Americans Divided on Athlete Protests

Source: Statista

Four years after San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick kicked off a wave of athlete protests against systematic racial injustice by sitting during the national anthem in a preseason game against the Green Bay Packers, professional athletes from several sports made their boldest statement yet, by simply refusing to play.

It was the Milwaukee Bucks that took the first step by deciding to sit out their playoff game against the Orlando Magic in the wake of the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin earlier this week. Several teams from the NBA, WNBA, Major League Baseball and Major League Soccer followed the Bucks’ lead and joined the walkout that caused all of Wednesday night’s NBA fixtures to be cancelled.

Having repeatedly kneeled in protest against racial injustice and spoken out in support of the Black Lives Matter movement, several athletes vented their frustration over a lack of progress following Sunday’s shooting in Kenosha, eventually leading to Wednesday’s unprecedented events.Ever since Kaepernick’s first protest in 2016, a debate had raged in the U.S. over whether or not the silent protests by countless athletes is appropriate or disrespectful.

As a recent poll conducted by YouGov on behalf of CBS News shows, the country is still divided on the issue, with 58 percent of U.S. adults saying that kneeling during the anthem is an acceptable form of protest and 42 percent thinking it’s not acceptable. As the following chart shows there’s an age gap and a partisan divide in how the protests are viewed. While young Americans and Democrats overwhelmingly support the protesting athletes, older Americans and Republicans widely oppose the protests.

Messi: Barcelona’s Goal Machine

Source: Statista

Barcelona talisman and for some the greatest player of all time, Lionel Messi, has handed in a transfer request, potentially signalling the end of his incredibly successful years at the Camp Nou.

With the club seemingly in turmoil at all levels, the 33 year old’s request to leave will hit the club hard, but may also allow new head coach Ronald Koeman to make a fresh start and embark on something which fans of successful teams never want to hear: a rebuilding project.

Still, one glance at Messi’s goal scoring record says everything about the massive importance of the player to the club, and the size of the job Barcelona will have on their hands to fill the hole he leaves behind. In 731 games in all competitions, the Argentinian found the net an incredible 634 times – averaging out at almost one goal every match (0.9 to be precise).