Curious, Have any of the Celtics players stated that they have been subjected to racism themselves by the fans in Boston. Wouldn’t they also be targets as 95% of the team is non-white. Are the fans only racist towards the opposing teams players? Also, have any other NBA players other than Kyrie and Lebron recently stated that they’ve had bad experiences at the TD Garden?
Marcus has.
I thought he mentioned that he heard some things, but didn’t state that it was directed at him. Again, I’m not saying that it’s acceptable behavior or claiming that racism doesn’t ever occur at the Garden, but why aren’t the Celtics players coming out and saying that the fans are acting this way towards them. Are the Boston fans only racist towards the opposing teams? Also, why aren’t there players (not named Lebron or Kyrie) from other teams stating that they’ve had similar bad experiences at the Garden.
I guess you'd have to consider this from their perspective -- which is something not easily done. As a hypothetical, let's say JT has heard the N-word at the Garden. It's possible that as he considers coming out publicly the cost of doing so outweighs the benefit.
Say he did hear something during a game, What might the cost be of coming out and saying in a postgame interview that you heard some racial comments during the game and that it needs to stop? Since I’ve been watching the NBA I can’t ever recall a Celtics player saying that a Celtics fan called them a slur during a game. Is that just reserved for opposing players? And again, why is this only being stated by Kyrie and Lebron. Where are all the other players from other teams that had bad experiences playing at the TD Garden.
What might be the cost? How in the world would I know? JT (the victim in the hypothetical) has walked through 24 years of life seeing the world through his own eyes, not mine. I could make up a dozen reasons why a person could decide not to publicly discuss a racial incident, but I'd rather not. Though I'll give you one: maybe the person just wants to deal with it privately. Is it possible for a person's life experience to tell him that making a public announcement about something someone yelled at him could end up not going well? Since we are idly speculating here, what if the last time he told people about something that happened he wasn't believed and was henceforth considered a liar?
We can't pretend we can put ourselves in other peoples shoes. We can only presume they have different shoes and that their decisions make some sense based on paths they've walked.
Getting a little more real, the bottom line is that the fact that Celtics players haven't shared racial incidents in Boston could be because they never happened. It could also be because they've chosen, for their own reasons, not to talk about it.