Nigel Hayes posing with a "broke college athlete" sign on national television last month was his way of speaking his mind about paying student-athletes.
The lightning bolt of a social media missive Tuesday from the Badgers basketball star — "As a student, I demand change from @UWMadison," he tweeted, along with a statement about Wisconsin's black students suffering racial injustices on campus — was his way of starting a conversation about race.
Hayes, the Big Ten preseason player of the year pick, also has strong views about police violence. So do his teammates. And on more topics, too, which is why Hayes and his teammates will sit down to discuss protests.
"There's nothing definitive," Hayes said this fall. "There may be something, or there may not be."
If Hayes and the Badgers decide to demonstrate, during the national anthem or otherwise, they almost certainly will not be alone.
The college hoops season begins Friday, with more than 160 games across the country. With that basketball blitz likely will come a fresh round of athletes choosing to protest from the playing stage.
After San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick began kneeling during the national anthem this August in protest of police violence, several pro and college athletes followed his lead. College basketball has had time to prepare for demonstrations as they watched them play out on football fields across the country.
Gophers coach Richard Pitino doesn't know whether his players will make a statement when their season begins Friday, but he has told his players he hopes they would do it together if so.