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Bradley accuses Kent of racism, lack of leadership

OSUBasketballJunkie

Never Forget 31-0
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Milton Bradley and Jeff Kent are still at odds. Los Angeles Dodgers manager Jim Tracy and general manager Paul DePodesta wish they weren't -- especially now that Bradley has injected race into the equation.

Bradley accused Kent of a lack of leadership and an inability to deal with black players in a 15-minute session with reporters at his locker before Tuesday night's 8-3 victory over the Colorado Rockies.
The remarks came only a couple of minutes after he said that the feud between the two that became public last weekend in Florida was a ``dead issue.''

``The problem is, he doesn't know how to deal with African-American people,'' Bradley said. ``I think that's what's causing everything. It's a pattern of things that have been said -- things said off the cuff that I don't interpret as funny. It may be funny to him, but it's not funny to Milton Bradley. But I don't take offense to that because we all joke about race in here. Race is an issue with everything we do in here.


``Me being an African-American is the most important thing to me -- more important than baseball,'' said the 27-year-old center fielder, whose voice never went beyond his normal speaking level. ``White people never want to see race -- with anything. But there's race involved in baseball. That's why there's less than 9 percent African-American representation in the game. I'm one of the few African-Americans that starts here.''

Bradley did not like what Kent said to him after he failed to score from first base on a double in Saturday's victory over the Florida Marlins. Bradley initiated a 25-minute closed-door meeting with Tracy after that game.

``I was told in spring training I was the team leader -- by Paul DePodesta. By Jim Tracy. By (team owner) Frank McCourt,'' Bradley said. ``Growing up in L.A., I know how to deal with all types of people, and I do it on an everyday basis. But some people don't deal with all different types of people every day, and therefore don't know how to handle situations when they arise.''

DePodesta issued a statement after Tuesday's game, saying: ``Everyone at the Los Angeles Dodgers is committed to winning. It has been a frustrating season for all of us and our fans, as we have dealt with plenty of adversity.

``We have a talented team of passionate players who take their performance -- as well as the team's performance -- personally. Under the circumstances, it is not unusual for players' emotions to run high. However, if and when any issue arises that runs contrary to the goals and values of the organization, there should be no question that we address it.''

Kent hadn't yet arrived at his locker when Bradley began his criticism of him, but Bradley accused the media of coming to his locker first Tuesday because of who he is, and the baggage that follows him around -- including the anger management classes the Dodgers required Bradley to take after several outbursts last season.

``At no time am I going to let somebody question my hustle, my injury or question my motivation for playing,'' Bradley said. ``I watch him on the field, and I follow in his footsteps and the things he does on the field. As far as off the field, he has no clue about leadership.

``If you're going to be the leader of the team, then you need to mingle with the team and associate with the team. I mean, you can't have your locker in the corner, put your headphones on and sit in the corner reading a motocross magazine. He's in his own world. Everybody else is in this world.''

Bradley, who tweaked his sore left knee while trying to beat out a double play grounder in Monday's loss at Florida, was a late scratch Tuesday because of irritation in the patella tendon.

Kent, a former NL MVP who feuded with Barry Bonds in San Francisco, defended himself following Bradley's accusations.

``He can go ahead and say those types of things, and it comes from an incident that he still doesn't get. And that's a shame,'' Kent said. ``If you think that I've got a problem with African-Americans, then go talk to Dusty Baker. Go talk to Dave Winfield, who took me under his wing. Go talk to Joe Carter -- all the guys that I idolized in this game and all the veteran players who taught me how to play this game. ``That's a shame, and I take offense to that. That's just absolutely pathetic if it comes from his mouth. I will not get into this anymore, and that's all I've got to say.''
 
So now Kents pissed off Barry Bonds and Milton Bradley. I have always thought Kent was a dick, but based on that I might start to warm up to the guy.


On to some of the more comical highlights of this article for me;

``The problem is, he doesn't know how to deal with African-American people,'' Bradley said. ``I think that's what's causing everything. It's a pattern of things that have been said -- things said off the cuff that I don't interpret as funny. It may be funny to him, but it's not funny to Milton Bradley. But I don't take offense to that because we all joke about race in here. Race is an issue with everything we do in here.
-Head case athlete referring to himself in 3rd person will always be funny to Jaxbuck.
-So the problem is race but you don't take offense to that because you are all joking about race all the time? :confused:


"That's why there's less than 9 percent African-American representation in the game. I'm one of the few African-Americans that starts here.''
That may or may not be an accurate figure but if he thinks baseball is an all white sport then he's even dumber than I thought. Unless of course his dumbass thinks Latins and Japanees people count as white.

