Arenas wants to share message with kids
Gilbert Arenas insists he now understands that "guns and violence
are serious problems, not joking matters."
In an op-ed piece written for
The Washington Post and put on the newspaper's Web site
Monday, the suspended Washington Wizards guard pledges to be a
better role model and says a "message of nonviolence will be front
and center as I try to rebuild my relationship with young people in
the D.C. area."
He continues: "I know that won't happen overnight, and that
it will happen only if I show through my actions that I am truly
sorry and have learned from my mistakes. If I do that, then
hopefully youngsters will learn from the serious mistakes I made
with guns and not make any of their own."
Wizards coach Flip Saunders supported Arenas' decision to
address the issue this way.
"If he wants to get active in his community and try to help
out kids, then he probably needed to say something. ... He's got to
go with what he feels in his heart," Saunders said before his
team's 99-88 loss to the Boston Celtics on Monday night.
"In talking to him, I think he understands the seriousness of
what he did," Saunders said. "He's trying to let people know
— kids, especially - that he had done something wrong and try
to take what was really a negative and try to somehow have a
positive impact."
Arenas pleaded guilty Jan. 15 to a felony charge of carrying
a pistol without a license. He is scheduled to be sentenced March
26.
"I am trying hard to right my wrongs. The one that will be
hardest to make right is the effect my actions have had on kids who
see NBA players as role models," Arenas says in the op-ed piece,
his first extensive comments since his season-ending suspension.
"Professional athletes have a duty to act responsibly and to
understand the influence we have on all those kids who look up to
us. I failed to live up to that responsibility when I broke the law
and set such a bad example."
Last week, Arenas was suspended without pay for the rest of
the season by NBA commissioner David Stern for bringing guns into
the Wizards' locker room as part of a dispute with teammate Javaris
Crittenton stemming from a card game. Crittenton also brought a gun
to the locker room - and he also was handed a season-ending
suspension by Stern.
Arenas already had been suspended indefinitely by Stern
earlier in January; his total ban amounts to 50 games.
A three-time All-Star, Arenas was leading the Wizards in
scoring and assists averages when he was first forced to sit out
after making light of things, including pretending to "shoot"
teammates with his hands during an on-court huddle before a game at
Philadelphia.
"I definitely think he's sorry for what happened. I think
he's disappointed as far as what took place, how people are viewing
him. ... I think now there's a process you have to go through as
far as letting people know you made a mistake," Wizards co-captain
Antawn Jamison said after Monday's game. "He knew he made a
mistake. If he could take it back, he would. He's not the type of
guy to do anything vicious like that. He just made poor judgment."
In Monday's piece, Arenas says he gave Stern reason to
suspend him and acknowledges he damaged "the image of the NBA and
its players." He also says he "let down our fans and Mrs. Irene
Pollin, the widow of longtime Wizards owner Abe Pollin."
Abe Pollin changed the team's nickname from Bullets to
Wizards because of the violent connotations of the old name. He
died in November.
Arenas' op-ed ends by saying: "Some people may not forgive me
for what I've done. But if I help steer even just one young person
away from violence and trouble, then I'll once again feel that I'm
living up to Abe Pollin's legacy and to the responsibility I owe
the kids of the District."