USA TODAY International Edition

UK players weigh in by kneeling during anthem

- Jon Hale The ( Louisville) Courier Journal USA TODAY Network

LEXINGTON, Ky. – Kentucky men's basketball players' decision to kneel during the national anthem before Saturday's game at Florida came after a series of in- depth conversati­ons.

“We meet as a team, we talk,” graduate student guard Davion Mintz said. “That's really special for us because everyone comes in, everyone shares their opinion. It's not like we just have one or two guys or just the coaches. We meet as a team, we talk, we share our stories, we relate to each other and we have guys who really listen. Then we make a decision from there, and our coaches just support us.”

Kentucky coach John Calipari did not learn his players wanted to kneel during the anthem until the trip to the arena in Gainesvill­e. After a conversati­on with Mintz, sophomore forward Keion Brooks and senior forward Olivier Sarr, Calipari and the other Kentucky coaches decided to kneel with the players at the players' request.

Whether the team continues to kneel during the anthem will depend on the outcome of further conversati­ons among players, Mintz said, but a repeat of the demonstrat­ion in Gainesvill­e is unlikely to happen at Rupp Arena because the team has not been on the court for the anthem there this season.

Kentucky has limited the number of people allowed on the court this season due to the COVID- 19 pandemic. Instead of having someone sing the anthem from the court, Kentucky has played a recording of the anthem on the video board while teams are still in their locker rooms.

Regardless of whether Kentucky players kneel during the anthem again, the conversati­ons among Kentucky players are not ending.

“It's a lot of stuff that goes on every day that we knelt for,” Brooks said. “The Capitol ( riot), that stuff had a part to play in it, but there are some other things that we don't see that go on every day that are unacceptab­le and that we want to take a stand against.”

The decision to kneel is the continuati­on of the team's desire to weigh in on social issues first voiced in the summer in the wake of the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd and former Kentucky student Breonna Taylor.

On Aug. 31, the team posted a video supporting the Black Lives Matter movement in which players shared their own experience­s with racism and read a list of Black people killed by police.

“The time for change is now,” the players said in the video, calling for fans to support them on and off the court. “We've watched for too long now as our mothers, our fathers, our brothers and our sisters have been profiled and discrimina­ted and even beaten, shot and killed. The victims of police brutality with no justice.”

The unified showing by Kentucky players and coaches to all kneel at once has led criticism of the decision to be directed at the entire team rather than individual players.

For the numerous fans who took to social media to criticize the demonstrat­ion, Calipari had a message.

“These kids are good kids,” he said. “They care about this country and all of the other stuff. They're trying to figure out life and making statements that they think they have to make. I want to listen to what they're saying, and then I'll support them if they want me to be there.”

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