Since TMZ posted audio on Friday that allegedly reveals Los Angeles Clippers team owner Donald Sterling making a series of racially-charged remarks, current and former NBA athletes have spoken out to condemn Sterling.
In an interview with Hardball on Monday night, former NBA player and Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar said that Sterling’s remarks have “no place” in America or in the NBA. “The NBA has done a great job in trying to affect change,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “I played for the Milwaukee Bucks as a rookie, and they were the first NBA team to hire a black GM [general manager], someone in the front office that had power and responsibilities. Throughout my whole career at the NBA, they kept opening up doors. That’s been the history of the NBA, and sports in general has been a great opportunity for people to step forward and make change.”
He added, “I think of Jesse Owens at the 1936 Olympics, I think of Jackie Robinson integrating baseball, and now we have this ugly, horrible thing that Mr. Sterling has said about any number of minority people. There’s just no place for this in the NBA.”
Abdul-Jabbar also released a statement on Monday:








