NBA will FORCE Mavericks to play the national anthem before games
NBA will FORCE Dallas Mavericks to play the national anthem before games after owner Mark Cuban scrapped it because The Star-Spangled Banner doesn’t ‘represent people from all communities’
- The NBA is again enforcing its policy requiring teams to play the national anthem before games after Mavs owner Mark Cuban discontinued the practice in Dallas
- The absence of the national anthem went unnoticed for 13 games in Dallas before it was reported because fans were banned due to COVID-19 guidelines
- Fans have only recently been allowed to resume attending Mavs games in Dallas
- Previously, the NBA required teams to play The Star-Spangled Banner ahead of games but the league gave teams the permission to drop the ritual last summer
- This was believed to be the first time that that any team from the four major American professional sports leagues refused to play the national anthem
- The Athletic reported the decision wasn’t made out of any hatred of the US, but because the anthem doesn’t ‘represent people from all communities’
- The Mavs host the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday night. Cuban told The New York Times that the team plans to comply with the league policy: ‘We are good with it’
The NBA is once again enforcing its longstanding policy requiring teams to play the national anthem before games after Mavericks owner Mark Cuban decided to discontinue the practice in Dallas because he and the team believe The Star-Spangled Banner does not represent all communities.
‘With NBA teams now in the process of welcoming fans back into their arenas, all teams will play the national anthem in keeping with longstanding league policy,’ NBA spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement.
The Mavs host the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday night. Cuban told The New York Times that the team plans to comply with the league policy: ‘We are good with it.’
He also released his own statement on Wednesday afternoon: ‘We respect and always have respected the passion people have for the anthem and our country. But we also loudly hear the voices of those who feel that the anthem does not represent them.
‘We feel that their voices need to be respected and heard, because they have not been. Going forward, our hope is that people will take the same passion they have for this issue and apply the same amount of energy to listen to those who feel differently from them. Only then we can move forward and have courageous conversations that move this country forward and find what unites us.’
Cuban’s decision went unnoticed for 13 games because it was not publicized and fans had not been allowed to attend games due to coronavirus restrictions, according to the The Athletic. In fact, Monday’s Mavs game against the Minnesota Timberwolves was the first time a limited number of fans had been allowed into the American Airlines Center in Dallas during the pandemic.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver had temporarily relaxed the anthem rules amid a wave of Black Lives Matter protests in the wake of the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd on May 25. The policy could still be addressed again in the future.
Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban (pictured) says he told the team to stop playing the national anthem before their home games this season. ‘It was my decision, and I made it in November,’ Cuban told The Athletic on Tuesday without elaborating [File photo]
Dallas Mavericks players and coaches kneel in protest of racism before an August 30 playoff game in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, where the NBA season was finished amid the pandemic. Owner Mark Cuban initially said he expected his players to stand for the anthem, but following the police killing of George Floyd on May 25, he became vocally supportive of demonstrators
The Athletic’s Shams Charania is reporting that Cuban’s decision has nothing to do with any ill will towards the United States, but rather it was a team decision to be more inclusive
Mark Cuban told The New York Times that he will comply with NBA anthem rules
Cuban told The Athletic that he made the decision back in November, but did not initially elaborate on why he did so. The Athletic’s Shams Charania reported on Cuban’s motivation prior to the Mavericks owner’s statement on Wednesday.
‘Source close to Mark Cuban says decision to not play Anthem before Mavs games isn’t because they don’t love U.S.,’ Charania tweeted, ‘but because many feel anthem doesn’t represent them, and they want to continue discussion of how to represent people from all communities when honoring U.S. at game.’
Cuban’s initial decision was condemned by many fans and local conservatives.
‘Get woke, go broke!’ tweeted Forth Worth (Texas) Police Officers’ Association vice president Anthony White. ‘I won’t spend another cent on @dallasmavs.’
Mark Cuban said he hopes people will take the opportunity to listen to others with differing points of view on the subject
‘I’d certainly encourage Republicans that attend [Mavericks games] to really consider what they’re spending money on,’ Dallas County Republican Party communications director William Busby told DailyMail.com. ‘I’m not a fan of official boycotts myself, nor would the party support an official boycott. However, the party does support free-market solutions and people speak with their pocketbooks.
