Saturday, February 27, 2021

J-Speaks: The Glass Shattering New Ownership Group of WNBA's Dream

 In order to create a better future, it is said that you must recognize the past that will allow you to celebrate the present and build towards a brighter future. After a season where they were put in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons by an owner and then United States Senator who did not want to embrace a future of equality that the players on the team’s roster wanted, that said team along with the other teams of the NBA decided to back her opponent. In January, that opponent thanks to the people of that state voted that owner out and on Friday her team was sold.

On Friday, the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) announced that the Atlanta Dream, which was previously co-owned by now former U.S. Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) has been sold to executives from a national real estate firm and a former player of the dream in Renee Montgomery, who played 11 seasons in the league, winning two WNBA titles with the Minnesota Lynx.

“My Dream has come true,” Montgomery, who announced her retirement from the WNBA on February 9 said in a statement on Friday. “Breaking barriers for minorities and women by being the first former WNBA player to have both a stake in ownership and leadership role with the team is an opportunity that I take very seriously. I invite you to join me as a Dream builds momentum in Atlanta.”

The Dream were sold to chairman of the real estate firm Northland, Larry Gottesdiener, which got unanimous approval by the league and the National Basketball Association’s Board of Governor, the WNBA said in a statement at the start of this weekend.

The new three-member ownership group also consists of Northland’s Chief Operating Officer (COO) Suzanne Abair and Montgomery, who became the first former WNBA player to become an owner and executive of a WNBA squad.

“I am so thrilled that former WNBA star Renee Montgomery will be joining the ownership group as an investor and executive for the team,” WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in a statement on Friday.

Engelbert added that the approval of the sale of Dream “Marks a new beginning for the Atlanta Dream organization and we are pleased to welcome Larry Gottesdiener and Suzanne Abair to the WNBA.”  

Montgomery, who also won two collegiate titles at the University of Connecticut opted out of the 2020 WNBA season to focus on the fight for social justice in the wake of the murders of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, Georgia natives Ahmaud Arbery and Rayshard Brooks, and many others at the hands of law enforcement.  

Montgomery joins a prestigious list of former and current athletes to have an ownership stake in a professional sports team. Michael Jordan has ownership stake in the NBA’s Charlotte Hornets. Hall of Famer and five-time champion with the New York Yankees Derek Jeter has ownership stake in the MLB’s Miami Marlins. Super Bowl champion quarterback of the Kansas City Chiefs and NFL MVP Patrick Mahomes and Hall of Famer and five-time champion in his playing days with the Los Angeles Lakers Earvin “Magic” Johnson have ownership stakes in the Kansas City Royals and reigning MLB champion Los Angeles Dodgers respectably. Hockey Hall of Famer and champion Mario Lemieux has ownership stake in his former team the Pittsburgh Penguins. Tennis legend sisters Venus and Serena Williams have ownership stake in the NFL’s Miami Dolphins, while the aforementioned four-time Kia MVP and four-time NBA champion LeBron James; 2014 Kia MVP and two-time NBA champion Kevin Durant of the Brooklyn Nets and his teammate in 2018 Kia MVP James Harden, and Super Bowl champion quarterback of the Seattle Seahawks Russell Wilson own respective stakes in soccer squads in Liverpool, Philadelphia Union, Houston Dynamo, and Seattle Sounders.

“People like LeBron James, who keeps talking about what ownership means, and what it could mean to have the right people in ownership, that just kind of fueled me. And I wanted to be that more than an athlete,” Montgomery said. “It sounds cliché but being more than an athlete does mean being in these types of situations, but it’s also exciting when you do get to see women in these power positions.”  

It was former Senator Loeffler’s opposing to her then team’s support of social justice issues and backing groups like Black Lives Matter that put her at odds with her own team.

The beginning of the end of Loeffler as owner of the Dream began when she made controversial comments on the racial disparities in our nation, and how she opposed the league allowing its players to put the last name of those who had their lives taken at the hands of those that are supposed to protect them.

Loeffler, a supporter of former President Donald Trump said in a note that she opposed the players’ plan to wear “Black Lives Matter” and “Say Her Name” shirts during warm-ups last season, which took place at IMG Academy in Bradenton, FL because it was an endorsement in her eyes of a “particular political agenda” and it was sending a message of “exclusion.”  

Calls for Loeffler’s ouster as owner of the Dream began there, and that led to not only the players on the Dream, but the entire league decided to put their support behind her opponent in her Senate race Rev. Raphael Warnock, who defeated Loeffler in the January run-off election. That win along with the victory by Jon Ossoff (D-GA) over his opponent David Perdue (R-GA) that gave control of the U.S. Senate to the Democrats, thanks to now President Joe Biden being voted President of the United States in November 2020, and Vice President Kamala Harris, the first female Vice President in our nation being the tiebreaking vote in the Senate.  

In the lead up to the run-off election, several Dream players were seen wearing “Vote Warnock” shirts.

Leading the charge to ouster now former Senator Loeffler not just as Senator of Georgia, but as co-owner of the Dream was Montgomery herself, who said in an impassionate not that was published on “Medium” writing: “Senator Loeffler, with or without you, we will continue this movement because it’s bigger than me or you.”

She also drew a lot of inspiration from former Senator Harris (D-CA), whose election as the first woman to be Vice President of our nation showed her that women in powerful positions of leadership is how our nation can live up to its promise of equal opportunity for everyone.

