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Why is Stephen A Smith blaming Renee Good for her own death? | Etan Thomas

about 11 hours ago
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This past weekend there were hundreds of demonstrations across the United States after Renee Good, an American citizen and mother of three, was shot dead by Jonathan Ross, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer, in Minnesota.The anger has permeated throughout the NBA as well.Steve Kerr and Doc Rivers, the head coaches of the Golden State Warriors and Milwaukee Bucks respectively, described Good’s death as “murder”.Kerr also attacked the Trump administration’s attempts to portray Good as a terrorist.“It’s shameful that the government can come out and lie about what happened when there’s video and witnesses who have all come out and disputed what the government is saying,” Kerr said.

Meanwhile, a fan at the Minnesota Timberwolves home game on Thursday yelled “Go Home ICE” during a moment of silence for Good,Many in the crowd responded with cheers,Most rational thinking people, then, seem to be in agreement on the subject,And then there’s Stephen A Smith,The ESPN hot-take machine seemed to align himself with the Trump regime’s assessment of Good’s death.

Here are his exact words.“I saw the video on numerous occasions and seeing what transpired from a lawful perspective as it pertains to a law enforcement official, don’t expect him to be prosecuted.He was completely justified,” Smith said.“From a humanitarian perspective, however, why did you have to do that? If you could move out the way, that means you could have shot the tires.That means you could have got a few feet away after you shot the tires.

And if you were unsuccessful in doing that, you could have got her down the road.“You didn’t have to do that.She wasn’t driving down the road coming at you 90 miles an hour.She was parked in the middle of the street, and rather than get out the car, she wrongfully tried to drive off and wrongfully disregarded a law enforcement official, which is exactly what ICE is, and, as a result, lost her life because of it.”Making the argument that a woman who posed absolutely no immediate threat at the same time deserved to be shot in the face is as disheartening as it is illogical.

Like so many of the Maga crowd, who don’t seem to take as harsh a line on the January 6 rioters who definitely didn’t comply with law enforcement when they stormed the Capitol, Smith’s rhetoric appears to be blaming Good for her own death when he emphasizes she “wrongfully disregarded an order”,Understandably, this brought on a swift condemnation of Smith,Don Lemon called him a “disappointment”, while former ESPN personality Keith Olbermann called for his firing,Veteran broadcaster Soledad O’Brien said that Smith simply does not understand many of the issues he speaks about once he strays from sports,“Stephen A Smith consistently jumps into issues, whether it’s politics or social issues, or in this case a legal issue that looks at how law enforcement is supposed to react, with zero knowledge or expertise and happily weighs in,” she told me.

In response, Smith said his words had been twisted and reported out of context.“I’m talking about legality when I’m talking about justification, nothing else,” Smith said.“Everything else about it is wrong.Morally and ethically wrong.” But he still maintained much of his original position.

“In the moment when you are dealing with law enforcement officials, you obey their orders so you can get home safely,” he said one day later in a lengthy segment designed to clean up his original remarks.“Renee Good did not do that.”The problem is that just because something is a law does not mean that it is just.Yes, law enforcement officials often escape punishment because of qualified immunity.But, as Chuck Modi, my co-host on The Collision: Where Sports And Politics Collide, points out: “If you’re going to make that point, the next thing out of your mouth should be that that is a terrible law.

And he didn’t say that.”If Smith doesn’t condemn the law, the message he is sending is that, in his not so humble opinion, the law is OK.It’s important to remember that every law is not a good law.The Jim Crow laws were legal.Slavery was legal for much of America’s history.

Stating that something is legal, without any further exploration, isn’t enough.Smith is beginning to sound like another media figure he has long attacked: Jason Whitlock.Both have echoed Maga talking points, positioning themselves as the Black faces figures on the right can point to and say, “See, he agrees with us, so we can’t be racist.” It’s why Maga platforms welcome them so readily – they are seen as allies, on their side, the “good ones”.Smith and Whitlock are not unaware of any of this.

“Stephen A Smith has done the math,” O’Brien told me.“This is what you have to say if you want to have the audience that he is trying to build.A rabid audience that will stand by you.And that audience has a financial value.I’m past being disappointed.

