Should professional athletes be allowed to kneel in protest when the national anthem is performed before a game? President Donald Trump thinks the answer is no. That has sparked a nationwide debate about patriotism, free speech, and race relations.
At a September political rally in Alabama, the president called on National Football League (NFL) team owners to fire players who refuse to stand when the anthem is played before games.
Trump’s remarks at the rally, and his tweets that followed, led to a wave of protests. Defiance grew on the sidelines of America’s most popular sport.
It had started as a small number of demonstrations by a handful of black football players to draw attention to issues such as police brutality. But after Trump’s comments, it quickly grew into nationwide protests.
On September 24, nearly all the players on three teams stayed off the field until the anthem was over. Those teams were the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Tennessee Titans, and the Seattle Seahawks. Players and coaches on dozens of other teams knelt or locked arms during the anthem in dramatic displays of team unity. Many of them disapproved of Trump for causing divisions between people.
“To have the president trying to intimidate people—I wanted to send a message that I don’t [approve of] that,” says Julius Thomas, a Miami Dolphins tight end. Thomas knelt during a recent game against the New York Jets. “I’m not OK with somebody trying to prevent someone from standing up for what they think is important.”
But the protests received a far more mixed reaction from fans. Many football fans object to the idea of dragging politics into their beloved sport.
“If you want to protest, go somewhere else,” says spectator Donna Murray. Murray attended a New England Patriots game in Foxborough, Massachusetts. “I think if they did it in a different [place], more people would listen.”