“It started with our Vice President [Harris]. Having the first woman as the Vice President I think that set the tone moving forward that the future is female,” Montgomery said.

Montgomery also said that the election of the first woman to the second highest office in our nation that made her see that women can be in positions of leadership and lead not just sports leagues to greater heights but our nation as well.

Behind the efforts of Montgomery and the 144 players of the WNBA that played this past season that raised the profile of Rev. Warnock and ultimately got the attention of Georgia voters to vote for better representation in their state.

In a statement, Loeffler and former Dream co-owner Mary Brock said in a statement, “We are proud of what we accomplished and wish the team well in their next chapter.”

Last summer the WNBA and the Atlanta Dream took a stand against one of their own who they felt was no representative of their ideals of who and what they stand for.

They formulated a plan to stand up to former Senator Kelly Loeffler by first stating that they disapproved of her thoughts against social justice and “Black Lives Matter.”

The Dream and the rest of the WNBA then backed Loeffler’s opponent in Rev. Raphael Warnock (D-GA), which raised his profile not just in the state of Georgia but the entire nation. Rev. Warnock defeated Loeffler in the Georgia run-off in January and this weekend said goodbye to her as owner of the Atlanta Dream.

This past summer, the WNBA flexed its muscles in the fight for a more equal and better future, and they hope the sale of the Dream to a new ownership group that includes Renee Montgomery is the start of a brighter and better future for not just the WNBA but for women.

“Last year, 2020, the players of the Dream refused to just shut up and dribble,” Gottesdiener said in a call with reporters on Friday. “They found their collective voice and the world listened.”

“We are inspired by these brave women who navigated sports and activism in the midst of a [Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic,” he added, “and we want to celebrate and honor them.”

Information and quotations are courtesy of 2/26/2021 www.cnn.com story, “WNBA Team Atlanta Dream Sold To New Owners—Including A Former Player,: Dakin And one; 2/26/2021 www.insider.com’s story, “Former Sen. Kelly Loeffler Is Out As Owner of WNBA Team, And the New Owners Include Former Star Player Who Retired To Fight For Social Justice;” 2/27/2021 12:35 a.m. edition ESPN’s “Sportscenter,” from Los Angeles, CA with Neil Everett and Stan Verrett. 

Thursday, February 4, 2021

J-Speaks: The Passing of MLB's Original Home-Run King

 Over the course of the past few weeks, our nation has had to endure the passing of many iconic figures in sports and entertainment. Many of them of color displaying their greatness in their rise in the face of complete disrespect that was not warranted and denied the just do for their accomplishments at that moment. Late last month, the baseball world, especially the Negro League and Major League Baseball (MLB) lost one of those great icons who faced a great deal of push back during his rise in that sport, but still made his mark.

One week ago, Baseball Hall of Famer Henry Aaron, who played two years in the Negro Leagues and 23 years in MLB with the Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1954-1974) and the Milwaukee Brewers (1975-76) passed away in his sleep at the age of 86. The cause of death was listed as natural causes but serious suspicion of his death came just 16 days after he and several public African American figures that included longtime activist Joe Beasley, former Atlanta, GA Mayor Andrew Young, and Founding Dean of the Morehouse School of Medicine and former Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services during the George H.W. Bush Administration publicly received a Coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccination. They did so to squash the myth that this life saving vaccine is harmful to minorities and that it is safe and necessary to get.

“This is just a small thing that can help zillions of people in this country,” Mr. Aaron said back on Jan. 5 to ABC News.  

The man who was nicknamed the “Hammer” or “Hammerin’ Hank” for his uncanny ability to hit the ball right into the bleacher is survived by his second wife of 47 years Billye Suber Williams and their one child together Ceci. Mr. Aaron was also married before to Barbara Lucas for 18 years (1953-71) and they had five children together: Gary, Lary, Dorinda, Gale, and Hank, Jr.

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said of Aaron’s impact on the game, “Hank Aaron is near the top of everyone’s list of all-time great players.”

“His monumental achievements as a player were surpassed only by his dignity and integrity as a person. Hank symbolized the very best of our game, and his all-around excellence provided Americans and fans across the world with an example to which to aspire.”  

Atlanta Braves legendary third baseman and outfielder in 1993 and 1995-2012 Chipper Jones said Aaron was the “epitome of class and integrity. RIP Henry Aaron!”

Jones also that Mr. Aaron was not only a “transcendent baseball player” but a “transcendent person” in our nation’s history.

“He set the bar not only for what you should strive for as a baseball player but as a human being.”

Braves Chairman Terry McGuirk said Aaron was: “A beacon for our organization.”

Before the Philadelphia 76ers tilt versus the Boston Celtics two Friday nights ago, a 122-110 win on ESPN, there was a moment of silence before the game in memory of Mr. Aaron.

Head Coach of the 76ers Glenn “Doc” Rivers, who played for the Atlanta Hawks from 1983-91 said on Friday night that Mr. Aaron was a great example where he replaced “anger” with “opportunity.”

“He’s a giant,” Rivers added. “You can still argue he still holds the home run record in a lot of people’s opinion, you know. He was just such a humble giant.”

Rivers former teammate during the 1980s and Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer Dominique Wilkins said via Hawks Twitter page @HawksonFSSE/Twitter that Mr. Aaron had to be one of the greatest athletes of all-time because of the pressure he played under, without knowing if something bad would happen to him on the field or just by sitting in the baseball dugout.

