The Guardian (USA)

Fans boo moment of silence to acknowledg­e inequality in NFL opener

- Tom Lutz

The NFL season on Thursday night got off to a dismal start, and exposed the pernicious sentiments of many in America, when some fans jeered what the league described as “a moment of silence dedicated to the ongoing fight for equality in our country”.

The incident was particular­ly striking because it was meant as a show of unity rather than any kind of protest with players, both black and white, linking arms.

“Some NFL fans booing the players for standing and locking arms in a moment of silent unity proves that for them the ‘standing for the flag’ was always about perpetuati­ng white supremacy,” wrote Kansas City councilman Eric Bunch on Twitter.

Earlier the Texans had stayed in the locker room for performanc­es of Lift Every Voice And Sing, widely considered the black national anthem, and the Star-Spangled Banner. Texans executive vice president of football operations Jack Easterby told NBC the players did not want “any misinterpr­etation of celebratin­g one song and throwing shade on the other”.

The Chiefs, the defending Super Bowl champions, stayed on the field during the anthems. Some linked arms while others stood with their hands on their heart. One player, defensive end Alex Okafor, knelt with his fist raised.

The Chiefs allowed around 16,000 fans into Arrowhead Stadium on Thursday night despite the Covid-19 pandemic. Kansas City mayor Quinton Lucas acknowledg­ed earlier this week that at least one person with the virus would attend the game but he said officials had consulted medical experts before making the decision to allow fans.

“Arrowhead Stadium is a large, cavernous, 80,000-seat stadium, so we’re able to keep social distancing, we’re able to keep people outside and we’re able to make sure that people aren’t interactin­g in close spaces and touching surfaces,” Lucas told Yahoo Finance.

The NFL kicked off after a summer of protests against police brutality and racism across the United States, following the police killing of George Floyd in May. When another black man, Jacob Blake, was shot in the back by police last month the protests moved to the sports world with the NBA, WNBA, MLB and MLS among the leagues postponing games in protest.

Player protests have been a huge storyline in the NFL since Colin Kaepernick started kneeling during the national anthem to highlight racial injustice during the 2016 season. Kaepernick soon found himself out of the NFL and many believed he has been blackballe­d by the league’s owners because of his political stance.

In June, the NFL commission­er,

Roger Goodell, admitted the league should have listened to its players earlier on the subject of racism and police brutality against black people. Around two-thirds of NFL players are black, while only two of the principal owners of the 32 teams in the league are people of colour.

Donald Trump, meanwhile, has expressed his displeasur­e at player protests. In 2017, he called NFL players kneeling during the national anthem “sons of bitches” and this week White House spokesman Judd Deere reiterated the president’s stance, saying: “President Trump stands with our brave soldiers and patriots who proudly stand for our national anthem and great flag, not those who choose to disrespect it by kneeling or elect to needlessly cover this demonstrat­ion – and the American people agree with him.”

Deere is correct that some people in the US agree with the president on protests, but many back the players.

A recent Washington Post poll found that 56% of Americans believe kneeling during the anthem is an appropriat­e form of protest, with 42% finding it unacceptab­le.

Earlier on Thursday, the Miami Dolphins said they will stay inside the locker room during the national anthem for the entire 2020 season. The players gave their reasoning in a video released on social media.

“This attempt to unify only creates more divide. So we’ll skip this song and dance, and as a team we’ll stay inside,” the players said during the video. “We need changed hearts, not just a response to pressure. Enough, no more fluff and empty gestures. We need owners with influence and pockets bigger than ours to call up officials and flex political power.”

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