There
is nothing new about a consensus being reached among athletic
officials or owners of sports teams that it is perfectly alright to
violate the Constitutional rights --either the 1st or 14th Amendments
-- of black athletes. For most of the first half of the 20th
century, blacks were denied participation in the National Football
League and in Major League Baseball, as well as complete denial of
opportunities for participation in sports in all southern colleges.
When colleges with black players scheduled games against those teams,
those games were governed by a "Gentlemen's Agreement"
among competing school officials, requiring that the black players
not be allowed to travel or compete in those games when played at
the southern institutions. The list is long of black athletes who
suffered those indignities, and while there was widespread protest
against such unsportsmanlike and unconstitutional practices, those
athletes and those practices, by and large, have vanished from public
memory. Those most remembered are the dominate black players whose
athletic talents defined their teams, but were not allowed to play in
highly anticipated and season- defining games. Willis Ward of
Michigan against Georgia Tech in 1934; Wilmeth Sadat-Singh of
Syracuse against Maryland in 1938; Leonard Bates of New York
University against Missouri in 1941; Lou Montgomery of Boston
College, experienced the double jeopardy of not being allowed to
play against Southern teams throughout his career, 1939-41, even when
those schools were the visiting team; and the undefeated 1951 San
Francisco Dons who refused an invitation to the presigious Orange
Bowl in Miami , because it was extended with an "if"
clause, mandating that the two black players, Ollie Matson and Burl
Toler, not be allowed to play.
In
1956 the Gentlemen's Agreement -- we thought -- came to an end when
the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans invited Pittsburgh with its black
player, Bobby Grier, to play all-white Georgia Tech. This was less
than one year after the murder of Emmett Till and only six months
after Rosa Parks ignited the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The Civil Rights
Movement was gaining traction, and a large contingent from the New
Orleans and Georgia Tech communities and the Governor of Georgia
sought to bar Grier from the game. The Governor also railed against
racially integrated seating at the game. Surprisingly, the players
and students of Georgia Tech, civil rights leaders from multiple
locales, whites who championed fairness in athletic competition, and
supporters of Pittsburgh football prevailed in seeing Grier take to
the gridiron and play in that game.
What
is happening to Colin Kaepernick is tantamount to a modern day
revival of the Gentlemen's Agreement among NFL owners, whose reasons
for his denial of a slot on a NFL roster are so transparent and
universal among themselves , that they do not need conversation,
conspiracy or collusion. Kaepernick is guilty of offending a recent
NFL practice, not a tradition, which started in 2009, when NFL
players started appearing on the field for the national anthem and
standing while it is played as a demonstration of patriotism, just as
major league baseball has been doing before games since WWII. The
incentive for the NFL, however, was as much about money as it was
about patriotism, considering that the NFL received millions of
taxpayer dollars from the Department of Defense and National Guard
for patriotic displays and military recognitions before and during
game intervals . Thus, the recent NFL "tradition" that
Kaepernick refused to honor must be scrutinized as much as the
origins and motivations for constructing Confederate monuments in
public spaces, and divisive symbols such as the Confederate flag
first being raised over South Carolina's state capitol in 1963, a
reactionary response to the Civil Rights Movement.
Kaepernick's
refusal to stand for the national anthem is not an infraction of
either law or the player's union collective bargaining agreement with
the NFL. What he did, in fact, is protected by the Constitution,
though his demonstration was replusive in the "court of NFL
owners opinion." And that is the crux of Kaepernick's problem
and the dilemma of the NFL commissioner. The owners and their
coaching and administrative employees are the arbiters of all issues
regarding player personnel, though in a competitve league and under
unionized contractual arrangements, both players and owners have
options for the resolution of player personnel related issues -- they
are simply traded, released, or seek other teams based on athletic
market value. But Kaepernick is not on a roster singularly because of
the "white elephant" the owners are reluctant to comment
on. It is not just that he refused to stand, it is what his kneeling
represented. His stated reasons for not standing for the national
anthem were about "race" in America -- the same reasons
that Tommie Smith and John Carlos gave the salutes at the 1968
Olympics that changed the world, or did it?
The
NFL is the most gigantic golden goose in the history of professional
sports, and owners do not want discussions of race to infiltrate the
white fan base, potentially jeapordizing or impeding the laying of
those billions of golden eggs. It is highly doubtful and there is no
credible evidence to suggest that if and when a team signs
Kaepernick, the NFL's brand identity, ticket sales, television
ratings and cable subscribers will be adversely affected. Those
concerns are determined by the quality of teams, marquee players,
and the competitive nature of the games. It is useful to remember
that the NFL had no problems with the $31 million that Pfizer paid
for advertising Viagra on NFL spots last season, and much more over
the past decade, despite concerns from family oriented fans that
erectile dysfunction advertisements were inappropriate for younger
viewers of NFL games. Those ads ran and the NFL ignored those
complaints because of the revenue they generated, and because they
had no measurable impact on television ratings. Of all the major
sports, the NFL and its 32 franchise owners may be the most
conservative brotherhood on social issues affecting the race of the
majority of its labor force --black players. At least seven donated
$1 million or more to Trump's inaugural committee, considerably more
than the owners of other major sports franchises.