“The thing for me that was most satisfying that he was able to sit down and give me tutelage to help my career,” Wilkins, who played for the Hawks from 1982-94 said on Friday night, adding, “and I owe Hank a lot because he made it possible for a guy like myself to persevere, and do something special in his life.”     

Mr. Aaron put together one of the greatest career resumes in the history of MLB finishing as the all-time leader in 2,297 career runs batted in (RBI), 6,856 career total bases, 1,477 extra-base hits, and 25 career All-Star appearances, which includes an MLB-record 21 All-Star selections.

Prior to 14-time All-Star Barry Bonds becoming MLB’s all-time leader in career home runs in 2007, which stands at 762, Aaron was the all-time leader in home runs from 1974-2007 at (755). He along with Bonds and the late great Babe Ruth (714) are the three players in MLB history with 700-plus career homers, with all playing 20-plus years in the major leagues.

Mr. Aaron in 11 of his 23 MLB seasons had more than 100 RBIs, 624 career doubles, 240 stolen bases, and 13 times he finished in the Top 10 in MVP voting.  

He also won three Gold Glove Awards (1958-1960); two National League batting titles (1956, 1959); four National League home run titles (1957, 1963, 1966, and 1967); and four-time National League RBI leader (1957, 1960, 1963, and 1966).

His No. 44 was retired by both the Brewers and Braves in 1976 and 1977 respectably.

To put into perspective what Mr. Aaron did in his major league career, former writer for Sports Illustrated Ralph Wiley, who now works for ESPN said back in 1998 that Aaron hit more homers than Ruth. Drove in more runs than Lou Gehrig. Scored more runs than Willie Mays and had over 12 miles in total bases than the runner-up Stan Musial.  

To honor Mr. Aaron, the Braves welcomed fans to visit his statue inside of Monument Garden at Truist Park in Atlanta, GA.

The Brewers will wear the No. 44 on their jersey sleeves for the 2021 season. The NFL’s Atlanta Falcons and Major League Soccer’s Atlanta United FC will both retire No. 44 jerseys for the 2021 season.

All flags at Georgia state buildings were flown at half-staff until his exceedingly small socially distant funeral that took place on Jan. 27 at Friendship Baptist Church in Atlanta, GA. S3

The most iconic and memorable homer that Aaron, who was 40 years old at that time hit was the one where he surpassed Ruth into No. 1 on MLB’s all-time list at No. 715 came as a member of the Atlanta Braves Apr. 8, 1974 in the national televised game then at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium of Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Al Downing at the bottom of the fourth inning.

While cannons fired off in celebration of this history making moment, as Aaron was rounding third base heading towards home plate, two college students sprinted onto the field and jogged alongside Mr. Aaron, which temporarily startled him.

Aaron after that was interviewed by the late great NBA on TNT sideline reporter Craig Sager between third and home plate for then Sarasota, FL’s WXLT (now WWSB-Channel 40). 

As the fan in the stadium cheered wildly for what just took place, Aaron’s parents, Aaron Sr., and the former Estella Pritchett ran onto the field as well to congratulate their son. His mother ran across the field and threw her arms around him, showing him love not just for the fact he surpassed Ruth, but that he was alive to witness this moment.  

Then Braves announcer Milo Hamilton, who called the game for WSB radio description of that milestone scene: “Henry Aaron, in the second inning walked and scored. He’s sittin’ on 714. Here’s the pitch by Downing. Swinging. There’s a drive into left-center field. That ball is gonna be-ee… Outta here! It’s gone! It’s 715! There’s a new home run champion of all-time, and it’s Henry Aaron! The fireworks are going. Henry Aaron is coming around third. His teammates are at home plate. And listen to this crowd! Met at home plate not by only every member of the Braves but by his father and mother.”

The Dodgers broadcaster in the late great Vin Scully took a different tone when describing the Aaron’s milestone homer as he addressed the racial tension. He began by saying how this was a “marvelous moment for baseball.” That it was a “marvelous moment for Atlanta and the state of Georgia; what a marvelous moment for the country and the world.”

Mr. Scully also said that “a black man” was getting a standing ovation in the Deep South for breaking a record of an all-time baseball idol.

“And it is a great moment for all of us, and particularly for Henry Aaron…And for the first time in a long time, that poker face in Aaron shows the tremendous strain and relief of what it must have been like to live with for the past several months.”

The good and the bad that Mr. Aaron faced during this proud moment in his baseball career is nothing new to him or many African Americans back then, especially in the Southern part of the U.S.

Born in segregated Mobile, AL on Feb. 5, 1954 one of seven children, including Tommie Aaron, who played with his brother in the majors, the game of baseball Henry saw as his way out of poverty, despite the fact he was not able to play organized baseball as a youth because of the aforementioned segregation then.

How poor was Mr. Aaron and his family when he was growing up in Alabama, he had to make his own baseball bats out of tree limbs. 

Mr. Aaron said that what made him such a great hitter in his career is that he would actually hit bottle caps and really small rocks that were a major aide in becoming the incredible hitter he was for over two decades in MLB, striking no more than 100 times in a season.  

Aaron thought he had escaped that part of his life when he made his major league debut with the then aforementioned Milwaukee Braves in 1954. But 12 years later the Braves moved to Atlanta, putting Aaron back in the Deep South, where he really worked hard to escape.

The late U.S. Congressman of the Georgia’s 5th Congressional District from 1987-2020 John Lewis (D-GA) said back in 2000 that the south Aaron was returning to then was what he called a “different South,” with Atlanta considered “the capital of the New South.”

