The two weeks between the NFL playoffs and the Super Bowl are usually incredibly boring. The same interviews, the same analysis for a game that Vegas picked correctly a month ago. But thanks to Donald Trump, this year itâs different.
After decades of adhering to the âstick to sportsâ mantra, sports fans, pundits and especially sports journalists have finally acknowledged that sports are political, sports are a reflection of our values, and this Sundayâs football game is the most politically laden Super Bowl in decades. You can root for a close game, you can root for your gambling interests, but know this: If you root for the New England Patriots over the Atlanta Falcons, you are giving unmitigated unwavering support to Donald Trump.
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This is not some tongue-in-cheek rant against the New England Patriots. This is an acknowledgment that sports are political, and rooting for the team this year has political significance. The admonishment from fans and some sports pundits that sports are entertainment and politics is serious business and that the two should be separate is a lie. Sports have always been political in America, especially for black people.
President Trump chose a white supremacist and terrorist sympathizer as his chief of staff and a National Security Council member. He refused to mention Jews on Holocaust Remembrance Day. Last week he instituted a âMuslim banâ written by a white supremacist. Seattle Seahawks quarterback (and Ciaraâs âcome upâ husband) Russell Wilson spoke out against the ban. Golden State Warriors and San Antonio Spurs coaches Steve Kerr and Gregg Popovich, respectively, have spoken out about the ban and other Trump policies.
ESPNâs resident Stacey Dash impersonator, Sage Steele, went concern-trolling on Instagram that Muslim-ban protests at LAX might delay a sick child getting to the hospital. ( I guess sick kids donât matter during championship parades that clog streets, though, right?) Two of the most influential sports voices, King James and Sir Charles, on the left and right respectively, also went at it this week. Bobby Fischer couldnât have executed a better king-takes-knight move than LeBron did, but in ethering Charles Barkley, LeBron James also displayed the fault lines between the old and new NBA playersâ public roles.
Simmering in the background of all of these stories is New England Patriots quarterback Tom Bradyâs unwavering support for President Donald Trump. A story that has been touched upon by great sportswriters like Dave Zirin but that major outlets like ESPN, FS1 and NBC have assiduously tried to avoid.
The fact that so many athletes have spoken out against Trump and his most recent policies, but Brady gets a relative pass for his stance, is telling. Itâs a reflection of the false sports-vs.-politics narrative that only exists for white people who can afford, either mentally or financially, to pretend that multibillion-dollar industries that rely almost exclusively on black and brown bodies for profit are somehow a quirk of nature and not a result of hundreds of years of racial politics and policies. Athletes influence and are influenced by policy, so when an athlete or coaching staff advocates for political leaders, it should matter.
From the earliest times in American sports, wonderfully detailed in William C. Rhodenâs Forty Million Dollar Slaves: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Black Athlete, there have been politics surrounding athletics, especially for black people. Immigration laws are twisted to allow athletes in to play sports while refugees from nations we are bombing are blocked. Black parents are arrested for trying to get their kids into better schools, but boundaries are bent to let black high school athletes attend elite prep schools.
The same criminal-justice system that is indifferent to the destruction of innocent black bodies at the hands of police will contort itself to protect black men accused of gun violence, rape and abuse so long as they can catch a football or hit a 3-point shot. Sports journalism itself is a distinctly political enterprise. Does anyone really believe that the âcrouching black conservative, hidden white moderateâ politics of the Stephen A. Smith-Max Kellerman, Skip Bayless-Shannon Sharpe, Ernie Johnson-Charles Barkley types of shows are an accident?
All of which brings us to this Sundayâs game and the Patriotsâ triumvirate of power: Brady, coach Bill Belichick and owner Robert Kraft.
If you root for the Patriots, youâre rooting for Brady and youâre rooting for Trump to brag and take credit for his political ally and friendâs win during his first year as president. Trump is desperate for a win and notorious for taking credit for the accomplishments of anyone associated with him.
Brady isnât just a Republican; heâs a right-wing reactionary. He skipped meeting President Barack Obama when the Patriots won the Super Bowl in 2015, a move employed by the most right-wing and likely racist athletes across various leagues. He endorsed Trump during the election of 2016. It wasnât an accident that Brady just happened to have a âMake America Great Againâ hat, turned to face the cameras, at his locker for an interview he knew was happening; it was an endorsement. If he disagreed with Trumpâs policies as president, he could say so (his wife did). But he wonât because he doesnât. Belichick and Kraft are on the Trump train, too.
The Patriotsâ roster is 66 percent African American (league average is about 70 percent), yet the Patriots have featured the largest number of starting white receivers and running backs of any team in the league in the last decadeâJulian Edelman, Danny Amendola, Wes Welker, Danny Woodhead, just to name a few. There is nothing inherently wrong with this, but Belichick is a geniusâhe could win with anybodyâso why go out of his way to pick so many white athletes in offensive-skill positions when most other teams have none? Belichick is making a point about team âcultureâ and composition. He wants a white team, which isnât a far cry from the Trump administrationâs desire to create a mostly white Cabinet and government if they can get away with it.
Donât pretend for a minute that the whiteness of the New England Patriots isnât noticed and isnât a selling point for a select set of fans (the NBA tried it for years). The sports worldâs Uncle Ruckus on SlimFast, Jason Whitlock, exhorts teams to âwhiten upâ like New England to be successful, so it shouldnât be a surprise that Brady and the Patriots are deemed the âGreat White Hopeâ by white nationalist sports fans.
Sports matter, and sports are political in America. Whether itâs the Miracle on Ice or teams protesting Donald Sterling or hosting veterans at games, who you root for and what they stand for matters. Under a president who brags about bigotry and a team whose leaders openly associate with him, there is no separation of your values from who you root for this Sunday. This weekend, as you sit down to watch the Super Bowl, show that you care about this country, democracy, decency and diversity. Watch the Super Bowl as an American, not as a Patriot.
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