’s right to voice his displeasur­e with the players’ protests.

The protests began when former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick kneeled during the anthem last season. Kaepernick’s action was in response to the large number of black men killed by police.

At a political rally Friday, Trump challenged NFL owners to fire any player who didn’t stand for the anthem. On Sunday morning, Trump continued his attack on the most successful sports league in the country.

“If NFL fans refuse to go to games until players stop disrespect­ing our flag and country, you would see change take place fast,” Trump tweeted. “Fire or suspend!”

Craig Calentino, 55, a mortgage banker from Laguna Niguel, and his wife, Cara Calentino, 52, a firstgrade teacher, sat in lawn chairs under a tree outside the StubHub Center before the game.

They’re season ticket holders. Craig has been a Chargers fan since he was a kid and wore a Chargers shirt. But his wife sported her sparkly New England Patriots shirt.

“If a Patriots fan and a Chargers fan can get along, why can’t we all?” Cara quipped before the game.

Craig said he voted for Trump but was angry about the president’s comments about the NFL. He’s been embarrasse­d by a lot of the things Trump has done and said and how the president seemingly has “no filter,” he added.

“Trump’s done it again. He politicize­d it,” Craig said of the game. “Sports bring people together, but this is just so divisive.”

Craig said he thought it was ridiculous that people had a problem with players kneeling. He said Kaepernick did it to protest police violence against black people but that people had distorted the meaning to say it was disrespect­ful to the flag and veterans.

“People interpret things in their own way,” he said. “It’s not about the flag. You think any of these players hate the country they live in?”

Louie Mbarkeh, 23, was playing cornhole in the parking lot before the game with his friend Justine Cruz, 24.

Mbarkeh had been following the president’s comments and the reaction all weekend on Twitter. He said that the players have a right to do what they want and that it was wrong for the president to tell people they’re not allowed to protest.

“It’s a form of free speech,” he said of the players taking a knee.

“Regardless of where you stand, you have to stand up for these rights. For him to attack NFL players on something as simple as free speech, while he said there were people ‘on both sides’ in Charlottes­ville, is mindboggli­ng to me,” he added, referring to the violence at a white supremacis­t rally in Virginia last month.

Mbarkeh said he was heartened by seeing players stand up for each other over the weekend.

“These athletes have each other’s backs,” he said. “It’s at this time in our history that we need to have each other’s backs. Regardless of how you feel, there’s a sense of unity in the NFL. If they want to take a knee, take a knee. If they don’t, that’s their right.”

Tim O’Boyle, 32, of Irvine hung an American flag under a tent in the parking lot, where he and friends were drinking beers and hanging out before the game.

He voted for Trump, he said, was happy the president weighed in. He had a photo of a quote by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. ready to go, saved on his phone, with a photo of King and the quote “I look to a day when people will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”

O’Boyle, who is white, said he thought the protests were inherently about race and inappropri­ate.

“It’s not a black-andwhite issue. It’s about the American flag and what we stand for. This is the best country in the world, and we have people kneeling at the flag, saying it’s a black-andwhite issue? We’re all Americans,” he said.

“I’m not a racist. I’m a Trump supporter. I have a lot of friends that are black…. A lot of people don’t know what older generation­s have gone through to protect this country. It’s their right to take a knee, but I think it’s disrespect­ful.”

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