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Clippers’ Lou Williams knows his role on and off the court

Clippers reserve guard Lou Williams pulls up for a shot against the Lakers.
High-scoring Clippers reserve guard Lou Williams pulls up for a shot against the Lakers.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
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Rising from a chair this week, Clippers coach Doc Rivers offered a parting shot as his video conference with reporters ended and his team’s practice began.

“Vote!” he said into the camera, before ambling out of frame.

For the record:

5:47 p.m. July 27, 2020In an earlier version of this story, Williams said he financially backed the work of Jasmine Crowe and her Atlanta-based company Goodr. In an email, however, the company said it had no record of any financial donation from Williams.

The moment was typical of a league balancing social justice efforts and basketball since teams’ arrival on the Walt Disney World campus near Orlando, Fla., two weeks ago for the restart of the NBA season.

From Denver’s Jerami Grant to the Lakers’ Dwight Howard, players have steered interview sessions toward calls for justice in the deaths of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd. Coaches, including Rivers, are used to fielding questions about police brutality as well as the postseason.

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The approach of Clippers guard Lou Williams, the most outspoken of his teammates in supporting the Black Lives Matter movement, most closely resembles a drill taught to basketball beginners. Rather than shut up and dribble, as Fox News commentator Laura Ingraham once instructed LeBron James, Williams has chosen to dribble forward while keeping his eyes up to stay aware of what is happening around him.

Since Floyd’s death in May, Williams says he has given $25,000 to the bail of peaceful protesters in Atlanta and donated to ATL is Ready, a group of grassroots organizers, students and community organizers.

Live basketball broadcasts will return to Prime Ticket when the Clippers play Orlando in the team’s first scrimmage as it prepares for the NBA restart.

Williams, who grew up in Memphis and moved to the Atlanta area when he was 9, said his interest in such issues was influenced partly by growing up in a state where John Lewis, the longtime civil rights pioneer who died Friday at 80, was a longtime Congressman.

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“I didn’t have an opportunity to meet him, but definitely had an impact on my life, me being from Atlanta, Georgia, me being from the city and understanding the impact that he had,” Williams said. “It’s kind of unfortunate that at 23 years old in his life, he organized the March on Washington, actually spoke there and was a major part in putting that event together, which was obviously a huge historical event, and he passed still fighting the same fight. We have a long way to go ... as far as humanity goes.”

Following Floyd’s death in Minneapolis in late May, Williams was at his house in suburban Atlanta, “feeling stuck.” He said he did not feel comfortable protesting in the streets but wanted to lend his support and was unsure how to do it.

“I wanted to let those people on the front lines know, or the people that were peacefully protesting to know, that I was with them,” Williams said. “I just spoke to my manager, had an idea that I just wanted to put some money towards getting people home as quickly as they could to get back to their families or get back on the streets and continue to fight the fight.

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“I think it’s a job for everybody when it comes to these type of situations, and I felt like that would be mine.”

Clippers center Joakim Noah’s role is on the verge of expanding during the NBA restart when scrimmages begin Wednesday.

In June, Williams considered not joining the Clippers in Orlando out of concern the NBA’s return would overshadow the spotlight turned onto police brutality in the wake of Floyd and Taylor’s deaths. Multiple players felt similarly. In recent days, multiple players have eschewed basketball talk during interviews and redirected answers toward police brutality. Following the Clippers’ scrimmage victory Wednesday against Orlando, star Paul George answered a question about his surgically repaired shoulders by offering condolences to Taylor’s family.

“I think that is what we are here for, to continue to keep that in the back of people’s minds,” George said. “I mean, her murderers are still free so nothing is done yet. And hope to continue, again, keep this fight going and use our platform to stand up for those that can’t stand anymore.”

Williams took basketball questions, as he has since his arrival in Florida, but said he was “proud” to see the NBA painted “Black Lives Matter” prominently across midcourt.

“I’m excited to be a part of a company that feels strongly about their beliefs,” Williams said. “It’s extremely important for ‘Black Lives Matter’ to be on the floor. I’m just glad that we are part of it. I hope people understand the message that we are trying to get across. We are fighting for equality and we are just going to continue to build.”

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