NBA legend Oscar Robertson asks 'where are the white athletes?' when injustices are happening
Oscar "The Big O" Robertson poses in
the press room with the lifetime achievement award at the NBA Awards.
(Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)
NBA legend Oscar Robertson received
the Lifetime Achievement Award on Monday night during the NBA Awards
show in California and used his platform to praise players for their
social activism.
Robertson, 79, said he was happy to
see LeBron James and other NBA stars take a stance on societal issues
and called on white athletes to follow in their footsteps, according to
ESPN.
“I think that as people evolve, and things are changing so much
in the world with social media and whatnot, these people are young
people who have families," Robertson said. "They've seen some injustice
in the streets or wherever it might be, it might be almost anywhere, and
they're stepping up. But the only thing that really bothers me is
‘where are the white athletes’ when this is happening?”
Robertson added that injustices in the world weren’t
just a “black athlete problem” and that there appears to be a “system
where you don’t want players to say anything at all.”
Robertson, a 12-time All-Star point guard and former
MVP, grew up in a segregated housing project in Indianapolis. He said
during his playing time players couldn’t speak out like they could now.
“But now I hope they all, the whites and the blacks get
together. Even with the football. What do you think is going to happen
when the union gets involved with the owners?” he