Longtime Civil Rights Activist Dick Gregory added in 1999 saying that the Civil Rights Movement had already shocked the “New South” and Aaron being the face of the Braves who brought a class and dignity on the surface, but underneath had a sternness of “don’t mess with him, don’t talk down to him.”

As Aaron was approaching Ruth’s home run record that had been held for four decades by Ruth, Aaron received death threats and racially driven hate mail, that according to the ESPN’s Baseball analyst and de facto historian Tim Kurkjian total about 1,000 letters a day.

In fact, Mr. Aaron set the Guinness World Record for the most mail received by a private citizen of nearly 3,000 letters a day, that equated to nearly one million in 1974, and much of it was hate mail. 

One letter that was sent to Aaron said that someone was going to break his leg, his back and that he will “DROP DEAD.”

Another began with “Dear Nigger Henry,” and consisted of he would “((not))” break the record “established” by the great Babe Ruth. That Caucasians are “more superior than jungle bunnies,” and that person’s gun is “watching your ever move.”

Someone sent Mr. Aaron a picture of an ape, pointing his first finger at his head that asked, “This picture flatters you Hank. You Fag.”

“I couldn’t open a letter month,” Aaron said last year about that hate mail he received during that time. “They had to be opened by the FBI or somebody else.”  

Longtime sports commentator Bob Costas, now with the MLB Network said that Aaron saved each of those hate letters in a box in his attic as a reminder that not a whole lot has changed, even today in our nation when it comes to racism. Costas at one point in that interaction asked Mr. Aaron if those hate letter obscured that millions of Americans, not just African Americans admired and respected you.

Mr. Aaron responded by saying that he does know but it does not change what he had to go through.

“I couldn’t let that stand in my way,” Mr. Aaron said.

Adding, “When I look in the stands, you know, after they said these nasty things, I looked in the stands and I saw all these Black people in the stands. I said, ‘I can’t let them down.’”

Co-host and longtime media personality and writer Jemele Hill said last week on Vice TV’s “Cari & Jemele (Won’t) Stick to Sports” said Mr. Aaron’s drive to break one of pro sports all-time records was one he did not reflect positively on until later on his life.

The newspaper that covered the Braves had his obituary prepared to be published because of the fear he would be assassinated.

In fact, the newspaper that covered the Braves, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s then executive sports editor Lewis Grizzard reported that he was receiving numerous phone calls that called journalists “nigger lovers” because they covered Mr. Aaron’s chase of Ruth’s record. So, while preparing the massive coverage of Aaron’s chase of MLB’s all-time home run mark, Grizzard quietly had Aaron’s obituary written, fearing that someone was going to assassinate him.

“And so, when we acknowledge our Black icons, we need to also acknowledge what racism has done to their lives,” Hill said.

She added that we need to acknowledge what systemic racism has “stolen” from our Black icons in sports and entertainment.

Hill’s co-host and former ESPN “Sportscenter” anchor Cari Champion said that we needed icons like Hank Aaron, fellow Negro Leaguer and MLB legend in the late Jackie Robinson, and Muhammad Ali to push the needle to where seeing her and Hill host their own show. To see someone like now Vice President Kamala Harris, and longtime journalist with CNN and NBC Soledad O’Brien, the host now of the weekend political show “Matter of Fact” to give young minorities a vision of that they can also be in position of power, and leadership, which is how we can make our world better.

Aaron surpassed Ruth on the home run list and at the same time showed many other African Americans who played in the MLB that they can be great like him even if others do not think so, like Torii Hunter, who hit 353 career homers a 19-year career in the majors.

“For him to stay focused and hit 756 home runs, and I just don’t understand it. I don’t get it, you know,” Hunter said. “If a guy hit, you know, 300 or 400 home runs in the major leagues, he’s like a God. What’s higher than God? Hank Aaron.”

You would think the words that came out of Mr. Aaron mouth would be one of jubilation. That was not the case, as he said once he surpassed Ruth, “I just thank God it’s all over with. Thank you very much.”

Mr. Aaron saw his milestone moment as a sign of relief that it was over because this moment was just six after the assassination of Civil Rights icon Martin Luther King, Jr. Just six years after then U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy had been assassinated. Just a decade after then President John F. Kennedy had been assassinated.

“You didn’t know what was going to happen to Hank Aaron. You didn’t know if he was actually going to break the record,” ESPN’s Baseball Insider Buster Olney, said of what Mr. Aaron went through back then.

Aaron tied Ruth’s all-time home run record on opening day in the 1974 season and surpassed Ruth four days later.

Olney, who was age 10 at that time said that his mother the next left a note that Mr. Aaron had broken the all-time home run record, writing at the bottom of the note that the crowd cheered.

Olney said that the final part of that note he got from his mother was just as important as the fact that he became the MLB’s new all-time home run leader.   

After Bonds hit his record-breaking 756th career homer on Aug. 7, 2007, Mr. Aaron made a surprise appearance on the big video screen at AT&T Park in San Francisco to congratulate Bonds on this history making moment in MLB.

“I would like to offer my congratulations to Barry Bonds on becoming baseball’s career home run leader. It is a great accomplishment which required skill, longevity, and determination,” Mr. Aaron said that night. “Throughout the past century, the home run has held a special place in baseball and I have been privileged to hold this record for 33 of those years. I move over now and offer my best wishes to Barry and his family on this historical achievement. My hope today, as it was on that April evening in 1974, is that the achievement of this record will inspire others to chase their own dreams.”

