"Wary of fan anger, athletes largely avoid political fray" by Callum Borchers | Globe Correspondent, May 25, 2012
They are some of the best known, highly paid people in the country, whose opinions are documented continuously by the press and consumed ravenously by the public. But unlike others with similar wealth and influence, professional athletes seldom venture into politics, generally keeping their views and money on the sidelines this election season.
In Boston, only one of 188 players listed on the rosters of the Red
Sox, Patriots, Bruins, and Celtics has made a political donation during
the current presidential election cycle. Josh Barrett, a reserve
defensive back for the Patriots, has given $1,000 to President Obama’s
reelection campaign, according to a campaign finance database maintained
by the Center for Responsive Politics.
Related: Selecting a Senator: Pag's Bags
I can see why he lost the special election, can't you?
Throwing the Booker at Obama Over Bain
Yeah, WTF is with Democrat$ the$e day$?
Patriots owner Robert Kraft has, too, while giving $500 to presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney.
See: Patriots' Kraft Passes Checks to Patrick
Working both $ide$ of the line of $crimmage.
And Jeremy Jacobs of the Bruins has contributed $3,500 to Romney.
I must admit, at this point I am more of a baseball and basketball fan than football or hockey.
Fans do not seem to mind political expression by team executives, but for players “there’s often a price to pay for speaking out,’’ according to Timothy Davis, a member of the National Sports Law Institute’s Board of Advisors. “Fans feel more comfortable with their athletes not expressing social and political views because they want sports to be an escape from all that.’’
In the land of Free Spee.... ?????
Bruins goaltender Tim Thomas paid a price in January when he refused to join his Stanley Cup-winning teammates on a visit to the White House, writing on his Facebook page, “I believe the Federal government has grown out of control, threatening the Rights, Liberties, and Property of the People.’’ Just months after Thomas was named the NHL’s best goalie and the most valuable player of the playoffs, some fans wanted him to be traded.
Related: Bruin Goalie Blocks Obama
A kick save, and a beauty!
Sports agents warn their clients about such backlashes and often advise them to remain politically neutral.
What if you can't eat at the diner?
Oh, right, different time -- in $o many way$.
“We’re always educating our athletes about how to handle the media, what to say and what not to say,’’ said Todd Ramasar, an agent who represents Ryan Hollins of the Celtics and Baron Davis of the New York Knicks. “It’s OK to support somebody, but you don’t have to be so public about it.’’
Even when the message is less explicit, it is no less clear. A Patriots team source said Kraft - who in 2008 made maximum campaign donations to both Obama and Republican nominee John McCain and also gave to Romney and Democrat John Edwards during the primaries - has a motto that trickles down to the locker room: “You can never have enough friends, so why make enemies?’’
Thank God Edwards never got anywhere near the office.
Or as Michael Jordan put it in 1990, when he refused to endorse Democrat Harvey Gantt in a North Carolina Senate race, “Republicans buy shoes, too.’’
It's the MONEY that MATTERS isn't it, Mike?
Oh, ♫ like Mike, if I could be like Mike, I want to be like Mike ♫ (but not like his sucky, worst-ever team).
But if an athlete risks alienating fans by opening his wallet or taking a public stand, he faces no such danger by casting a ballot in the privacy of a voting booth. Yet, the culture of sports does little to encourage even the most basic form of civic participation.
That's why it's such big bidness! A grand distraction with its mausoleums, 'er, coliseums, and a repository for elite loot.
What do you want them to do with it, pay your medical bills or make your mortgage payment so you don't lose that overpriced, pos home?
“Political engagement is fostered over time, and a lot of athletes miss out on opportunities to build that because of the control their coaches or athletic programs have over their time and focus,’’ Davis said.
There have been no major studies of professional athletes’ voting habits, but anecdotal evidence suggests turnout is low. The NFL, NBA, and NHL all are in season in November, when presidential elections are held. With busy travel schedules, the only way for many players to vote is by absentee ballot.
“It’s definitely difficult when you’re dealing with the voting process, because you’re playing and you’re all over the place,’’ said former tight end Jermaine Wiggins, who won a Super Bowl with the Patriots and played seven NFL seasons. “You’re moving here and you’re moving there, and you’re living in different cities.’’
Former linebacker Matt Chatham, who played eight NFL seasons and won three Super Bowls in six years with the Patriots, recalled voting by absentee ballot in South Dakota during his playing days but noted that politics rarely came up in conversations with team personnel.
The Patriots, Celtics, and Bruins said they have no programs to help players obtain absentee ballots and do not actively encourage them to do so.
Hey, look, they might vote for the wrong guy!
And you just DO NOT WANT ATHLETES BECOMING INFORMED, and I'll sum it all up for you in one word: TILLMAN!!
When athletes do enter the political arena, it is often after retirement - and their efforts are frequently devoted to promoting their own candidacies. Notable players-turned-politicians include Bill Bradley, a basketball Hall of Famer who served three terms in the Senate and ran for president in 2000; Jack Kemp, who won two American Football League titles with the Buffalo Bills, served 18 years in the House, and ran for president and vice president; and Jim Bunning, a baseball Hall of Famer who represented Kentucky in the House and Senate.
There was a time when active athletes were more willing to deliver political messages, said Dan Lebowitz, executive director of the Center for the Study of Sport in Society at Northeastern University. He pointed to John Carlos and Tommie Smith, who raised black-gloved fists on the medal stand at the 1968 Olympics, and Muhammad Ali, who a year earlier refused to fight in Vietnam.
For Ali, the price was a three-year ban from boxing; for Carlos and Smith, it was decades of scorn. Carlos’s first wife committed suicide in 1977 partly, he has said, because of the prolonged public outcry over his “black power’’ statement.
The stakes are much lower for today’s athletes, but most subscribe to the Jordan philosophy, Lebowitz said.
Or WAR, right?
--more--"
Time to stand for the National War Cry, 'er, Anthem.