armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan

About the Author

Coachcarpenter
Born under a bad sign, raised some hell in Tennessee and Texas, married up, had a beautiful baby girl, write about sports every now and then.

More By Coachcarpenter

The Number One Team in the Country - The Tennessee Volunteers
8 votes, 3 comments
The Great Basketball Debates (Part 5) - Q & A
7 votes, 3 comments
The Great Basketball Debates (Part 4) - Whose Game Is This?
7 votes, 3 comments
View All

Other recent voters

If you like the article, vote for it.
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

Sports and Politics

by Coachcarpenter
created January 24, 2008, last edited February 10, 2009
23
Vote
IUPUI basketball coach Ron Hunter will work barefooted tonight against Oakland University to raise awareness and shoes for Samaritan's Feet, a charity devoted to putting shoes on African children. It is a wonderful story that raises some interesting questions:

How much obligation do athletes/coaches have to be forces for social change?

Do we, the sports-watching public, want to see political gestures from our athletes?

What is an appropriate political gesture vs. an inappropriate political gesture?

We often hear about athletes forming charities, reading in elementary schools, visiting hospitals, etc., but rarely see one doing something publicly on the playing field to make a political statement or raise awareness for a cause.

William Rhoden explores this issue in his book Forty Million Dollar Slaves. His thesis is that athletes stay quiet because of the big fat paychecks coming from their bosses, much the same way slaves kept quiet in order to avoid punishments back in the Southern cotton fields. Rhoden specifically points to Michael Jordan as someone who avoided being controversial throughout his career, despite the power and attention he possessed, because he benefited financially by doing so.

I have not heard one critical word about Hunter's gesture because it is so purely selfless and for such a noble cause. What if, however, Hunter went shoeless to raise awareness about the paltry minimum wage? What if Hunter left the game during the 2nd half to protest late-term abortions? What if Hunter ordered his team to forfeit games until troops were brought home from Iraq? It is easy to support a social/political agenda that is safe like shoes for kids, but what about one that is less safe and more controversial?

Of course, there are several historical examples that demonstrate what happens when athletes make overt political gestures during sporting events/ceremonies. Tommie Smith and John Carlos were kicked out of the Olympic Village and largely panned for their racism protest at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf famously refused to stand during the national anthem because its "history of tyranny" violated his Muslim beliefs. He was jeered by NBA fans and criticized for his actions. Carlos Delgado was booed for his decision to sit during the playing of "God Bless America" in protest of the Iraq War.

These are all largely the same actions Coach Hunter is taking tonight, but the causes in these respective situations were more divisive.

With the NBA All-Star game coming to New Orleans this season, what would happen if the players vowed to skip the game unless all Katrina areas of the city were addressed? What would the public reaction be in such a situation? Do athletes have any obligation whatsoever to use their enormous clout in matters similar to the way Coach Hunter is bringing attention to the plight of shoeless African children?

Let's face it - if Hunter is raising this much attention at IUPUI, how much attention could a Tiger Woods, Kobe Bryant or David Beckham garner for a similar cause? What if Woods decided to play The Master's with a pink golf ball to raise money for breast cancer? Would it be appropriate? Would we be willing to live in a political sports culture for the sake of hungry Africans, dying AIDS patients and battered women or do we want to keep the separation of sports and politics.

I have to believe there are athletes and coaches across the country today thinking, "If he can do something like that for shoeless Africans, what could I do to help someone else?"

While I applaud Coach Hunter's beautiful gesture, I wonder whether it is opening a Pandora's box of public political statements from professional and amateur athletes across the country and wonder what the reaction will be if it occurs.


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
Steel TownDraft Pick
676 days ago
Score 0+-
Wow, excelent article. What great questions to ask.

"How much obligation do athletes/coaches have to be forces for social change?" - To this I must ask you a question. Obligation to who?

"Do we, the sports-watching public, want to see political gestures from our athletes?" - In general I think the answer is no. But I don't think anyone would not want a famous athlete to champion their own cause. Most people only seem to mind when an athlete speaks out about something they don't support.

