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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar slams 'gotcha' questions that athletes are asked by the press as 'antagonistic' and 'infuriating' in mental health essay

Jul 24, 2021, 00:23 IST
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Los Angeles Lakers great Kareem Abdul-Jabbar attends the Los Angeles Lakers and Memphis Grizzlies basketball game at Staples Center on February 21, 2020 in Los Angeles, California. Kevork S. Djansezian/Getty Images
  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar wrote an op-ed for The Hollywood Reporter about athlete mental health.
  • He said post-game interviews can be "much worse than the actual competition" for some athletes.
  • He said "gotcha" questions asked by the press can be "frustrating and sometimes infuriating."
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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar criticized the media for asking athletes "gotcha" questions after games in an op-ed about mental health in sports.

In his essay published in the Hollywood Reporter, Abdul-Jabbar applauded athletes like tennis star Naomi Osaka and Cleveland Cavaliers' Kevin Love for openly speaking about their mental health struggles.

He said that post-game interviews can be "much worse than the actual competition" for some athletes, especially introverts.

"Reporters often look to elicit a dramatic, headline-grabbing quote by provoking the athlete, goading them about losing or about their public stances for social justice," he wrote. "When I was an active player, the repetition of these kinds of antagonistic 'gotcha' questions game after game, year after year, was frustrating and sometimes infuriating. For all of us, it takes a toll."

He added that the pubic should stop punishing athletes and celebrities when they are anything less than "paragons of perfection," and instead admire them "for all they've accomplished despite their challenges."

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"It's a reflection of our own character whether we choose to be supportive or derisive, because that reflects either our capacity for compassion - or the depth of our own personal fears," he said.

Abdul-Jabbar's op-ed comes weeks after Osaka withdrew rom the French Open to take a mental health break.

Osaka's decision renewed a conversation about mental health among athletes, similar to a conversation sparked by Love following an essay he wrote about having panic attacks in 2018 for the Players Tribune.

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