Trump hits out at sports figures in Twitter rant

African-American athletes continually the focus of US president’s personal attacks

LaVar Ball, father of basketball player LiAngelo Ball, who was denounced on Twitter by Donald Trump as an “ungrateful fool!” Photograph:  Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images
LaVar Ball, father of basketball player LiAngelo Ball, who was denounced on Twitter by Donald Trump as an “ungrateful fool!” Photograph: Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images

US president Donald Trump began his first Thanksgiving holiday in office with an early-morning Twitter rage in which he again vented about some of his favourite targets: sports figures he thinks have defied him.

The president called LaVar Ball, the father of one of three basketball players arrested in China for shoplifting, a "poor man's version of Don King", the black sports promoter. He also called Ball an "ungrateful fool!" and insisted that "IT WAS ME" who deserved more thanks for rescuing Ball's son from the Chinese authorities.

Trump followed the angry rant toward Ball, who is African-American, with a return to his months-long demand for football players to be more respectful while the national anthem is played – an issue that has strong support among some Americans. On the idea of asking players to stay in locker rooms during the anthem, Mr Trump tweeted: “That’s almost as bad as kneeling!”

Together, the posts were a reprise of Mr Trump’s personal attacks against sports figures – many of them African-American – for what he judges to be poor behaviour on their part and a failure to demonstrate enough deference to others.

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White House officials deny that the president is focused on race when he comments about sports and athletes. But to historians and black activists, the tweets are clear evidence of an attempt by the president to send a message of solidarity to many supporters.

"President Trump appears to have a peculiar overfascination with African-American athletes and a negative fascination," said Douglas A Blackmon, the author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning book Slavery By Another Name and the host of American Forum, a weekly show produced by the University of Virginia's Miller Center.

Targets

Twitter has long been the president's preferred method for directing his outrage at individuals, and those of all races have been his targets, including Hillary Clinton; James Comey, the former FBI director; and Khizr Khan, the Pakistani father of a fallen US soldier.

But Mary Frances Berry, who is African-American and who served as the chairwoman of the US Commission on Civil Rights, said that Trump's particular desire during his first year in office to lash out at African-American sports figures was hard to ignore.

“It just reinforces a theme that’s already on their mind,” Berry, now a professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania, said of the president’s tweets. “It’s tailor-made for him to spout off and reinforce his base.”

In addition to National Football League players and Ball, Trump has in the past tweeted angrily at other African-American athletes and broadcasters, including Stephen Curry, the star basketball player for the Golden State Warriors, and Jemele Hill, a sports journalist who is a host of ESPN's flagship SportsCenter.

In the case of the NFL players, Trump has played to the beliefs of his most conservative supporters by openly deriding Colin Kaepernick, the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback who last season kicked off the idea of sideline protests by kneeling.

Speaking to an adoring, and mostly white, crowd in Huntsville, Alabama, in September, Trump referenced the actions of football players like Kaepernick who knelt during the national anthem and said he would love to see an NFL owner say, "Get that son of a bitch off the field right now."

On Wednesday, the president kicked off the first day of a five-day visit to his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, by focusing his ire on Ball, the outspoken father of UCLA basketball player LiAngelo Ball, who, along with his teammates Cody Riley and Jalen Hill, was released from Chinese custody after Trump intervened.

LaVar Ball stoked the confrontation with the president this week, refusing on CNN to thank Trump for his assistance and saying that “I don’t have to say, to go around saying ‘thank you’ to everybody.”

That interview appears to have prompted the angry response from Trump. He insisted that he was the one who rescued Ball’s son, and he chided Ball for refusing to give Trump the due he felt he deserved.

“LaVar, you could have spent the next 5 to 10 years during Thanksgiving with your son in China, but no NBA contract to support you,” Trump wrote, referring to another of Ball’s sons, who plays professional basketball. “But remember LaVar, shoplifting is NOT a little thing. It’s a really big deal, especially in China. Ungrateful fool!”

Patriotism

Trump has repeatedly denied that his criticism of kneeling is aimed at African-American players. “The issue of kneeling has nothing to do with race,” he tweeted in September. And White House officials have said the president’s tweets are about patriotism.

"This isn't an us-versus-them. This should be something that brings our country together," Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, told reporters in the days after Trump first raised the issue. "All Americans should be proud to stand up, salute that flag, salute that anthem and be part of that process."

Polls suggest that many agree in the US with Trump. One taken in September found that 49 per cent of Americans agreed with the president that it was wrong for football players to kneel during the national anthem to express a political opinion, compared with 43 per cent who said they were right to do so.

In some ways, LaVar Ball and Trump are made for each other: two publicity-seeking individuals who rarely shy away from a good verbal fight. It was the success of Ball's eldest son, Lonzo, as UCLA's freshman point guard last season, that gave Ball a platform to build a brand. Since then, he has often let loose a series of attention-grabbing statements, including once claiming that – in his prime – he could have beaten retired basketball star Michael Jordan one-on-one.

But some of Trump's critics say the president's attack on Ball was about more than just chest-thumping between the two men. They say it echoes what they view as an obsession by Trump on sports figures who are black. Harry Edwards, a civil rights activist and professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, said that Trump understood that attacking black athletes – who are among the most popular figures in African-American communities – sent a powerful signal to some of his most fervent voters.

“All of these attacks resonate with a base that have some severe perspectives on African-American equality and justice,” he said. “To attack African-American athletes is really a way of sending that message that these are others.”

National anthem

Trump's decision on Wednesday to revisit the issue of football players who kneel at games appeared to have been set off by a Washington Post article that said that the league was considering a policy change under which players would stay in the locker room during the playing of the anthem. A league official said on Wednesday that the idea was not currently under consideration.

Trump has excoriated the NFL for allowing players to kneel, which he sees as disrespecting the American flag. In his tweet on Wednesday, the president criticised Roger Goodell, the longtime leader of the football league, asking "when will the highly paid Commissioner finally get tough and smart? This issue is killing your league!"

Blackmon said Trump’s focus on the actions of the players suggested that he took a particular affront when his expectations of their behaviour was not met. “This consistent pattern – African-Americans who stand up in a sense to him, who do not seem to be sufficiently compliant – seem to draw particular ire,” Blackmon said. – New York Times