Bradley did not like what Kent said to him after he failed to score from first base on a double in Saturday's victory over the Florida Marlins. Bradley initiated a 25-minute closed-door meeting with Tracy after that game.
Now we are to the crux of the problem. This prima donna nut job couldn't score from first base on a double and got called out for it so with no where else to go pulls out the race card. What a tool.

Like I said before, I have never been a fan of Kent the person but anyone who gets into a fight with Bonds and has Bradley crying like a little bitch, can't be all bad.
 
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-Head case athlete referring to himself in 3rd person will always be funny to Jaxbuck.

High Lonesome likes the third person too, High Lonesome also really like to eat Cheetos. High Lonesomes best friend is Joe Horn.

-So the problem is race but you don't take offense to that because you are all joking about race all the time?

white people can't joke about race unless they are friends with the butt of the joke, even then it is a fine line.



Jeff Kent is one of my favorite Major Leaguers
 
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Jaxbuck said:
Like I said before, I have never been a fan of Kent the person but anyone who gets into a fight with Bonds and has Bradley crying like a little bitch, can't be all bad.
I absolutely agree. Kent plays hard every day and he's clutch. He's everything you want in a ballplayer, unlike Bradley who is nothing but a head case.
 
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The stache makes the man

kent1018.jpg



Thanks for the memories
 
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Re: "The problem is, he (Kent) doesn't know how to deal with African-American people,'' Bradley said. "I think that's what's causing everything."

I think Bradley should worry more about his personnal problems, like how to treat his pregnant wife:

Redondo Beach police responded to domestic violence reports at the home of Milton Bradley three times in a 33-day period this summer, including an instance in which the Dodger outfielder allegedly choked his pregnant wife and injured her lip, authorities said Tuesday. The Bradleys were neither arrested nor charged with a crime in connection with any of the police visits, and in a statement Tuesday Bradley called a report of the incidents "exaggerated."
-- Los Angeles Times
 
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The whole problem is that Milton Bradley's ego is huge and he feels he can argue with anyone and that he is better than anyone, I'm not saying Kent's the greatest guy, but I can see why someone would be pissed at Milton Bradley, I mean I can see why the Indians traded him :biggrin:
 
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Anyone catch Bradley's comment in SI? I don't have it in front of me, but basically when talking about his potential legacy: "I want people to think I was a pretty good ballplayer, and a pretty good person. Anyone getting in the way of that needs to be eliminated.":slappy:

So if anyone doesn't think Bucklion is a nice guy, Bucklion is going to wipe them out :slappy:
 
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Another viewpoint:

Hey Jeff, Listen Up!
By Scoop Jackson

Dear Mr. Kent,

Love your game, big fan. Heard that you had a little issue with Milton Bradley the other day. Heard he said some "not so friendly" things about you. Those things happen from time to time, ya know. If I were you, I wouldn't sweat that. Teammates are like family -- you can't choose 'em.
I also heard that you can't deal with black people. I'm sorry … African-American is what was said. Now Jeff, since I'm a fan and I want to see you continue to ball at an All-Star-like level, I'm going to pass along some advice on how to deal with us, since, you know, I've been black for a long time.
The first thing you gotta understand is that sometimes we be trippin'. Now I'm not saying that Milt was wrong, I'm just telling you that we black people tend to "bug out" or "snap" at times. No reason, no excuses. Our women do it more than the men. But somehow we give them reason, they say. But that's a whole 'nother story. Anyway, get used to the "snappin'" -- that's just us.
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width=5 rowSpan=2><SPACER height="1" type="block" width="5"></TD><TD width=275>
i_bondskent_hi.gif
</TD></TR><TR><TD style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 3px; LINE-HEIGHT: 13px" width=275>[FONT=verdana, arial, geneva]Kent wasn't exactly best friends with Barry Bonds back in his Giants days.[/FONT]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Look, cousin (not that we're related, that's just the way black folks talk to one another sometimes), I know you saw "White Men Can't Jump." Remember the scene where Woody was telling Wesley that "black people would rather look good" than get dirty on the court. Well, that's true. That's how we are.
Now don't get it twizzled; we hustle as hard as the next non-black ballplayer. But it looks different. A lot of times, because of the way we do things -- because we try to look smoove at all times -- it comes off that we don't hustle enough; that we're not giving it our all. It's quite the opposite, my man.
So when you make comments to other ballplayers, especially teammates, that question their intensity on the field, that question their "hustle," it inherently takes us back to the old mentality that people used on us. We call it the gym rat theory. It insinuates that blacks are more naturally gifted athletes and the game comes easier to us, and because of that "theory" we don't practice as hard, we don't have to put in the same amount of hours, we don't have to do as much work.
It pisses us off, Jeff.
And I'm not saying that you said that, I'm just telling you that black athletes have had to deal with that forever, since sports began. They said it about Joe Louis in relation to Rocky Marciano, they said it about Willie Mays in relation to Joe DiMaggio, they said it about Oscar Robertson in relation to Jerry West, Magic to Bird, they're saying it about Serena Williams in relation to Lindsay Davenport.
"Naturally gifted" to us Jeff … man, that's code for: We don't have to work as hard at the game as you all because of our inbred talent. So whenever someone comes close to saying or just insinuating it -- even when they don't mean it that way -- it sets us off. Literally.
So Jeff, in the future, remember we're really sensitive about that. Probably oversensitive. Blame history. See, there's a difference in us and y'all. You all say yams, we say sweet potatoes. Y'all got Nick and Jessica, we got Bobby and Whitney. When someone says "Name a classic movie," you all say "Animal House," we say "Cooley High." When someone says Calvin, you all think Klein, we think the kid from the McDonald's commercia
We just different, yo.

