It doesn’t surprise me that Donald Trump’s style has a lot of appeal to sports coaches like Mike Ditka, Bobby Knight and the Buffalo Bill’s Rex Ryan. Sports coaches are judged in a very binary way that comes down to win/loss records, victory and defeat. And, football, in particular, is a game that rewards physicality (at most positions) over understanding. That’s not to say that NFL scouts don’t care about intelligence or character, but they’re more impressed by how much you can bench press or how fast you can run the 40-yard dash.
One sign that Rex Ryan might be a Trump supporter came from his willingness to give Offensive Guard Richie Incognito a job. Incognito was suspended indefinitely by the Miami Dolphins in November 2013, following revelations that he bullied (in particular) a black teammate and Stanford University graduate named Jonathan Martin. In the end, the suspension lasted three months and cost Incognito two gameday checks.
As the NFL goes, the Incognito scandal was a fairly big deal. There was a big investigation and eventually a report was issued. The stuff Incognito and some of his friends did to Martin and to a Japanese trainer on the team are so horrifying that I can’t even refer to most of them with any specificity. In general terms, they threatened to rape both Martin and his sister. In addition to that (and many other things), Incognito wasn’t shy about sharing his distaste for black people. For example, here are two text message exchanges he had with a white teammate:
Player B: Especially if u plan living in Arizona in the future, that’s exactly what you want
Incognito: Yea. For picking off zombies 32
Player B: Lol isn’t that why we own any weapons!?
Incognito: That and black people
Player B: Mmm def all black pplFour days later, Incognito and Player B discussed rifle scopes in text messages.
Player B: Yes. That’s a solid optic made specifically for a .308
battle rifle
Incognito: Perfect for shooting black people
Player B: Lol exactly
Player B: Or Jeff Ireland
After the Dolphins reinstated Incognito, they cut him for obvious reasons. But Rex Ryan was willing to overlook Incognito’s behavior and tolerate the fallout that would inevitably result in a mostly black locker room from inviting an extreme racist onto the team.
Still, it seems that some black Bills players were shocked when their coach Rex Ryan made an appearance with Donald Trump:
A Bills player said when he learned Ryan had spoken at Trump’s rally, he simply couldn’t believe it. “Rex is such an open-minded guy, a really good person,” said the player, who asked not to be identified, fearing repercussions from the Bills. “But the fact he could back someone as closed-minded as Trump genuinely shocked me.”
The player, who is black, emphasized that teammates’ frustration with their coach’s public endorsement was not universal. But in private discussions, he said, “Some of the African-American players on the team weren’t happy about Rex doing that.”
Indeed, said another black player on the Bills who requested anonymity to speak freely about tensions swirling with a combination of protests led by Colin Kaepernick and a combustible candidate: “I see Trump as someone who is hostile to people of color, and the fact that Rex supports him made me look at him completely differently, and not in a positive way.”
As for Incognito, he’s predictably in Trump’s camp, and his reasons are about as nuanced as you’d expect:
“I think that he can help this nation get back to a world superpower,” Incognito told B/R Mag. “Where I think he could help is putting us first again and having that—it’s my mentality, too—having that tough attitude where you put America first and everyone’s thinking we’re the greatest nation in the world. Don’t mess with America. That toughness is where I identify with him.”
Incognito doesn’t care what his black teammates think of him, but presumably Rex Ryan does. Yet, he’s oblivious to how his support of Trump is widely seen as an endorsement of racism.
Black players who might otherwise back a more conservative candidate said they have abandoned Trump because they view him as anti-black. Multiple players cited Trump’s embrace of so-called birtherism—the lie that President Obama isn’t a natural-born citizen—as one of several reasons they dislike Trump.
“A lot of black players believe saying the first black president isn’t really American is racist as f–k,” one player told B/R Mag.