So,
while the banishing of Kaepernick from the NFL is filtered through
the lenses of citizenship, ethics, morality and patriotism, it must
also be calibrated against the protection of the coffers of the
golden goose. It is a powerful message from the NFL, a league of all-
white owners, reflecting an irrational fear of the optics of
potential pre-game on field conduct -- that runs counter to their
personal politics and sensibilities, and what they believe to be
those of their conservative white fan base and corporate sponsors --
from a labor force that is over 70 percent black. Balancing
constitutionally protected basic individual rights against those
elements is the dilemma of the NFL, and 32 individual owner decisions
have been reached, all against Kaepernick. He has been "blackballed"
and this has been confirmed by officials from several NFL teams who
speak anonymously. To entertain any other reasons for Kaepernick not
being on a roster is to suspend common sense.
It
does not matter to NFL owners that in 1943 the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled in West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette that compulsory
standing or saluting the flag is " not a permissable means of
achieving national unity." Nor do they care to revisit the
Court's eloquent statement written by Justice Robert Jackson : "
If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is
that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox
in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or
force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein."
It is instructive to note at that time the protocol of the pledge of
allegience was begun with individuals standing with the right hand
placed over the heart, and after reciting the words " to the
flag," the arm was fully extended slightly upwards towards the
flag, palm down --too much of a resemblance to the Nazi salute --
and because of that it was changed during WW II to keep the hand over
the heart. None of this is to imply or suggest that individuals be
denied the right to pledge the flag or stand for the national anthem.
To the contrary, it is merely a reminder of the constitutional right
and subsequent Supreme Court reasoning for the other side of the
American coin, and to contexturally illustrate how the NFL owners
have avoided discussions of the law, opting for the promotion of the
ludicrous pretext that Kaepernick is not a NFL caliber quarterback.
Thus, the "silence" on the real issue --which is about his
rights -- is the modern day equivalent and a hybrid of the
Gentlemen's Agreement on the arbitrary restriction of black
participation in sports.
Black
athletes in the other major sports leagues -- MLB and the NBA --
are also vulnerable to Gentlemen's Agreements, considering there are
3 major sports leagues, 92 teams, and only 1 black principle owner.
The new Gentlemen's Agreements will be much more complex than the old
ones, because they do not seek to eliminate all blacks from the
athletic competition -- that would create too much of problem for
the survival of the golden goose. Instead, the new agreements will be
more about eliminating certain types of blacks from sports --- those
who have the audacity to speak the truth about race in America, and
those who challenge the outer perimeters of expected behavior. The
practice of preference for "certain types" of blacks will
find parallels and egregious examples in American politics,
particularly the Trump infested Republican party, though its origins
precede his political ascendancy.
In
the tragic and complex instance of Kaepernick, the owners have
suspended the principle that all roster slots are based on merit.
Considering that there are 32 NFL starting quarterbacks, 32
second-string quarterbacks, and 32 back-up quarterbacks, none of the
owners can argue that there are 96 quarterbacks better that
Kaepernick, who has led a team to a Superbowl. Neither can Roger
Goodell, although he has limited authority and cannot place any
player on a team roster. Still, that is not the larger problem. It
is the fact that he has not yet demonstrated the moral courage to
speak forthright and publicly on this issue, or to display the
leadership that is consistent with his stature and $34 million
annual salary. Thus, he, too, has become a problem and should not
seek refuge in silence. In fact, he has become the drum major of
inertia, and should the protests against the NFL gain enough
momentum to threaten his security , while cornering him into a
publicly indefensible position, let's hope he grabs a flag and
pretends he's leading a parade. The NFL needs a summit --not silence
--on the obvious, though it will take considerably more pressure than
has been demonstrated to break the quietness.
So
far, the NFL has found provisional reassurance in its banning of
Kaepernick and has the upper hand where it matters most . Television
ratings for the 2017 pre-season games was up 12% from last year,
giving the NFL the luxury of a wait-and-see position to determine if
the NFL's 15% black fan base -- and others -- expand enough influence
to stage boycotts sufficiently strong and visible enough to have a
discernable effect on ratings, the sale of NFL merchandise, game
attendance, sponsor attitudes, or participation in NFL Fantasy
Leagues, each directly tied to revenue. The NFL is immune to appeals
to fairness, morality, and social justice, and this predisposition is
even more pronounced in the era of Donald Trump. The NFL is about "
wealth and power" and it will not concede anything without a
struggle, and that struggle must include its share of some of the
marquee players --black and white -- and leaders and leading
organizations of our country -- black and white. Only those optics
can flex enough muscle to produce a dividend of justice.
One
thing is for sure, Kaepernick will not be the last NFL player to
refuse to stand for the national anthem. The questions are what will
the NFL do about it, and will the penalty be the proliferation of
more Gentlemen's Agreements.
Al-Tony
Gilmore, Ph.D. is Historian Emeritus of the National Education
Association and was the first scholar to explore the intersection of
sports and society with his book, Bad Nigger : The National Impact of
Jack Johnson. He is the author of several noted books including, All
the People : NEA's Legacy of Inclusion and Its Minority Presidents,
and A More Perfect Union : The Merger of the South Carolina Education
Association and the Palmetto Education Association. He wrote the
introduction to the reissuing of E.B. Henderson's classic, The Negro
in Sports. His reviews and articles have appeared in The New
Republic, Huffington Post, Washington Post, Journal of American
History, South Atlantic Quarterly, American Scholar, and Journal of
African American History among others. He most recently served as
Visiting Scholar in the Estelle and Melvin Gelman Research Center of
The George Washington University.
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