When Bonds surpassed Aaron in 2007 on the all-time home run list, he showed the same grace and dignity that has been a part of him, all be it fraudulently because Bonds was found out to have used Performance Enhancing Drugs (PEDs) that he became known for his entire baseball career to him that Aaron did not receive when he surpassed Ruth.

“Hank Aaron—thank you for everything you ever taught us, for being a trailblazer through adversity and setting an example for all of us African American ball players who came after you,” Bonds said in a statement last weekend. “Being able to grow up and have the idols and role models I did; help shape me for a future I could have never dreamed of.”

This was another example of Mr. Aaron’s kindness and respect for another, which was nothing really new because ESPN’s Pedro Gomez said two weeks ago on “Sportscenter” that Aaron during his career took many minority baseball players that experienced the kind of systemic racism under his wing.

Mr. Aaron not only confronted that vitriol from many Caucasians and was open about it but showed the class in how he handled it.   

He did have his fun moments in his baseball career, especially on the back nine of it often joking about how old he was playing against younger player, and still besting them.

“The kid that was pitching, and the kid that was catching I was older than the two of them put together,” Aaron jokingly said with a smile in an interview once while playing with the Braves. “So, it was kind of embarrassing. But I felt good about it really. Because it’s very unusual to participate in this game that long.”

“His career demonstrates that a person who goes to work with humility every day can hammer his way into history and find a way to shine like no other,” Commissioner Manfred said.  

Aaron’s professional baseball journey started in the Negro American League in 1952 with the Indianapolis Clowns, that was separate but nowhere close to equal to the majors.

There, Mr. Aaron said that he played with some of the best baseball players that “knew how to play the game.”

He added that the players he played with taught him a great deal.

His MLB journey began with the Milwaukee Braves on Apr. 13, 1954 at age 20, where he went hitless against the Cincinnati Reds. Things would get better from there and in the 1957 season won his only National League MVP and led the Braves to that year’s World Series title over the New York Yankees in seven games. 

Even the eye-popping numbers Mr. Aaron put up in his remarkable career, he was always seen as underrated because he was not a player that took the approach to have all eyes on him. He never hit 50 homers in a single season, with his highest in one season being 47 homers. While he was remarkably consistent in his 25-year career, Aaron was always overshadowed by other MLB players, who had more charisma and played in more high-profiled media markets like Ruth with the Yankees.

“If Hank had played in New York like [Mickey] Mantle and [Willie] Mays, we all know it would have been a different story,” Academy Award winning film director/producer and New York sports fan Spike Lee said once. “He was stuck in Milwaukee.”

“I know they were in the World Series in ’57 and ’58. That put him in the spotlight. But other than that, it really wasn’t until he was getting into that Ruth territory that the spotlight finally shown on him the way it should have all along.”

ESPN Baseball Analyst Eduardo Perez, who played 13 years in the majors (1993-2000, 2002-06), said that Aaron was someone that was not only a great player on the baseball diamond, but the impact that he had off the field was even greater. 

The one number Perez said on ESPN’s “Sportscenter” two weeks ago that stood out about Mr. Aaron in his baseball career that he hit 44 home runs in four different seasons.

“I used to always be a numbers guy. Still am to this day. And No. 44, every time I think of it, it symbolizes Hank Aaron.”

After playing the final two seasons of his baseball career with the Brewers, Aaron stared across another racial divide as his next challenge, owning a baseball team.

“I look forward to one day that a Black will be able to run a professional ball club. And I’m hoping that one Black will be me.”

Following the 1976 season, then owner Ted Turner, founder of CNN, TBS, and TNT reached out to Aaron about being a part of the Braves front office, which he accepted and worked for the team he played for a little over two decades in several capacities for over four decades, that included being named Senior Vice President and assistant to the Braves’ President. He became the Corporate Vice President of Community Relations for Turner Broadcasting System (TBS), a member of the company’s Board of Directors, and the Vice President of Business Development for The Airport Network.

In 1982, Aaron was inducted into the baseball Hall of Fame, receiving 97.8 percent of the ballots, second only to the 98.2 percent of the vote Ty Cobb received in the inaugural 1936 Hall of Fame election. 

In 1999, MLB honored Mr. Aaron on his 65th birthday created the Hank Aaron Award in celebration of the 25-year anniversary of Aaron surpassing Ruth on the all-time home run list. This award is given annually to baseball played voted most effective hitter in both the NL and American League (AL).

In 2007 after the Braves were up for sale, then MLB Commissioner Bud Selig announced that Aaron would play a key role in the management of the Braves formation of programs through MLB that encouraged the influx of baseball into minority communities, which included Aaron founding the Hank Aaron Rookie League program.

The greatest award that Mr. Aaron has received came on Jan. 8, 2001 when then President Bill Clinton (D) presented the MLB legend the nation’s highest civilian honor in the Presidential Medal of Freedom, which he received by his predecessor George W. Bush ® in June 2002.

“Rosalynn and I are saddened by the passing of our dear friend Henry Aaron,” former President and Governor of Georgia Jimmy Carter (D) said in a statement. “One of the greatest baseball players of all-time, he has been a personal hero to us. A breaker of records and racial barriers, his remarkable legacy will continue to inspire countless athletes and admirers for generations to come.”

