LeBron James says he will keep his name on back of jersey

LeBron James won't have a social justice message on the back of his jersey for the NBA's restart, the Lakers All-Star forward said during a video call with reporters. Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Photo

LeBron James won't have a social justice message on the back of his jersey for the NBA's restart, the Lakers All-Star forward said during a video call with reporters. Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Photo

Published Jul 12, 2020

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LOS ANGELES - LeBron James won't have a social justice

message on the back of his jersey for the NBA's restart, the Lakers

All-Star forward said during a video call with reporters Saturday

afternoon.

"I will continue to do (work) off the floor and when I'm talking to

you guys everything that I do has a purpose, it has a meaning,"

James said. "So, I don't need to have something on the back of my

jersey for people to understand my mission or know what I'm about and

what I'm here to do.

"But I commend everybody and I respect everybody that decided to put

something on the back of their jersey. I think that's great and I

also respect anyone that didn't."

James spoke before the Lakers' first practice since March, when the

NBA season was suspended because of the coronavirus pandemic. The

Lakers arrived in Orlando, Florida, on Thursday night and immediately

began a 36-hour quarantine. They cleared that quarantine around

midday Eastern time Saturday and were able to leave their hotel rooms

and prepare for practice.

Dwight Howard, who considered skipping the restart, met the team in

Orlando. A video circulated from Rajon Rondo's Instagram account that

showed a hotel room inside the bubble more than a day before the

Lakers arrived, but coach Frank Vogel said Rondo flew with the rest

of the team on Thursday night.

They practiced at 5 p.m. local time and kept secret which players and

staff members were available to train in order to avoid speculation

about the results of league-mandated Covid-19 testing.

"Because of privacy concerns, not going to disclose the number of

guys and whether or not we have our full staff at this time," Vogel

said. "We're going to continue to honor the testing protocols and

just not disclose that."

In planning the restart to the NBA season, the league and players'

union worked together to decide to allow players to replace the names

on the back of their jerseys with a preapproved slogan. They approved

29: Black Lives Matter, Say Their Names, Vote, I Can't Breathe,

Justice, Peace, Equality, Freedom, Enough, Power to the People,

Justice Now, Say Her Name, Si Se Puede, Liberation, See Us, Hear Us,

Respect Us, Love Us, Listen, Listen to Us, Stand Up, Ally,

Anti-Racist, I Am A Man, Speak Up, How Many More, Group Economics,

Education Reform, and Mentor.

"It's just something that didn't really seriously resonate with my

mission, with my goal," James said. "I would have loved to have the

say so on what would have went on the back of my jersey. I had a

couple things in mind but I wasn't part of that process, which is OK.

I'm absolutely OK with that."

James isn't the only Lakers player to express lukewarm sentiments

about the league providing a preapproved list in conjunction with the

players' union (National Basketball Players Association), which did

not consult most of its membership. Kyle Kuzma said he wishes he

could have chosen a more personal message.

Some Lakers have decided to use the preapproved slogans. JaVale McGee

plans to put "Respect Us" on the back of his jersey.

"I definitely feel like respect is a key factor in social

injustices," McGee said. "I feel like we definitely need to get

equality, we definitely need to get the same respect everybody else

does. It's just a blessing to have this platform and the NBA doing

everything they're doing to help also."

James agrees that the platform the NBA provides will be useful in

promoting messages against racism and for social justice. He has

spoken out about the way the justice system treats Black people in

years past and has done so throughout the NBA's hiatus. James helped

start a voting rights organization this summer called More Than A

Vote, which is designed to support Black voters and fight voter

suppression in their communities.

"We will continue to push the envelope and let people know that we

are human as well," James said. "No matter our skin color, no matter

how we look, no matter how we sound. We don't want to just be used

for our God-given abilities as far as our talent on the floor, our

talents in the music industry, our talents in the industry as far as

clothing and things of that nature. But we also want to be recognized

for our talent with our brains because that's what we are, just like

everybody else. And we should be treated that way."

dpa

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