It was entirely predictable that friendships would end over white players picking Trump despite it being obvious how their black teammates would feel about it. An example from the article begins with a white and black player and their spouses becoming friends. They ate at each other’s houses. The players sat together in meetings. But when the white player expressed support for Trump, the dinner invitations dried up, his calls were not returned, and eventually the black player told him “I can’t be friends with anyone who would vote for Donald Trump. I’m sorry.”
An informal poll from Bleacher Report found that 20 of 22 black NFL players plan to vote for Hillary Clinton and only
two plan to vote for Donald Trump, while all 21 white NFL players surveyed plan to vote for Trump. The poll is unscientific and has a huge sampling error, but it shows the degree of disconnect that’s developed among black and white players in the NFL.
Like most millionaires (the NFL minimum salary is $420,000, the average salary is $1.9 million), pro football players are tax-averse, and this helps explain the conservative tilt of the league, even among black players. Yet, for most of the black players, Trump is a transparent racist and anyone who would consider voting for him is clearly okay with that. They may not like the sound of Hillary Clinton saying that millionaires need to give up more of their pay, but Trump’s racial attitudes are a much bigger concern.
The white players understand this at least to the degree that most of them know better than to be open about their support for Trump, but they don’t seem to be persuaded by their black colleagues’ objections. What’s remarkable about this is that NFL locker rooms are very integrated places, so this isn’t a matter of two populations living in isolation from each other. It’s been well-documented that the more segregated and white a locality is, the stronger Trump’s support will be. Whites living in mixed neighborhoods of Philadelphia, for example, have completely different attitudes about this election than whites living in mostly white rural and Appalachian parts of Pennsylvania. Yet, proximity doesn’t seem to have increased the racial sensitivity of white players and coaches.
Maybe that has something to do with the culture of football. Maybe the fact that the NFL is dominated by southerners is a factor. I don’t really know.
We shouldn’t discount that the lack of understanding goes the other way, too. Most of the white players and coaches would protest that their support of Trump does not mean that they’re okay with racism and their support for him is based on other considerations like making America great again (whatever that might mean to them). Some of them are no doubt genuinely blind to the racism that animates Trump’s campaign. Others have problems with Hillary Clinton that they weight even more heavily than the problems they have with Trump. It many cases, it’s probably overly uncharitable to assume that these Trump supporters are voting for him because they’re attracted to or willing to overlook his racism.
Yet, it’s hard to understand how they could fail to get how their support for Trump is perceived and why it might cost them a friendship or make some black athletes not want to play with or for them.
My level of surprise at seeing Richie Incognito being the lone white player to voice his enthusiasm for Trump: 0 / 10.
He’s just like Trump – has been, and always will be, an asshole, and there’s nothing he can do to hide it (nor would he want to).
I have to admit that I was a little surprised by the unanimity of the white vote. It’s definitely a small sample size, but given how the demographic is split among all likely voters and the fact that many NFL players are actually quite educated I still found it kind of shocking. I’d love a breakdown of how they polled (how many different teams were involved, what the position breakdown was, etc).
Like Kevin Drum, I don’t watch football. Never have as a kid, and certainly not as an adult. I also don’t watch sports in general and have no idea what ESPN or sports talk radio is looking like these days. But I’m curious how accurate others think these Rasmussen numbers are about white viewers being turned off of the sport altogether because they are being reminded that racism exists. It certainly wouldn’t surprise me, but I haven’t been home since the season started and don’t know how it’s affecting my own family, all of whom probably disagree with Kaepernick’s protest:
Link
People might say that in a poll, but I think it’s difficult to isolate factors in reality.
Personally, I find myself far less interested in football for a whole host of reasons that have nothing to do with protests but rather the game itself. With how much we’ve learned about the long term damage that these guys are doing to their bodies (in addition to the ubiquitous, violent short term injuries), it’s difficult to watch sometimes. The fact that the league skews younger and younger due to several factors, including the terms of the last CBA, means that the product on the field is sloppier. Just to name a couple.