Former President Bush said of Aaron, “The former home run king wasn’t handed his throne. He grew up poor and faced racism as he worked to become one of the greatest baseball players of all-time. Hank never let the hatred he faced consume him.”

President Clinton said that Aaron’s passing, baseball lost “one of its greatest heroes” and that our nation lost “an inspiring role model and philanthropist, and I have lost a wonderful friend.”

President Barack Obama, who presidency back in 2008 is not possible if not for how Mr. Aaron stood strong in the face of racism said that the Hall of Famer not only “one of the best baseball players we’ve ever seen” but was one of “the strongest people” he ever met.

“Whenever Michelle [his wife] and I spent time with Hank and his wife Billye, we were struck by their kindness, generosity and grace—and were reminded that we stood on the shoulders of a previous generation of trailblazers.”   

The current President Joe Biden said that watching Hank Aaron play baseball that he knew he was watching “someone special.”

That seeing Mr. Aaron play baseball was more than just about watching a “gifted” athlete that mastered his craft as he worked towards what would be a Hall of Fame career as one of the greats to ever play baseball, but that every time we saw him round the baseball diamond that we were witnessing not just someone chasing an astonishing record, but he was helping the nation chase a better version of who we are and want to be.

Henry Louis “Hammer or Hammerin’ Hank” Aaron will forever in the eyes of many be remembered for a monumental swing that allowed this African American man to surpass a Caucasian man in fellow Hall of Famer Babe Ruth on Major League Baseball’s all-time home run list.

On that night, Mr. Aaron was getting showered with praise and appreciation at a time where he did not always get it back. What he really did was provide hope that our nation can break a systemic divide that has seemingly divide the U.S. into two countries where Caucasian Americans can do and get away with anything and minorities, like African Americans have to toe a certain line at all times.

Mr. Aaron was a very towering and monumental figure at a time in baseball that was a very harsh environment that might have left a much lesser man bitter or resentful for what he endured from racist Caucasian fans and the letters they sent to him back in 1974, and the threat of kidnapping his kids.

Aaron’s remarkable grace and focus did more than lived up, even surpassed the enormous responsibility he felt how he represented Black and Brown Americans. That focus led him to become a successful businessman. Raised and provided millions of dollars to school and charities.

In his later years, Mr. Aaron often said he hoped his lasting legacy to be not for the remarkable resume that he put together as an MLB player for 23 years. But for the many lives he help change.

“I think I want to be remembered as someone who was able to forget about baseball. But be able to help mankind,” Aaron said.

Henry Louis “Hammer or Hammerin’ Hank” Aaron memory for what he did on and off the field will never be forgotten. And while the Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium where his most famous swing took place is now gone, and is now a parking lot, the piece of the outfield wall where his 715th career homer landed remains.

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 1/22/2021 1 p.m. ESPN’s “Sportscenter” with Hannah Storm and David Lloyd, with reports from Buster Olney and Eduardo Perez; 1/22/2021 6:30 p.m. on “ABC World News Tonight With David Muir,” on WABC; 1/23/2021 12:30 a.m. ESPN’s “Sportscenter” from Los Angeles, CA with Neil Everett, and Stan Verrett; 1/27/2021 www.npr.org story, “Funeral For Hank Aaron: The ‘Marvel From Mobile’ Is Honored In Atlanta,” by Bill Chappell; 1/28/2021 11:30 p.m. Vice’s “Cari & Jemele (Won’t) Stick to Sports,” with Cari Champion and Jemele Hill; 1/31/2021 5 a.m. “Matter of Fact with Soledad O’Brien;” https://www.baseball-reference.com/leaders/HR_career.shtml; https://en.m.wikpedia.org/wiki/Ted_Turner; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_F._Kennedy; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Carter; and https://en.m.wikpedia.org/wiki/Hank_Aaron

Monday, February 1, 2021

J-Speaks: The Passing Of A Respected NBA Journalist

 It was already a tough day on Tuesday, Jan. 26 as one year ago last week was the one-year anniversary of the sudden tragic death of a future Hall of Famer and five-time NBA champion of one of the flagship franchises of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The day was even tougher one with the sudden passing of a proud member of the NBATV family, Michigan native, and former sportswriter in Indianapolis, IN and Atlanta, GA.

One week ago, Sekou Smith, senior analyst for NBA Digital and Turner Sports Broadcasting for 11 years, and former NBA beat writer for The Indianapolis Star from 2001-05 and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution from 2005-09 passed away after testing positive for the Coronavirus (COVID-19). He was just 48 years old. He is survived by his wife Heather Pulliam, and their three children in daughter Rielly and sons Gabriel and Cameron.

“We are heartbroken over Sekou’s tragic passing,” Turner Sports said in a statement on the passing of Sekou Smith. “His commitment to journalism and the basketball community was immense and we will miss his warm, engaging personality. He was beloved by his Turner Sports and NBA friends and colleagues. Our deepest condolences are with his family and loved ones.”

The passing of the Grand Rapids, MI native came on the one-year anniversary of the tragic passing of future Hall of Famer Kobe Bryant, who along with his 13-year-old daughter Gianna, and seven others who died in a helicopter crash outside of Los Angeles, CA.  

Longtime sportswriter for The Washington Post and co-host of ESPN’s daily show “Pardon the Interruption” Michael Wilbon said at the close of Wednesday’s show that he and Smith were part of a Zoom eulogy and few of their colleagues for former South Bend Tribune sportswriter and fellow ESPN reporter Vaughn McClure, who passed away back in Oct. 2019, also at age 48.

