The eroticized aggressionGolden State Warriors are NBA champions for the second time in three years, but this go-round comes with a dramatic little coda that has yet to be decided.
It boils down to this: Championship sports teams typically visit the White House for some celebratory time with the President, but Warriors coach Steve Kerr and star Steph Curry have not been shy about criticizing Donald Trump's time in the Oval Office. Moreover, this fits with an NBA-wide sentiment that is vehemently anti-Trump.
So will or won't the Warriors visit the White House?
SEE ALSO: Respite for tortured fans: The Warriors' hellish road to that NBA titleYou may have seen this very question dominating your Twitter feed Tuesday morning. As often happens when the pack mentality gloms onto a particularly buzzy story, there was some sketchy reporting out there.
We'll get to the real state of affairs in a minute, but these two tweets pretty well encapsulate the phenomenon of Twitter users taking a shaky story and absolutely running with it.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
If you're scoring at home, that's 24,000 retweets for the original tweet of purported news, but literally one retweet for the subsequent admission that it was simply an anonymous lifting of stuff other people said.
Anyway. Good ol' Twitter, the global town square.
The Warriors released a statement Tuesday morning to set the record straight:
“Today is all about celebrating our championship. We have not received an invitation to the White House, but will make those decisions when and if necessary.”
So, no. The Warriors haven't declined any invitations to the White House -- because they haven't even been invitedto the White House.
But it's hard to imagine Trump doing so.
Kerr has taken several digs at the Trump administration's penchant for incendiary rhetoric and aversion to facts. But his criticism of Trump's sought-after ban on immigrants from many Muslim countries in January was especially poignant.
"If we're trying to combat terrorism by banishing people from coming to this country, by really going against the principles of what our country is about and creating fear, it's the wrong way to go about it," Kerr said. "If anything, we could be breeding anger and terror, so I'm completely against what's happening. It's shocking and it's a horrible idea."
Kerr speaks from a place of personal experience: His father, a professor and president of the American University of Beirut, was shot to death by an Islamic extremist group when Kerr was a freshman in college.
Curry was more succinct in his criticism of Trump the following month. Other prominent figures across the NBA have not been shy about criticizing Trump either, which only served to further heighten uncertainty about whether pro basketball's champs would visit the White House whether or not the Warriors or another team ended up winning the title.
But Trump did receive another championship team at the White House in April.
Trump rebuffed one presidential sporting tradition when he declined to throw out the first pitch at a Washington Nationals game in March, but the following month he hosted a visit by the Super Bowl-winning New England Patriots.
Several Patriots players said they wouldn't attend due to politics, and a viral photo seemed to show an embarrassingly tiny turnout. That story ended up having more to it, but there are some reasons why a White House visit by the Patriots is a much different proposition than a visit by the Warriors.
Remember during the presidential campaign when Tom Brady coyly had a "Make America Great Again" cap in his locker? Trump also claimed during the campaign that Patriots coach Bill Belichick had written him an endorsement letter. Team owner Robert Kraft is also a friend of Trump's.
That's a much different dynamic than what exists between the Warriors team and current presidential administration -- so don't hold your breath for a White House visit from the NBA champs, even if Tuesday morning's reports jumped the gun by a lot.
Additional reporting by Marcus Gilmer.
Topics Donald Trump
Sliding into Patricia Lockwood’s DMsThe B Side of War: An Interview with Agustín Fernández Mallo by Jorge CarriónOn Sports Time by Matt LevinStaff Picks: Maps, Marvels, and Madmen – The Paris ReviewMemoir of a Born Polemicist by Vivian GornickStopping the VoidStaff Picks: Boulders, Brushstrokes, and Bud Smith by The Paris ReviewThe Tarot Is a Chameleon by Rhian SasseenIsn’t That So by Friederike MayröckerCavafy’s Bed by André AcimanThe Lioness of the Hippodrome by Susanna ForrestWhiting Awards 2021: Sarah Stewart Johnson, NonfictionThe Lioness of the Hippodrome by Susanna ForrestThe ResistanceThe Art of an Even KeelOn Sports Time by Matt LevinWhat Our Contributors Are Reading and Watching This Winter by The Paris ReviewUntitled, No Date by The Paris ReviewWhiting Awards 2021: Steven Dunn, FictionRedux: Pulling Away the Greenery by The Paris Review When to buy a laptop: Best times to buy a new PC Best coffee maker deals from Amazon's Big Spring Sale Books, movies, and music are buy 2 get 1 free during Target Circle Week Mac Mini M2 Desktop deal: Save $100 at Best Buy Anthropic’s AI agent Claude is playing Pokémon and just can’t catch ‘em all Amazon Spring Sale 2025: Best cordless power tool deals Amazon Big Spring Sale 2025: Best Fire TV Stick 4K Max deal Amazon Spring Sale 2025: Best Kindle Scribe deal Texas bill calls for age Amazon Big Spring Sale 2025: Best Amazon Spring Sale 2025: Best Apple AirPods 4 deal Amazon Spring Sale 2025: Best Apple Watch SE deal NYT Strands hints, answers for March 26 Best robot vacuum deal: Save $340 on the roborock Qrevo S Robot Vacuum Best Amazon Spring Sale outdoor deal: Get the Tiki Smokeless Patio Fire Pit for 50% off My favorite kitchen appliance is on sale during Amazon's Big Spring Sale The government’s Signal leak is a national security nightmare, but the memes are great Today's Hurdle hints and answers for March 25, 2025 NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for March 26: Tips to solve Connections #184 NYT Strands hints, answers for March 25
3.0886s , 10197.203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticized aggression】,Fresh Information Network