Charles Barkley calls out NBA’s Jewish commissioner for not disciplining Kyrie Irving over antisemitism controversy
Sports pundits are turning up the heat on the NBA and the controversial star player, calling out the Brooklyn Nets for a lack of disciplinary action
(JTA) — Former NBA star Charles Barkley slammed NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, who is Jewish, for not suspending Brooklyn Nets All-Star Kyrie Irving after he promoted an antisemitic film on his Twitter account.
“I think Adam should have suspended him. First of all, Adam’s Jewish. You can’t take my $40 million and insult my religion,” Barkley said, referencing Irving’s contract, during a Tuesday night segment of the popular “NBA on TNT” panels that airs on the network before, during and after game broadcasts.
The NBA has “suspended people and fined people who have made homophobic slurs, and that was the right thing to do,” Barkley added. “If you insult the Black community, you should be suspended or fined heavily.”
Fellow former star Shaquille O’Neal, also a longtime member of the TNT panel, called Irving “an idiot” for sharing a link to a film that promotes the idea that Jews dominated the slave trade, among other antisemitic conspiracy theories.
Barkley — who has called out antisemitism from Black athletes in the past and has a Jewish son-in-law — was the latest to join a chorus of increasingly sharp criticism aimed at Irving, the Nets and the NBA over the situation. Irving, who doubled down on his right to share a link to the film but later deleted his tweet, has not been disciplined; the Nets’ general manager said Tuesday that the team is in discussions with the Anti-Defamation League about next steps.
Nike, Irving’s biggest sponsor, said in a statement that the company condemns all forms of hate speech.
Several prominent sports writers and commentators have begun arguing that the Nets’ reaction time on the Irving saga has been too slow. NBA reporter Brian Windhorst devoted an episode of his podcast to the controversy, calling the Nets’ reaction “feckless.”
Rich Eisen, an NFL Network host who is Jewish, got emotional in criticizing Irving in a podcast episode on Monday.
“You’re dehumanizing me, Kyrie — I’m a Jewish man, OK?” Eisen said, referring to Irving’s claim that a reporter at a press conference was “dehumanizing” him with a question about the tweet. “Descendant of people who died in gas chambers and got incinerated by Nazis…. [I]t’s not funny.”
"I know what anti-Semitic tropes look like, what they sound like and what they feel like."@richeisen on the dangerous behavior of @KyrieIrving:#NBA #NBATwitter pic.twitter.com/N70dM8Gbg1
— Rich Eisen Show (@RichEisenShow) October 31, 2022
Eisen also noted that the words “Kanye was right about the Jews” appeared on antisemitic banners being hung over highways in recent days and were projected onto a college football stadium. He called those incidents “really scary.”
Nets head coach Steve Nash was fired on Tuesday, ostensibly for the team’s poor 2-6 record to start the season. The team is close to hiring Ume Udoka, the former Boston Celtics head coach who was suspended by the team for an improper relationship with a subordinate.
Amar’e Stoudemire, the former NBA star and former Nets coach who converted to Judaism in 2020, pushed for Irving to have “intensive conversations with the commissioner about what he’s doing and what his plans are as a basketball player.”
This article originally appeared on JTA.org.
A message from our Publisher & CEO Rachel Fishman Feddersen
I hope you appreciated this article. Before you go, I’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s award-winning, nonprofit journalism during this critical time.
We’ve set a goal to raise $260,000 by December 31. That’s an ambitious goal, but one that will give us the resources we need to invest in the high quality news, opinion, analysis and cultural coverage that isn’t available anywhere else.
If you feel inspired to make an impact, now is the time to give something back. Join us as a member at your most generous level.
— Rachel Fishman Feddersen, Publisher and CEO