“Still not over that. And now we have to deal with the passing of another dear friend and colleague Sekou Smith. Rest in peace,” Wilbon said.  

Smith’s journey began after graduating from Jackson State University with a bachelor’s degree in communications in the 1990s.

In honor of Smith, Jackson State University has started a scholarship in his name, the Sekou Smith Journalism Award at Jackson State University which was tweeted @MasterTres last Thursday evening.

He first worked at The Clarion-Ledger in Jackson, MS covering college football, basketball, and baseball from 1994-2001.

The news of Smith’s sudden passing really hit his NBATV family really hard, especially longtime colleague Matt Winer who during the NBATV’s pregame show before a matchup between the Los Angeles Clippers versus the Atlanta Hawks tried to hold back tears when describing the kind of person and journalist his colleague was.

Winer said that Smith, the creator and author of the Hang Time blog on NBA.com, host of “The Hang Time Podcast” and a Senior analyst on NBATV’s “The Beat” was a “journalist journalist” that had a curiosity and skepticism that made him endearing to all that were in his presence, while also being “endearingly cranky,” and always passionate about the subject matter he loved the most, and would let you talk to him forever if you would let him about sports.

“More importantly, a devoted husband and father, and a great friend to so many of us around here,” Winer said. “Just a great spirit about him. And if you couldn’t have a good conversation, fun conversation with Sekou Smith, then you didn’t like talking.”

Smith is the latest in the nation to pass away because of COVID-19, bringing the current total to www.worldmeters.into 454,024.

Many of Smith’s fellow sports journalist colleagues expressed their feelings, sadness, and respect they had for Mr. Smith and what he meant to the profession of sports journalism.

ESPN play-by-play analyst for the NBA and college football and play-by-play analyst for the Sacramento Kings on NBC Sports California tweeted @MarkJonesESPN, “Heavy heart today...We lost a good brother to Covid. Sekou Smith of @NBATV and nba.com was a brilliant and insightful writer, a positive dude. He’s gone home to be with the Lord.”

“The Athletic’s” and “The Stadium’s” Shams Charania tweeted @ShamsCharania about Smith’s passing “Hard to Process,” adding that he was “An impeccable human being. Rest in Peace, Sekou Smith.”

ESPN’s “The Undefeated’s” Marc J. Spears tweeted @MarcJSpears, “Thank you for your brotherly friendship, humor, honesty, and compassion. Glad we had a chance to tell each other we loved each other three weeks ago. You were a gift to this Earth as a friend, father, and man Sekou Smith. Rest in Peace to my brother. Prayers to your wife & family.”

Spears colleague Justin Tinsley, who he called Smith a “great NBA journalist” and “a great personality.”

While he only met Smith a few times, Tinsley said about Smith on Thursday’s edition of ESPN’s “Around the Horn,” it was the infectious personality, energy and presence that was very inviting. Though it was painful to lose him, the way he treated the game by how he reported on professional basketball with a high level of respect, nuance, and care.

“He left the game better than when he found it, and I think that’s what anybody would want to do in that situation,” Tinsley said about Smith’s impact as a journalist. 

Sports reporter for The New York Times Marc Stein tweeted @TheSteinLine, “Simply an honor to know and work alongside @SekouSmithNBA. BELOVED beyond words by his colleagues across the league. This saddest of days only gets sadder and harder. Sending as much warmth and strength as we can muster to his family in this unspeakably difficult time…”  

Smith’s former colleague at NBATV Stan Van Gundy, now head coach of the New Orleans Pelicans used a sports analogy in describing how good Smith was at his job calling him a “pro’s pro.”  

He added on his Twitter page @realStanVG, “The NBA community lost a great man today in Sekou Smith. While I’ve known him since he was with the AJC but was lucky to work with him at NBATV. I got to know him well enough to know 3 things-I was lucky to spend time with him, I wanted to know him better and hew as a good man.”

The respect and condolences for Smith did not just come from his co-workers at Turner Sports and journalism colleagues, it was shown by the two teams he covered for the two newspapers of the hometown NBA squads.

A moment of silence was held before Brooklyn Nets versus Atlanta Hawks tilt last Wednesday night in remembrance of Smith, who wrote for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution as mentioned from 2005-09, before joining NBATV.

“The Atlanta Hawks organization is heartbroken by the passing of Sekou Smith. The Hawks’ beat writer for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution from 2005-09, Sekou provided our fans with honest and fair coverage, sharing incredible insight on the team while establishing himself as one of the NBA’s to personalities. He made Atlanta his home, continuing his brilliant work on NBA Digital on TV and behind the keyboard telling the stories of the league in his unique way. Sekou’s passion for the NBA and its players was only outmatched by the pride and love he reserved for his family and friends.”

“We send our condolences to his wife Heather and their three children. He will be sorely missed.”  

There was also a moment of silence to honor Smith before the Indiana Pacers home contest versus the Philadelphia 76ers on Saturday night. Smith covered the Pacers as mentioned at the start of the 2000s for The Indianapolis Star. Pacers officials also placed a framed photo of Smith in one of the few spots in the revamped press area.

Many NBA players expressed through Twitter about how sad they feel that Smith is no longer with us.

Phoenix Suns 10-time All-Star guard Chris Paul @CP3 tweeted, “Man today just got a little heaver…my condolences to Sekou’s wife, family, friends, and extended NBA family. What a kind and compassionate man we just lost.” 

