INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Second gentleman Douglas Emhoff was in the first row on Saturday.
The husband of Vice President Kamala Harris was courtside for the HBCU Classic at the NBA’s All-Star weekend in Indianapolis, taking in a college game between Virginia Union and Winston-Salem State. He spoke earlier Saturday at a basketball clinic, as did some WNBA players, for girls between the ages of 7 and 17.
Emhoff makes no secret of his basketball fandom; he’s been a Los Angeles Lakers season ticket holder for years. In her 2019 memoir, Harris revealed that Emhoff initially reached out to her by a text message he sent from a Lakers game.
“It’s what brings us together,” Emhoff said of sports in an interview with The Associated Press. “Because of what’s happening in the real world, sports is one of those things that we can all agree on. It brings us together. We can be in a room with 20,000 people, all cheering for the same thing, we can all talk about it, I can talk to my son about it, I can talk to my father about it. It brings generations together.”
At the basketball clinic, Emhoff told the players that sports can be a great tool to address gender inequities.
“When there’s things that aren’t fair, in particular to women and girls, I can use this microphone to advocate that that’s just not right,” Emhoff told the girls as they broke into applause. “Things need to be fair, things need to be equal and men need to support women.”
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Emhoff has often represented the U.S. at sporting events, leading delegations when asked to do so by President Joe Biden. He was with the U.S. women’s national soccer team when it played in the World Cup, watched Allyson Felix medal at the world track and field championships, was present at the opening ceremony for the Tokyo Paralympics and even has thrown out a ceremonial first pitch at a Washington Nationals…
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