By accepting racial protest, the NBA draws a blueprint for other sports


For too long, the league was interested in making itself palatable for a white audience. Under Adam Silver it is listening to its black players

If there is one thing clear about the current NBA, it is that it is no longer the league of David Stern. As a businessman, the league’s former commissioner was a visionary, building a booming operation that now reaches around the globe. But on social issues he stumbled, creating policies that almost seemed designed to make a league of mostly African American players appear palatable to a white audience.

It was Stern, after all, who 11 years ago created professional sports’ first sideline dress code that he called “business casual”. It came at a time when a phrase thrown around the league was “middle-class values,” which was basically code for “white values”. And while many of those using these words would never consider themselves to be tone deaf to the struggles of people of color, their zeal to keep the money machine going clouded a deeper social understanding.

Related: Colin Kaepernick on death threats: if I'm killed 'you've proved my point'

Related: Richard Sherman on anthem protests: 'People are still missing the point'

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