Now, the only reason I'm writing you is because this is the second time this has happened. Back in San Fran in what, 2002, you had drama with Barry Bonds. Remember that? Yeah, that was crazy. You two, two of the best players in the game on the same team, acting like Shaq and Kob before Shaq and Kob.
In hindsight, it was cool … like Shaq and Kob. Makes for good baseball, better print. Teammates ain't gotta be best friends and all to get things done. I mean, if teams are supposed to be like family, that's just how fam actually is sometimes. You and BB kept it real.
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width=5 rowSpan=2><SPACER height="1" type="block" width="5"></TD><TD width=195>
050826_kent_195.jpg
</TD></TR><TR><TD style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 3px; LINE-HEIGHT: 13px" width=195>[FONT=verdana, arial, geneva]Seems like Kent's always involved in some controversy.[/FONT]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>But that don't count, 'cause Barry ain't really one of us.
But now an issue with another "brotha" pops up. I'm not saying I see a trend, but …
Jeff, you've been in the league too long to not know how to deal with us. I mean, I know there's a color issue in baseball, I know there aren't many of us, but man, I know over the years there has been enough time for you to learn how to tolerate us or figure us out.
I mean, I've heard people call you a loner. They say that you don't get along with anyone, that it's not racial with you -- it's neutral. That you're just a down-home country kinda fella and it's you that we don't know how to deal with.
Cool. That's fair.
But when you start naming all of your black friends ("If he thinks I have a problem with African-Americans, then go talk to Dusty Baker, Dave Winfield who took me under his wing, Joe Carter and all the guys I idolized in this game and all the veteran players who taught me how to play this game."), it kinda validates Bradley's point.
No one ever claimed that you couldn't get along with us, no one even said that you didn't or couldn't learn to like or even love some of us. That's not the point. The point being made by your teammate is that you can't "deal" with us. Meaning, you don't understand us.
When Bradley says it's "a pattern of things" that you've said, when he says they are things he didn't "interpret" as funny, it lends itself to making us think that in the clubhouse -- and maybe outside of the clubhouse -- there isn't a certain degree of "consideration" for who we are and how we act.
And I know Milton is closer to an L.A. Angel than a real one, but don't totally ignore his claim.
And I know, like me, you'd hate for him to be right.
I don't want you to come out of this as the new Fuzzy Zoeller. Feel me? I don't want you to be the new white poster child for the "fried chicken and watermelon" circuit. Leave that for John Rocker's kid.
So remember what I said earlier; trust me, it'll help you until the Dodgers start winning. Black folks, we snap off; black folks, we sensitive. And almost everything said and done with or about us has a history behind it that we have yet to outlive.
Plus, if you can't do it in L.A., how is Jeff Francoeur going to learn to do it a Braves uniform? Do you know how many black folks are in Atlanta?

And that's all I'm tryna do by writing you. Just to let you know that even though whatever you said may not have been of ill intent, or maybe your words were simply misunderstood, you don't deserve the label that's not far from being put on you.
Because not being able to deal with black people doesn't make you a racist, it just makes you human.
One love,
Your new black friend,
Scoop
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=jackson/050826
 
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