‘What’s the reason for it?’ Busby continued. ‘Is it political correctness? Is it to keep players from kneeling. What is the reason for it? There seems to be no answer for it. I think if Mark Cuban would give some answers, that would probably make people feel a lot better because then at least they would know.’
The controversy spilled over into the White House on Wednesday as White House press secretary Jen Psaki was asked to give President Joe Biden’s response.
‘[Biden] is incredibly proud to be an American and of the anthem and all it represents, particularly to our servicemen and women,’ Psaki said. ‘That pride in our country means recognizing the times when we have not lived up to our highest ideals, which is often what is the conversation around sporting events.’
Although Cuban has continuously supported athletes exercising free speech, in a 2017 interview with ESPN, he said he planned on standing for the anthem with his ‘hand over [his] heart,’ adding that he expected his players to join him.
Cuban has become more vocal in defending protesting athletes since the Minneapolis police killing of African-American man George Floyd on May 25, saying he would support his players who decide to protest.
Monday’s game against the Minnesota Timberwolves was the first time a limited number of fans had been allowed into the American Airlines Center. The Mavericks won 127-122. Pictured: Dallas Mavericks guard Luka Doncic (center, in green) handles the ball against the Minnesota Timberwolves during the first have of Monday’s NBA game
Many critics responded on Twitter, Wednesday, threatening to boycott the team and the NBA for Cuban’s decision. ‘Get woke, go broke!’ tweeted Forth Worth (Texas) Police Officers’ Association vice president Anthony White. ‘I won’t spend another cent on @dallasmavs’
Fans appear split on Cuban’s decision, with some supporting the move and others claiming it is disrespectful to veterans
Stan Van Gundy, Head Coach of the New Orleans Pelicans wrote in a Tweet: ‘This should happen everywhere.’
‘Because I think we’ve learned a lot since 2017,’ Cuban told ESPN’s Outside the Lines in June. ‘I think we’ve evolved as a country. And this is really a unique point in time where we can grow as a society, we can grow as a country and become far more inclusive and become far more aware of the challenges that minority communities go through.
‘So I’ll stand in unison with our players, whatever they choose to do. But again, when our players in the NBA do what’s in their heart, when they do what they feel represents who they are and look to move this country forward when it comes to race relationships, I think that’s a beautiful thing and I’ll be proud of them.’
Previously, the NBA required teams to play the Star-Spangled Banner ahead of games but Silver gave teams the permission to drop the ritual this season.
The league said it had instructed teams ‘to run their pregame operations as they see fit’ due to ‘the unique circumstances this season.’
‘I recognize that this is a very emotional issue on both sides of the equation in America right now,’ Silver said during a press conference in December, ‘and I think it calls for real engagement rather than rule enforcement.’
One Twitter user accused the Mavericks owner of being an ‘un-American Cuban’
Fans appear split on Cuban’s decision, with some supporting the move and others claiming it is disrespectful to veterans.
‘Thank you Mark Cuban, best owner in the NBA by far,’ one Twitter user wrote.
DALLAS MAVERICKS OWNER MARK CUBAN
An investor estimated by Forbes to be worth $4.3 billion, Mark Cuban bought the Dallas Mavericks in 2000, and has since become one of the most outspoken sports franchise owners in America.
In recent years he has vocally supported athletes who protested racism by kneeling during the national anthem, and recently made waves by discontinuing The Star-Spangled Banner at Mavericks games.
However, the 62-year-old Cuban hasn’t always been the ‘woke’ warrior that many of his critics were likening him to on Wednesday.
In a 2017 interview with ESPN, for instance, Cuban said he expected his players to stand for the anthem.
‘This is America, and I’m proud of people who speak out civilly. That’s who we are as a country,’ Cuban said. ‘I’ll be standing there with my hand over my heart. I think the players will be [standing]. I expect them to be.’
Cuban also supported Republican Donald Trump before the two split over the issue of athlete protests. In 2015, Cuban even said that the businessman and presidential candidate was ‘probably the best thing to happen to politics in a long, long time.’