"What is an appropriate political gesture vs. an inappropriate political gesture?" - I don't think there is such a thing as an inappropriate political gesture. But you must remember when making a bold political statement, there will be people that disagree with you, and those people may lash out at you in turn. For instance, you have every right voice your opinion, but, I too, have every right to think you are a jerk off for what you did.
Permalink | Reply
The PipDiv-I Stud
676 days ago
Score 1+-
The Tiger Woods lynching story also rings true here. People think Tiger should be doing more, he claims he can't do everything. Both sides are partially right. It's tough. For me I am a very political person and I would do something controversial for a good cause. The IUPUI coach is doing something small for an easy to accept cause and that is good. Mohammed Ali was a storm of controversy and long-term his legacy has been a positive one. But others just get roasted as easy targets. It's such a tough situation. The best bet would be to give time and money behind the scenes, rather than risk the platform that allows you to give at all. A broke athlete has no money or voice for change. Sadly that is the world we live.
Permalink | Reply
KelsdadAll-Star
676 days ago
Score 0+-
Tiger did exactly the right thing, which was to keep his mouth shut.
Permalink
The PipDiv-I Stud
675 days ago
Score 0+-
I agree, trying to get that situation over with behind the scene's as quickly as possible was the right way to handle that specific situation.
Permalink
RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
676 days ago
Score 1+-
An obligation to be political? No. Nobody has an obligation to be politically vocal or active. Half of this country doesn't vote, most of this country doesn't belong to a party, or can even name their Representative. Political apathy is a sacred right.

Do I want to see political gestures? So long as it doesn't affect on-field performance, I don't care. If Curt Schilling wants to wander around New Hampshire campaigning for McCain, and Tom Brady wants to give money to the Democrats, they can go right ahead. If David Ortiz wants to turn his back on the flag during the anthem, that's fine too. It's your right to voice political dissent and assent. However, it's also everyone else's right to disagree with you, and to voice that disagreement.

And I'll say this, you don't want to come off like George Clooney at the Oscars. Don't be pretentious, don't be a know-it-all, don't be a jerk. Leave those roles for politicians to fill.

Appropriate vs. inappropriate are subjective. And it would be hard to classify each. That's more of a "know it when I see it" kind of thing.

An example of an inappropriate gesture: if that white guy in the picture was also doing the black power fist thing.
Permalink | Reply
LASportsblogAAA-er
676 days ago
Score 2+-
No obligation, but I commend Coach Hunter for her work and his pledge to take the shoes to Africa and hand them out himself
Permalink | Reply
GeodanVarsity
676 days ago
Score 0+-
Excellent article. Very thought provoking.

It reminded me of when the U.S. boycotted the 1980 Olympics because they were being held in the former U.S.S.R. Communism was the enemy and sports and the athletes were the losers.

All the athletes that didn't get to compete were overlooked in order to make a political statement. There hard work left meaningless.

Communism failed in the Eastern Block and Russia and perhaps the world is better for it.

So, how is it that there is no boycott of China's 2008 Olympics? Communism is still oppressing a great many people. Maybe the economic relationships of the global economy has something to do with it. Money is the great equalizer.

Some causes do seem easier to make a stand and world class athletes are made lesser when they stay silent in order to maintain there image and profitability margin.

Maybe that's the lesson. We can all take one on the chin until there is no more money to be made.
Permalink | Reply
RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
676 days ago
Score 1+-
The US (and many other countries) boycotted the 1980 summer games because the USSR invaded Afghanistan in 1979, not because the USSR was communist.
Permalink
LASportsblogAAA-er
676 days ago
Score 0+-
Although in hindsight Rawbee, letting Russia handle the Afghanis would of been a favor.
Permalink
RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
676 days ago
Score 1+-
Well in hindsight we should have never let the Jerries to be able to get back in the pantry back in 1918.
Permalink
Add your Comment
ArmchairGM welcomes all comments. If you don't want to be anonymous, Register or Login. It's free
Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User Coachcarpenter | January 24, 2008 | January 2008 | Ron Hunter Opinions | College Basketball Opinions

Don't Miss

Phillies World Series 2009: A Year Later, and They Still Don't Want Us
Sorry, But I'm Not Sorry
2009 NHL Preview
In Which Ricketts Wins World Series
2009 Week 3: Let’s Talk About Your Favorite NFL Team

In the News

Hey ArmchairGM users! Want to help the admins update this news section? Click here to help us out.

Comments of the Day

1 Fred McGriff was better than Tony Perez.
1 I"m kind of perplexed by this as well. I think McGriff...
1 What a great article. A topic that needs to be discussed more ...
0 My 9 year old daughter has a loose kneecap, it has sl...
0 hes not a quarterback so its warren moon randall cunningham o...

Play the Picture Game

IF you could have one free ticket, which would y...

New Articles

Alex Smith Carries Niners Past Jaguars
The Los Angeles Dodgers Dominated the Yankees in the 1963 World Series
How Can Fred McGriff Not Be Elected to the Hall of Fame?
Best African-American Quarterback Ever?
Ken Caminiti: National League's 1996 MVP

Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Article:Sports_and_Politics"

This page was last modified 19:48, 24 January 2008. Content is available under the GFDL.

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise