Los Angeles(Agencies): American world No. 73 Taylor
Townsend said the tennis world is not a united place when it comes to racism
and she gets extra-attention from security at tournaments while others breeze
through.
"Even in the tennis world it
is not a united place," Townsend said in a Tennis United video posted on
YouTube. "We lose our identity of who we are because there can only be
one."
"I've had people argue with
me to tell me that I'm Coco Gauff. I'm not Coco Gauff but all of us look the
same, all of us are built the same, everybody sees a black person and they
assume it's Venus or Serena (Williams) or Sloane (Stephens)."
"Even from the aspect you
walk through and nobody stops you and I'm walking through and somebody has to
check my bag, check my credential, check my coach's bag, check my coach's
credential."
"It's extra-security, extra-precautions
that need to be taken to make sure I belong."
Townsend made the comments as
crowds filled the streets of cities around the world on Sunday to protest the
killing of African-American George Floyd while in Minneapolis police custody.
"The black community has
been suppressed, our identity has been robbed from us," said the
24-year-old still chasing a first WTA singles title. "Black men are being
gunned down and killed in the middle of the street in broad daylight from
police officers."
"This is our reality and
this is the reality that we've been having to deal with for so long, of people
not being comfortable with you. This is our reality. It happens all the time —
week in, week out, every tournament that I play in the States, overseas, it doesn't
matter."
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