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The Jerusalem Post

US sports teams and athletes demonstrate unprecedented support for Israel amid war

 
 ISRAELI-AMERICAN PITCHER Dean Kremer made his first career playoff start for the Baltimore Orioles on Tuesday while thinking about family members in Israel.  (photo credit: Gregory Fisher/USA Today Sports)
ISRAELI-AMERICAN PITCHER Dean Kremer made his first career playoff start for the Baltimore Orioles on Tuesday while thinking about family members in Israel.
(photo credit: Gregory Fisher/USA Today Sports)

Athletes and sports teams across the United States have shown support to Israel as it reels from Hamas attacks and an ongoing war.

In an unprecedented show of support for Israel, a number of professional athletes and sports teams issued statements about Hamas’s invasion of the country and the ensuing ongoing war.

“The NBA and [the NBA Players’ Association] mourn the horrific loss of life in Israel and condemn these acts of terrorism,” the NBA posted on X, the social media platform previously known as Twitter. The league’s commissioner, Adam Silver, is Jewish. “We stand with the people of Israel and pray for peace for the entire region.”

Numerous NBA teams then reposted the league’s message. The Washington Wizards, the team of the NBA’s lone Israeli player, Deni Avdija, posted that they “stand with the people of Israel.” Avdija himself posted a lengthy statement on Instagram, writing that he personally knows some of the victims and that “while I’m here playing ball, my thoughts are constantly pulled back to Israel.”

NBA star Kyle Kuzma, Avdija’s teammate on the Wizards, posted, “Israel - just terrible stuff happening right now and my prayers with them!!”

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 ISRAELI NBA player Deni Avdija lights the torch at the opening of the JCC Maccabi Games in Israel on Sunday night (credit: CHEN OFIR/COURTESY)
ISRAELI NBA player Deni Avdija lights the torch at the opening of the JCC Maccabi Games in Israel on Sunday night (credit: CHEN OFIR/COURTESY)

The MLB posted a statement on Monday afternoon, writing on X that the league is “horrified by the acts of terrorism committed against the people of Israel” and is “heartbroken for the people of Israel.”

Baltimore Orioles Israeli pitcher Dean Kremer, who was born in California to Israeli parents and has played for Team Israel in international tournaments, shared the MLB’s message on Instagram with a Hebrew note saying, “There are no words. My heart just got ripped to shreds.”

Kremer is likely to start the Orioles’ playoff game Tuesday - which they have to win to stay alive in the American League Division Series against the Texas Rangers – and Orioles beat reporter Dan Connolly tweeted that some of Kremer’s teammates have checked in on him.

Many of Kremer’s teammates from Team Israel also reshared the MLB’s post, including rookies Matt Mervis and Zack Gelof and Orthodox prospect Jacob Steinmetz. Boston Red Sox pitcher Zack Weiss, another Team Israel alum, posted an Instagram story about the conflict, and Team Israel coach and former big leaguer Kevin Youkilis posted a photo of himself in his Team Israel jersey with the caption “I stand with Israel.”


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Similar messages of support have poured in from across the sports world over the past three days, including from New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, who is Jewish and a longtime supporter of Israel.

Other teams that shared posts of support for Israel include the NHL’s New Jersey Devils, Miami’s MLB and NBA teams, the New York Jets, Cincinnati Reds, and Philadelphia 76ers, among others. Cincinnati Reds assistant pitching coach Alon Leichman, who is Israeli, also posted a message of support.

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Noticeably silent has been the teams from New York – which has the largest Jewish population outside of Israel – as all of the New York Yankees, New York Knicks and New York Rangers have not released any statements regarding Israel this week.

Detroit Lions player Alex Anzalone shared that his parents are currently in Jerusalem, pleading with the US government to help them safely evacuate. “It’s hard,” Anzalone told the Detroit News. “[It’s] really all I’ve been thinking about.”

Anzalone’s parents are reportedly part of a group of 53 Americans who arrived in Israel on October 2 as part of a tour group through their church in Naples, Florida. Rep. Byron Donalds, who represents the area in Congress, posted about the group on X, to which Anzalone replied: “My parents are in this group. Please get my parents home… @POTUS,” tagging US President Joe Biden’s official account.

Amar’e Stoudemire, the former NBA star who converted to Judaism and played professionally in Israel, shared a video on Instagram calling for a ceasefire, saying he “pray[s] for the safety of Palestinian children along with the Israeli children.” Former Super Bowl MVP Julian Edelman wrote on X that he is “heartbroken.”

Boston Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla spoke about the war during his pregame press conference on Sunday, saying, “There should be a lot of thoughts and prayers” for Israelis.

“I went this past year and I went in 2016,” Mazzulla said. “It doesn’t matter what you are, whether you’re a Muslim, whether you’re Jewish or Christian, Israeli or Palestinian. They’re people and they go through a lot of dangerous times and situations. Our country is 400 years old and they’ve been going through suffering for 10,000 years. You start to see the perspective of the world, and it’s a really, really tough area to be. So I think we should all be aware of that.”

Israel’s top basketball and soccer leagues have also postponed their games, while the Maccabi Ra’anana basketball team is scheduled to play an exhibition game against the Brooklyn Nets in New York on Thursday as the team celebrates a previously scheduled Israeli Heritage Night.

This week’s Euroleague and EuroCup games will begin with a moment of silence as games for the two Israeli teams in the respective competitions Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv have been pushed off. The Basketball Champions League has postponed both Hapoel Jerusalem and Hapoel Holon’s season-opening games slated next week. Former Israel National Team head coach Shlomo Sharf’s granddaughter Mai Naim who had been missing since the Hamas attack began has been found dead after attending the music festival near the Gaza border. (JTA)  

Palestine team withdraws from tournament in Malaysia

The Palestine soccer team has withdrawn from a tournament in Malaysia, amid ongoing fighting between Israel and Hamas, the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM) said on Tuesday.

The Palestine soccer team had been scheduled to compete in the Merdeka Cup – an international friendly tournament in Malaysia – from October 13-17 along with India, Tajikistan, and host country Malaysia.

“The Palestinian team had to withdraw from participating in this 42nd edition because they could not fly to Kuala Lumpur due to the tense situation in the country at the moment,” FAM said.

The Palestine team is due to play 2026 World Cup qualifying matches against Lebanon and Australia in November. It has also qualified for next year’s edition of the Asian Cup in Qatar, which will run from January 12 to February 10. (Reuters) 

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