Were you to ask me, in a poll, “Are you more or less likely to tune into an NFL game because of the protests” I would probably answer that I’m more interested, but the truth of the matter is that it doesn’t really have any effect on whether or not I watch a game.
Because of course Rasmussen Reports would run such a poll.
The conservative movement and its allies, allies like NFL executives and their media partners, are led by spoiled children who have helped turn many their base fans into infants. Good lord, let’s take the wrinkled thumbs out of the mouths of these fans and give them all binkies to suck on.
Why should the NFL be different from everywhere else in America? This is happening all over the place, as people (on both sides of the Trump/Clinton divide) are being forced to confront the radical difference that has grown between their own values and those of their friends and families.
Totally OT, but in 24 hours Floridians better hang on to something , or better yet, evacuate, evacuate, evacuate .
Mathew has a better than even chance of causing terrible devastation to eastern Florida, South Carolina, and then, a chance of doubling back and punching us again. I hope FEMA is well-prepared.
And, as Josh Marshall points out, disrupting Democratic voter turnout.
Hurricane Matthew and the Presidential Election
good point
As usual he is wrong.
It is going to hit mostly in Brevard and North on 95 up to Jacksonville.
Those are GOP votes, particularly when you get to Jacksonville.
Booman wrote;
. “Yet, for most of the black players, Trump is a transparent racist and anyone who would consider voting for him is clearly okay with that.”
———
Well, Trump IS a racist, and anybody who would consider voting for him IS clearly OK with that! And anybody who does the ‘both sides’ BS is OK with it, and anybody who makes excuses for him is OK with it.
That’s because Trump has released the viscous dogs on the world. He has given permission for the deplorable, nasty, mean spirited and irredeemable section of society to spill their bile.
And we will be paying the price, in violence and hateful rhetoric for many years.
Welcome to the party NFL.
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You’re being unfair, Boo. Incognito’s just worried about his job getting outsourced to China.
China!? No need for that. Robots are the future.
I would definitely watch robot football
“Let’s see another replay of this metal-crunching hit! That FootBot 210k is really showing a lot of character by getting up from that collision. What a tough robot!”
There are assholes every where. That they would overrepresented among white professional football players is pretty much fitting the stereotype of dumb, brain damaged, followers of authoritarian jerks.
Any successful football coach is pretty much a petty dictator so the white, and black, guys are comfortable with bombastic bullshit on a daily basis. And of course, as pointed out, the coaches are definitely comfortable with the dictatorial crap. Trump’s use of race is just about the only thing that would separate the players.
Billy Penn:
how many people are in Philly? It looks like they only spoke with 65 according to that
I think we should wait for confirmation from another poll before jumping to any conclusions
a population of 1,000,000 voters (roughly Philly’s) gets you a +/-12.2% MoE for a 95% CI! And that MoE applies to each estimate (i.e., Clinton’s support, Trump’s support)!!!
Meaning Trump’s “real” number could be anywhere from 9.8% to 34.4% (and the “real” number would even be outside THAT wide range in 1 in 20 repetitions of the poll). And Clinton’s anywhere between 54.8% and 79.2%.
Since those ranges don’t overlap, the poll does tell you Clinton’s ahead in Philly (guessing that would come as surprise to virtually no one).
Beyond that, it’s worthless, meaningless (or worse, by creating the impression it has meaning). Even for estimating trend, since the previous poll it’s compared to very likely shared the same tiny sample size problem resulting in similarly huge MoEs.
I am very surprised there has been no mention of big time football’s (college and pro) physical abuse and rape problems. Many of these athletes have been coddled in a macho bubble all of their lives and their attitudes towards women are as warped as it gets. The evidence is all over the media (hello Ken Starr). I think a large majority of them would have a very hard time voting for a woman.
If Trump was only a misogynistic pig he’d be cornering the market on the NFL vote…but he’s not and that is a bridge too far for the black players. That’s my take anyway.
I’ll throw this in. A long time ago I was very briefly a professional athlete and it is a very, very different world.