”My hope is that one day Smith and Whitlock experience the kind of personal and racial reckoning depicted at the end of Spike Lee’s Bamboozled, when Manray, played by Savion Glover, looks in the mirror and realizes he can no longer wear blackface and tap dance for a white audience that has rewarded him with fame and fortune.That Smith and Whitlock come to see that the gold coins and head pats from Maga hands are no longer worth the cost, and finally hang up their tap shoes for good.But I won’t hold my breath.
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‘It opened my eyes’: Félix Auger-Aliassime on tennis, Togo and his father’s journey

The world No 7 on his teenage trip to west Africa, his fundraising efforts and finding his form ahead of the Australian Openith a smile, Félix Auger-Aliassime says: “Well, imagine you’re 13. I had been to Europe. I had been to America. I live in Canada. And then you go to Togo; it’s a little different, you know?”Auger-Aliassime, the seventh best tennis player in the world, was describing the homecoming he enjoyed 12 years ago as he first caught a glimpse of Togo, the country his father, Sam, was born in and emigrated from to Canada before his son’s birth

about 8 hours ago
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Why is Stephen A Smith blaming Renee Good for her own death? | Etan Thomas

This past weekend there were hundreds of demonstrations across the United States after Renee Good, an American citizen and mother of three, was shot dead by Jonathan Ross, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer, in Minnesota.The anger has permeated throughout the NBA as well. Steve Kerr and Doc Rivers, the head coaches of the Golden State Warriors and Milwaukee Bucks respectively, described Good’s death as “murder”. Kerr also attacked the Trump administration’s attempts to portray Good as a terrorist.“It’s shameful that the government can come out and lie about what happened when there’s video and witnesses who have all come out and disputed what the government is saying,” Kerr said

about 11 hours ago
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The Spin | Nimble or nervous 90s? Cricket maths show best approach to scoring a century

Stats tell us batters have less reason to be anxious in the 90s than common lore suggests, though the pain and fear of falling short is all too realIf you’ve ever been lucky enough to score a century you’ll know how seismic a moment it is when you finally get over the line. Some play the game for a lifetime and never make one, the three-figured kingdom for ever out of reach, a promised land they are destined never to enter. Yet cricket lures you back like a devilish lover. You just can’t quit it. Next time might be your time

about 11 hours ago
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Windrush and the rise of wandering Caribbean cricket clubs that fuelled talent in English game

In the early 1980s there were scores of “Caribbean” cricket clubs playing across England, many of them bearing evocative names such as New Calypsonians, Island Taverners, Paragon, Starlight and Carib United.Mostly these clubs operated under the radar – as wandering sides renting pitches on municipal grounds that were outside the traditional league structures. With few physical records of their existence, their history has been in danger of being lost as numbers have plummeted since the late 1990s.Thankfully, though, there are at least a few people dedicated to documenting the players and personalities who made up such a vibrant part of the domestic game from the late 1940s. And now there’s a new book, Windrush Cricket, by the University College London associate professor of history Michael Collins, setting out their origins and impact

about 14 hours ago
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Emma Raducanu recovers in Hobart to post first win in over three months

Emma Raducanu offered an impressive demonstration of her resilience at the Hobart International as she ­rallied from an overnight second‑set deficit in her rain-delayed first-round match to defeat Camila Osorio of Colombia 6-3, 7-6 (2).The victory marks Raducanu’s first win since September after struggling with a foot injury in the final weeks of the 2025 season. She had contested just one match this season after being sidelined for much of the off‑season, losing in three sets against Maria Sakkari in the United Cup.Considering those recent challenges, this is a positive start for Raducanu. She will next face Taylah Preston, the 20-year-old Australian wildcard, in the quarter-final after Raducanu’s second-round opponent ­Magdalena Frech withdrew from their last-16 match because of injury

about 17 hours ago
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John Higgins and Kyren Wilson win at Masters as curious run of 6-2 scorelines goes on

Kyren Wilson, the 2024 world champion, defeated Si Jiahui in impressive fashion to reach the Masters quarter-finals with the 6-2 result continuing a curious statistic: every match at Alexandra Palace this week had finished with the same scoreline. That record extended in the evening session as John Higgins saw off Barry Hawkins, 6-2, to reach the last eight.After edging the first frame following a run of snookers, Wilson – yet to win a tournament this season having broken his cue at the start of the campaign – looked set to build a maximum in the next, but just missed the 11th red into the bottom corner pocket as he moved 2-0 ahead.Si got on the board with a well-crafted break of 97 before the world No 2, who lost to Shaun Murphy in last year’s Masters final, dug in to re-establish his lead at 3-1 heading into the mid-session interval.Although Si pulled another one back by taking a close fifth frame, Wilson, looking to move on from a disappointing first-round exit to Elliot Slessor at the UK Championship, then took the sixth 82-28 before closing out an impressive victory with successive century breaks of 101 and 105

about 23 hours ago
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UK borrowing costs drop to lowest level in more than a year

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South East Water could lose operating licence after outages in Kent and Sussex

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Elon Musk’s stubborn spin on Grok’s sexualized images controversy

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X ‘acting to comply with UK law’ after outcry over sexualised images

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England’s T20 World Cup plans hit by Adil Rashid and Rehan Ahmed visa delays

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Amateur stuns pros to win One Point Slam and A$1m in boost for Australian Open

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