The Slave Side of Sunday

Don Wassall

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Here's a former player who thinks black NFL employees are no better than slaves.

[url]http://news.yahoo.com/s/thenation/20060120/cm_thenation/2006 0206zirin_1[/url]

Dave Zirin
Fri Jan 20, 3:40 PM ET

The Nation -- For most sports fans, heaven would be to play in the National Football League. We see money, fame and no expectations of social responsibility beyond showing up on Sunday ready to play. In the mind of the fantasy sports fan, it means a big house, a garage full of cars and the promise of sexual gratification. The last thing any fan would believe--or want to believe--is that racism is endemic to the culture of the NFL.

That's the contention of NFL veteran Anthony Prior, whose new book, The Slave Side of Sunday, invokes an explosive metaphor to describe life in the NFL. Prior played six NFL seasons with the New York Jets, the Oakland Raiders and the Minnesota Vikings, and developed a reputation as a cornerback with blinding speed, if not blinding stats.

Prior contends that the NFL is rife with a racism that is both deeply institutionalized and largely unchallenged. "I was frustrated by not seeing the truth in print," Prior told me in a recent interview. "And I believe that if you want to see it, you should write it."

Prior is a self-published author. In addition to The Slave Side of Sunday, his publishing house, Stone Hold Books, produced Faith on 40 Yards: Behind the Silver & Gold of the NFL in 2003. The starting point for his new book is the much-derided 2003 statement by Tampa Bay all-pro defensive tackle Warren Sapp that the NFL acts as a "slavemaster" to its players. Sapp was pilloried for his comments, but Prior argues that there is a lot more truth to Sapp's statements than meets the eye.

Prior knows that, like Sapp, he will receive criticism for his statements. And on the face of it, his argument does seem ridiculous, if not offensive: How can people who make mega-salaries and play before adoring crowds be likened to slaves? Prior's response is that the answer lies in the lack of control NFL players are allowed to have in their daily lives and in the mega-industry they have helped create. He sees this lack of control being intimately tied with a dynamic where 65 percent of the players are African-American, yet only 18 percent of coaches, 6 percent of general managers and no owners are anything other than white.

"Black players have created a billion-dollar market but have no voice in the industry, no power. That sounds an awful lot like slavery to me," he says. "On plantations slaves were respected for their physical skills but were given no respect as thinking beings. On the football field, we are treated as what appears like gods, but in fact this is just the 'show and tell' of the management for their spectators. In reality, what is transpiring is that black athletes are being treated with disrespect and degradation. As soon as we take off that uniform, behind the dressing room doors, we are less than human. We are bought and sold. Traded and drafted, like our ancestors, and the public views this as a sport, ironically the same attitude as people had in the slavery era."

Prior names no names, but he contends that coaches and other authority figures in the game use racism to bully African-American players in an effort to instill obedience. "I've heard coaches call players 'boy,' 'porch monkeys,' 'sambos,' " he says. "Players don't get tested on their athleticism as much as they get tested on their manhood. Many players rail against this. They say, 'I'm being treated like a goddamn slave.' However, as soon as the coach is present, their life becomes doing whatever possible to please this man.

"The intimidation is immense...I've seen players benched because a coach saw them with a white woman, or overheard a criticism of his incompetence, or because a player didn't go to Bible study. I've been in film sessions where coaches would try to get a rise out of players by calling them 'boy' or 'Jemima,' and players are so conditioned to not jeopardize their place, they just take it. It's my understanding that management by intimidation is illegal, so why do we allow this to occur? I believe that due to the nature of the race of players who are being intimidated, people tend to overlook this. That is why I wrote this book. People must understand that this is not just intimidation, this is pure racism."

Prior says Southern-born athletes are particularly vulnerable. "Southern Black players call the coach 'boss' or even 'master.' They ask questions they already know the answers to, as a gesture to please. They let themselves be abused in all manner to keep their jobs. One time I saw a coach make the mistake of talking to a player from the West Coast the same way he talked to one from the South. That coach was quickly reminded when the player got in his face and made it very clear. 'I am a man and you will respect me as a man.' Words to live by."

Another institution that raises Prior's ire is Athletes in Action, an evangelical Christian group that is a presence in high school, college athletics and even the professional sports. Before the big game on Super Bowl Sunday, Athletes in Action is sponsoring an NFL-sanctioned prayer breakfast in Detroit.

"I call [them] Hypocrites in Action. Almost every time, the minister is white, and the subject matter is right off the plantation," Prior says. "One time I went over to the Bible study and asked, 'What's the subject matter?' I was told, 'Living in Obedience.' I just said, 'No thank you, I don't want to be brainwashed today.' On some teams, prayer becomes obligation, and God and Jesus become little more than a lucky rabbit's foot. Unfortunately, religion is used as a crutch to prey upon players who intend to be true to their faith but end up being slaves to it. This is a wrongfully instilled practice. I wouldn't have issue with this if the tools given were truly in good nature for the progression of mankind, not the regression of players."

Neither the NFL nor Athletes in Action returned calls for comment on Prior's allegations.

Prior says he has written the book as a way to advance the idea that African-American players can organize themselves to fight racism beyond the playing field. "As individuals we must create a collective. NFL's black players have a tremendous strength. This is a power we are scared to exercise yet dream to live." He believes that a workplace action on the eve of the Super Bowl could bring real change. Certainly, the thought of football players holding the multibillion-dollar spectacle hostage and making demands on the NFL ownership to give more back to the impoverished communities that produce their all-pros is a daring notion. The question is whether Prior and those who agree with him would risk the fruits of Super Bowl glory for the greater good of those who will never see an NFL contract.
 

Colonel_Reb

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Although I don't agree with much of this, I know that many black players think this. I know a researcher who has done studies on the NFL combine medical exams, practices, and tests and received similar remarks when surveying players. Whites had a different view of it than blacks, although they all thought the process was humiliating.
 

bigunreal

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What a joke. Some slavery. Please enslave me like that! Force me to
"work" barely half the year. Force me to fight off endless numbers of
super-model wannabes. Force me to deal with endless numbers of adoring
men, women and children salivating for my autograph. Force me to accept
more money than 99% of my fellow Americans make. Force me to live out
the childhood dream of almost every little boy.

Just to let you know what a great deal these unappreciative clowns
have, I want to cite a personal anecdote. Virgil Seay was a WR with the
Redskins back in the early '80s, and was part of the "Fun Bunch" in two
Super Bowls. He was basically the 4th receiver on the team, didn't do
much in a brief career, and is barely remembered today. His daughter
went to school with my son and was in a couple of his classes. I was
talking with his wife during a field trip a few years ago, and I asked
about his pension. She was very honest, and told me that luckily,
because he was on the Falcons roster for two games one season, he was
fully vested and that "he doesn't have to work." Think of that; this
guy was a real nobody who played for five seasons (might have been
four), did nothing to distinguish himself at all, and because he was a
professional athlete, he could have retired from the workforce before
the age of 30! This guy lives in the same county as I do (one of
the richest counties in the United States), and all he does for a
living is coach the wide receivers at a local high school. He's just
making some small change for fun, doing what he loves to do, yet he can
maintain a high standard of living in a great area because of his
unparalleled pension. The idiot who "wrote" this book is benefiting
from the same lucrative pension. What's most amazing of all is the
white jock-sniffers who lend credibility to this ridiculous stuff.
 

SteveB

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Unfortunately, Mr. Prior doesn't understand the real world. Under his definition, everyone who has a job is a "slave" because they have to answer to a boss. Everyone has to be accountable for results if they want to get paid. I am self-employed, yet I still have to answer to my customers if want to get any business.

The NFL invests big money in these guys, so it is understandable that they want some control over them. He acts like the player doesn't have a choice in the matter. They can always find another line of employment. He also brings up the NFL investing in the black community. I would ask Mr. Prior how much of his salary he gave back to his community?
 

speedster

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The difference these days is that if you don't like your situation then you can always walk away.
 
G

Guest

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If black players dont like our money than i would gladly like to see them out of the sport so just as deserving white athletes would get a shot to produce an equal product on the field.
 

jaxvid

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Southern players call the coach "boss" or "master"?

No freakin'way. That has got to be pure BS. This guy is just writing crap to sell a book. I don't believe any of it.
 

Freedom

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This could actually explain anti-white discrimination. If a coach
thought that blacks were like animals, then he would not play whites,
as you wouldn't enter a human in a horse race.



Marge Schott(Cincinatti Reds owner a while back) was very racist
against blacks, yet also pro-Caste System and anti-white athletes by
playing guys because they were "million dollar n*****".
 

Freedom

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Well, she wasn't very racist, but held similiar
prejudices at least judging by the general perception of her and her
statements. She was definitely anti-white athlete. Look how
she treated Pete Rose.
 

Don Wassall

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jaxvid said:
Southern players call the coach "boss" or "master"?

No freakin'way. That has got to be pure BS. This guy is just writing crap to sell a book. I don't believe any of it.

I agree. It's total b.s. None of what he writes about the employee/employer relationship rings true. All one has to do is watch games to see how often black players are yelling at coaches and worse. I've yet to see a white coach do anything except humiliate himself by putting up with it. Most likely it's a lot worse off camera. White coaches tread far more delicately around black players than white ones and it's been that way for a long time. Roy Blount wrote about it in "Three Bricks Shy of a Load," about the Steelers 1973 season. You can bet it's gotten a lot worse since with the advent of black domination of the league through the Caste System and coaches being physically attacked on a semi-regular basis. What Pryor writes is ludicrous.

Black claims are seldom subjected to scrutiny, as they have been given a status that everything they say, no matter how absurd, when it comes to alleged mistreatment at the hands of whites is treated as gospel truth. Journalistic standards, weak as they are anyway in the corporate media, aren't applied at all when it comes to white bashing, the system's favorite sport.Edited by: Don Wassall
 

Bronk

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The word slavery is sort of wrong. The proper term would be "gladiatorial."

Blacks didn't invent football or create the NFL and Americans would love football if there wasn't a single black in it (might even like it more). Yet they want some say into the operations of the NFL? I can think of no better way to screw up pro football than to let blacks run the show. They can't even run their own lives, how do they expect to run a complicated billion dollar business like the NFL.

Don't get me wrong, I already hate the NFL for the hyper-capitalistic, fan-be-damned attitude, so the idea of letting a bunch of backward ghetto tripe take it over and grind the machine to a halt is appealing to me.
 

Colonel_Reb

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Bronk said:
They can't even run their own lives, how do they expect to run a complicated billion dollar business like the NFL.QUOTE]

Reminds me of a 1972 song by Jonathan Edwards, Sunshine Go Away Today.

"He can't even run his own life, I'll be dam
smiley35.gif
ed if he'll run mine!"Edited by: Colonel_Reb
 

jaxvid

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Colonel_Reb said:
"He can't even run his own life, I'll be damned if he'll run mine!"

I'll thank you not to use the word "damned"!
smiley2.gif
 

Colonel_Reb

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I thought quoted cursing was acceptable?
smiley36.gif
 
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