from Morgan Campbell of the Toronto Star,
Since we’re all sharing stories about racism, hockey, and the stifling whiteness of Canadian institutions, here’s mine.
In November of 2000, I was six weeks into a yearlong internship at the Star, pinch-hitting for a sick colleague on the hockey beat. So I showed up at Lakeshore Arena to report a story about the Edmonton Oilers, who were playing the Leafs the next night, and whose roster included five Black players.
Late in the media session, a scrum formed around Scarborough’s Anson Carter. I asked him about the role race played in his professional life, and he gave calm, thoughtful answers. When I asked whether people tried to portray him as something he isn’t because he was a Black athlete in a largely white sport, he responded that people tried but said, “I’m not a politician. I’m hockey player.”
The following morning, that same exchange appeared in a competing publication under the byline and logo of a white columnist also present at the Carter scrum.
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