Five-time NBA All-Star and three-time NBA champion with the Golden State Warriors Klay Thompson, who is out for the season with an Achilles injury tweeted @KlayThompson, “Rip Sekou Smith. I used to watch you on @NBATV nightly. Terrible news!”

Three-time NBA champion with the Miami Heat and future Hall of Famer Dwyane Wade @DwyaneWade, “I’ve never had anything but positive interactions and conversations with Sekou Smith. Our prayers go out to the Smith family. We lost a good one. Rest In Heaven.”

If there is one thing that the passing of Smith and the countless thousands of others that have been lost in the past year-plus because of COVID-19 is that life is short and that being able to tell those the kind of impact they have had in your life or the kind of impact they have had on you should be said in that moment and not until they are no longer living.

Two people that Smith had an impact on were a fellow Michigan native, and longtime colleague at NBATV, who played 14 years for the Hawks, Miami Heat, Portland Trail Blazers, San Antonio Spurs, New Orleans Pelicans, and Charlotte Bobcats Steve Smith, who went to Michigan State, and has known Sekou for over two decades.

During the pregame show on Tuesday, a picture shown of Sekou, Steve and Allie LaForce from the NBA Restart in Orlando, FL last season entitled “The Smiths.”  

To put into context the kind of connection that Steve and Sekou had, their sports conversations ranged from talking about the NBA to the local sports teams in Detroit, MI from the Lions of the NFL, the Tigers of Major League Baseball (MLB), the Pistons of the NBA, and high school hoops.

“This hurts,” Smith, who wore a blue suit jacket and gold tie and light blue stripe shirt in honor of Sekou Smith said before calling the Clippers versus Hawks game with Brian Anderson. “Just a special friend of all of ours here at Turner Sports.” 

“I learned so much from him, not only about basketball but the game of life. We only disagreed about one thing, that was Michigan State [Spartans] and Michigan Wolverines. And that’s why in honor of him, I wear my blue and gold today and I say “Go Blue” to Sekou but special condolences goes out to Heather his wife, his three children. And this one’s for you my friend Sekou.”

Another former Michigan State alum whose friendship with Sekou Smith goes back since she was 20 years old is former ESPN broadcast journalist Jemele Hill, the host of “Cari & Jemele (Won’t) Stick to Sports.”

During the Thursday edition of her show, Hill echoed what many said of Smith that he was a great person.

She also talked about how when they see the number of people who have died from the Coronavirus, that is aforementioned 454,024 individuals might be just a number on the screen or in a newspaper article.

“Best believe as this pandemic rages, this virus is getting closer and closer to us individually,” Hill said about losing a good friend to this global pandemic. “And so, I just say this to people, but I know we say it every time someone passes, ‘Tell your people what they mean to you now.”  

Last week was the one-year anniversary of the sudden passing of future Hall of Famer Kobe Bryant in a helicopter crash at age 41. It was also a day that the NBA family and the sports journalism community mourned the loss of Sekou Smith, who died suddenly after testing positive for the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic.

A family of Smith’s wife Heather lost her husband. His three children in daughter Rielly and sons Gabriel and Cameron lost their father. His NBATV family lost not just a colleague, but a great writer who brought a nuance, personality, grit and focus as a writer, broadcaster, and podcaster.

Sekou Smith made a major impact that earned him respect and appreciation from his colleagues at NBATV and those in the sports journalism profession that left a lasting impact that will never be forgotten.

“The NBA mourns the passing of Sekou Smith, a beloved member of the NBA family,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement a week ago. “Sekou was one of the most affable and dedicated reporters in the NBA and a terrific friend to so many across the league. He covered the game for more than two decades, including the past 11 years with Turner Sports, where he showed his full range of skills as an engaging television analyst, podcast, and writer.”

“Sekou’s love of basketball was clear to everyone who knew him and it always shined through in his work. Our heartfelt condolences go to his wife, Heather, and their three children, Gabriel, Rielly and Cameron.”

Information and quotations are courtesy of 10/16/2020 www.southbendtribune.com story, “Former South Bend Tribune Sports Writer and ESPN Reporter Vaughn McClure Dies at 48,” 1/26/2021 7 p.m. “NBATV Pregame Show,” presented by Car Max with Matt Winer, Candace Parker, and Grant Hill; 1/26/2021 7:30 p.m. “Los Angeles Clippers versus Atlanta Hawks,” on NBATV with Brian Anderson and Steve Smith; 1/27/2021 5:30 p.m. ESPN’s “Pardon the Interruption,” with Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wibon; 1/27/2021 www.hitc/com’s “Who Is Sekou Smith’s Wife? Fans Honor NBA Reporter’s Family After Death,” by Kate Fowler; 1/27/2021 12:30 a.m. NBATV’s “Gametime,” with Matt Winer, Candace Parker, and Grant Hill; 1/28/2021 5 p.m. ESPN’s “Around the Horn,” with Tony Reali; 1/28/2021 11:30 p.m. VICE TV’s edition “Cari & Jemele (Won’t ) Stick to Sports” with Cari Champion and Jemele Hill; 1/28/2021 1:30 a.m. NBATV’s “Gametime,” with Chris Miles and Channing Frye; 1/31/2021 1:30 a.m. NBATV’s “Gametime,” with Chris Miles, Sam Mitchell, and Dennis Scott; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Smith_(basketball); https://www.worldmeters.info/coronavirus/country/us/; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sekou_Smith.