Kyrie Irving

Utah Jazz told rabbis to remove ‘I'm a Jew and I'm proud' signs during game involving Kyrie Irving

The team said that the signs were in breach of its audience code of conduct for causing a distraction to players

Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images

Kyrie Irving of the Dallas Mavericks dribbles the ball during the game against the Utah Jazz on Jan. 1, 2024, at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City, Utah.

A group of Utah rabbis were told to remove signs that declared "I'm a Jew and I'm proud" from a basketball game on Monday because they were told it was causing a distraction to the players.

Rabbi Avremi Zippel, a longstanding Utah Jazz fan, and three other rabbis brought the signs to the Delta Center Monday night to protest the involvement of Kyrie Irving, now a Dallas Mavericks player. Irving was suspended from the Brooklyn Nets in 2022 for tweeting a link to a movie widely considered to be antisemitic and for initially failing to disavow it.

Zippel said in a string of posts on X that Irving spotted the sign early in the first quarter and told him: "No need to bring that to a game." Zippel said Irving then spoke to Mavericks security staff, before Jazz officials came to check the rabbis' tickets and tell them to put the signs away.

The Jazz said in a statement that the signs were in breach of its audience code of conduct that maintains games must be played "without distraction or disturbance."

Read the full story at NBCNews.com.

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