Mookie Betts's Web Gem Seals Dodgers' Win Over Padres
For the second consecutive night, the Dodgers beat the Padres in dramatic fashion, this time thanks to their fill-in center fielder.
Every player and staff member from four MLB teams took a knee before last night’s opening slate of games to make a statement about inequality. Every single one of them—except Giants reliever Sam Coonrod.
The moment was not a protest. It was a carefully constructed display coordinated and approved by Major League Baseball. A recorded, uncontroversial message from Morgan Freeman played over the stadium PA system as the players kneeled and held a black ribbon. (Phillies outfielder Andrew McCutchen came up with the idea.)
It was as provocative as you would expect a corporately sanctioned statement to be. The Freeman narration did not mention “police” or even the phrase “Black lives matter.” The clip amounted to a perfectly reasonable call for equality.
Coonrod was the only player on the Yankees, Nationals, Dodgers or Giants to stay on his feet while everyone else knelt. He stood out like a sore thumb.
Asked to explain himself after the game, Coonrod cited his religion.
“I meant no ill will by it,” Coonrod told reporters. “I don't think I’m better than anybody. I’m just a Christian. I believe I can’t kneel before anything but God, Jesus Christ. I chose not to kneel. I feel if I did kneel I'd be a hypocrite. I don’t want to be a hypocrite.”
If a central tenet of Christianity is treating others with love and respect, it's not clear how not joining a call for just that would be hypocritical. But Coonrod also said he took issue with the substance of the statement.
“I can't get on board on a couple of things I’ve read about Black Lives Matter, how they lean toward Marxism and said some negative things about the nuclear family,” he said.
Yes, the founders of the organization Black Lives Matter have referred to themselves as “trained Marxists,” a quote that has spread like wildfire by some attempting to discredit them. But again, the phrase "Black lives matter" wasn't event part of the Freeman clip.
Coonrod seems to be missing the point of the ribbon display: It was meant to be an anodyne alternative to actual protest. Even if you believe that kneeling during the national anthem is somehow disrespectful to the military, kneeling during a Morgan Freeman speech gives you another way to show support with risking blowback. And in fact, last night only a handful of Dodgers and Giants (Mookie Betts, San Francisco manager Gabe Kapler and Pablo Sandoval among them) were brave enough to kneel during the anthem.
Luckily for Coonrod, it doesn’t sound like his decision will drive a wedge in the clubhouse.
“The one thing we said is, we‘re going to let people express themselves,” Kapler told reporters. “We‘re going to give them the choice whether they stand, kneel or do something else. That was a personal decision for Sam.”
It sounded like a joke when it first surfaced as a possibility, but the NHL’s newest franchise is actually going to be called the Seattle Kraken.
I ranked Kraken last when the ownership group trademarked 13 possible team names in 2018 and I’m still not wild about it as a name. But at least the logos and jerseys are really cool. I especially like how the anchor logo looks like the Space Needle.
Stephanie Apstein reports from on the ground in Washington on the start of pandemic baseball. ... Tom Verducci wrote an essay about the return of baseball. ... Inside the first games played within the NBA bubble.
Faculty at the University of Kentucky are calling for the school to remove the name of racist Adolph Rupp from its basketball arena. ... Roy Williams donated $600,000 to fund scholarships for UNC seniors who had their spring sports seasons cut short. ... Mike Francesa is retiring again from his WFAN gig.
Creative scammers tried to defraud a tech company by using an audio deepfake of the CEO’s voice. ... Police in Taiwan returned a missing Nintendo Switch by using the game Animal Crossing. ... Tom Cruise might be filming a movie in outer space.
Email dan.gartland@si.com with any feedback or follow me on Twitter for approximately one half-decent baseball joke per week. Bookmark this page to see previous editions of Hot Clicks and find the newest edition every day. By popular request I’ve made a Spotify playlist of the music featured here. Visit our Extra Mustard page throughout each day for more offbeat sports stories.
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