Since then, however, the two have become public enemies.
‘I told him I was really concerned about a candidate becoming president who was not making an effort to learn the issues,’ Cuban told conservative radio host Mark Levin in 2016.
Cuban has criticized Trump over his ties to Russia, for his perceived laziness, and referred to the now-former President as a ‘jagoff’ who got ‘stupider before your eyes.’
Trump, meanwhile, has said Cuban is ‘dope’ and ‘not smart.’
Cuban, a one-time computer software salesman from Pittsburgh, is now invested in over 80 businesses, some of which he learned about as a host on the CNBC show, Shark Tank.
In addition to founding video portal platform Broadcast.com, which he sold to Yahoo! for $5.7 billion in 1999, Cuban also has stakes in Magnolia Pictures and AXS TV.
Stan Van Gundy, Head Coach of the New Orleans Pelicans wrote in a Tweet: ‘This should happen everywhere.’
‘If you think the anthem needs to be played before sporting events, then play it before every movie, concert, church service and the start of every work day at every business. What good reason is there to play the anthem before a game?’
Others were torn over the decision, with an account called Mavs Fans For Life claiming that ‘50% love the move, 50% hate the decision’.
In the comments underneath the post, one user said: ‘I’m split on this. Even though I understand why as the NBA is about getting and standing for Equality, this is also disrespectful to the soldiers who are serving the country or vets. Very split for sure’
Another warned: ‘If this is true May have lost a lifelong fan!’
‘National Basketball team won’t play National Anthem. Pretty disgraceful…’ a third commented.
Tim Cato, who writes about the Mavericks and basketball for The Athletic, pointed out that impassioned fans did not appear to notice the absence of the national anthem until it was reported by the publication.
‘It’s sure interesting to me that any mavericks fan who cares enough to be mad about this sure didn’t care enough to notice it wasn’t there for 13 games,’ he tweeted.
It is thought that the Mavericks are the only team to have scrapped the national anthem entirely.
At the NBA’s 2020 season restart, virtually all players knelt during the anthem in a gesture that has come to symbolize solidarity with the movement.
Cuban, who has owned the Mavericks since 2000, previously spoke out in support of kneeling during the anthem, and in comments last year took aim at what he called the ‘National Anthem Police.’
Speaking about the prospects of Mavericks players kneeling during the NBA restart in Orlando, Cuban said in July: ‘If they were taking a knee, and they were being respectful, I’d be proud of them. Hopefully, I’d join them.’
Later Cuban commented on Twitter: ‘The National Anthem Police in this country are out of control. If you want to complain, complain to your boss and ask why they don’t play the National Anthem every day before you start work.’
In June, Cuban tweeted in response to Floyd’s death, imploring white people to realize that ‘we are the ones that need to change’ in order to improve racial equality in the United States.
‘Dear White People,’ Cuban’s tweet began. ‘We are the ones that need to change. This is not one man’s story. This is almost every black man’s story. Which is why the problem is ours. We need to find OUR way to change what we do. There is no quick fix. It’s a moral imperative.’
Cuban included a link to an open letter from Emerson College president M. Lee Pelton, an African-American man who was arguing that structural racism is ‘not a black problem.’
Tim Cato, who writes about the Mavericks and basketball for The Athletic, pointed out that impassioned fans did not appear to notice the absence of the national anthem until it was reported by the publication
An account called Mavs Fans For Life claimed that among fans ‘50% love the move, 50% hate the decision’
Playing ‘The Star Spangled Banner’ before games has become part of the fabric of professional sports leagues in the United States.
Athletes’ responses to the anthem became a deeply divisive issue during the administration of former US President Donald Trump.
Trump attacked National Football League players who took a knee during the anthem to draw attention to racial injustice as unpatriotic.
The New York Times reported that the Mavericks declined to play the national anthem during its first 16 years, while under the ownership of Donald Carter. God Bless America was sung instead before home games.
The Mavericks began playing the national anthem in 1996 after the team was purchased by Ross Perot Jr., who later sold a majority stake to Cuban.
‘National Basketball team won’t play National Anthem. Pretty disgraceful…’ one Twitter user commented
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