Bruce Maxwell, the first and only Major League Baseball player to kneel during the national anthem, says he âwasnât even home four hoursâ before he had to deal with a pro-Donald Trump supporter who was still big mad over the ball playerâs gesture.
The Oakland Athletics player told TMZ Sports that he had just returned to his hometown of Huntsville, Ala., and was grabbing lunch with a friend when he was denied service by a server.
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âHe was like, âYouâre the guy who took the knee,ââ Maxwell told the online media outlet. The server then told Maxwell that he voted for Trump and that he âstand[s] for everything [Trump] stands for.â
âHe denied us service at lunch, and they had to go get us another waiter to wait on our table at that same restaurant,â the 26-year-old catcher said.
Maxwellâs lunch companion, also black, is a Huntsville city councilman. After the confrontation, the councilman spoke with the restaurantâs manager and was able to get another server to wait on them.
Coincidentally, Trumpâs infamous remarks expressing his wish that NFL owners could fire any âson of a bitchâ who kneels during the national anthem were delivered at a campaign rally in Huntsville. And, in fact, during the exchange at the restaurant, the pro-Trump server told Maxwell that he was at Trumpâs rally.
Trumpâs incendiary remarks were a clear allusion to Colin Kaepernick, the former San Francisco â49ers quarterback who began kneeling during the anthem last season to highlight racial injustice. Maxwell, the son of a military veteran, became the first baseball player to join in the protests in a game against the Texas Rangers one month ago.
âIf it ends up driving me out of baseball, then so be it,â Maxwell said at the time. âThis is bigger than a monetary standpoint. This is bigger than the uniform I put on every day. This is about the people in this country, and we all deserve to be treated equally. Thatâs the whole purpose of us taking a knee during the national anthem.â
Since then, heâs become friends with the former quarterback, who is still without a job. Maxwell says that he and Kaepernick talk regularly.
âHis friendship definitely helps. His guidance comes through that. And just being able to use him as a sounding board some days does me some good,â Maxwell told TMZ.
Read more at TMZ Sports.
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