Some of Eden Prairie's boys basketball players who quit the team this season sat in the bleachers during the first game of a section tournament Wednesday, as they and their families urged the school district to do more to address a coach's use of a racial slur in December.
Boys basketball coach David Flom was suspended from coaching for a month in December over his reading of the slur in a social media post as he talked to players about social media. Since his reinstatement in January, some players of color have quit the team. Their families have hired a lawyer who is alleging Flom's language made the basketball team hostile to Black players. The former players and their families sat in the bleachers at Wednesday's home game against Prior Lake. One mother held a sign reading, "Do you inspire each? No."
Watching the game when he wanted to be playing was hard for 11th-grader Tyler Nduulu, he said.
"It's not the best feeling, but you have to stand up for what you believe in," he said Wednesday.
Camren Riggins-Brown, a Black 10th-grader who quit the team, said last week the problem was bigger than one slur.
"There are so many minor things that don't get spoken about," he said. "No one knows about the bigger picture."
Flom has said he regrets using the slur and knows he hurt the players.
"I know the harm I have caused," Flom said in January. "I'd love to be part of any discussions going forward, from an education standpoint and for my own learning."