Connecticut Hammerheads goalie Kris Alleyne and New York Lizards midfielder Mark Ellis, who has participated in protests on Long Island, are the league’s other black players. The “MLL Four” sometimes stood together, sometimes by themselves. Teammates and coaches started to join them as the games went on. By the final weekend, all four players and Hammerheads assistant coach Bobby Horsey, stood at midfield before a matchup between Boston and Connecticut.
It was an act borne out of multiple conversations among the black players and with the league. The first meeting occurred in Davis-Allen’s hotel room, where the men discussed being black in a predominantly white sport and how they could go about using their platforms for change. Some wanted to kneel. Others did not, especially since the games took place at the U.S. Naval Academy.
Eventually, the players decided they would stand at midfield during the national anthem. They presented their plan to MLL commissioner Alexander “Sandy” Brown and the Players Council. Alleyne, Davis-Allen, Ellis and Toliver shared that they weren’t happy with the lack of attention the league had initially given to the issues of systemic racism and inequality in the wake of the police killings of Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. Still, they got the OK to go ahead with their demonstration.
After Davis-Allen and Toliver stood shoulder-to-shoulder opening day, Alleyne and Ellis also took centerstage before their teams’ games that evening, scenes that played out in front of a national audience on ESPN networks.
“One of my biggest dreams in my life was to play in a game with a flyover,” Alleyne said. “I hadn’t gotten there yet. The fact that I was at the Naval Academy and hearing the anthem and seeing the flag on the jumbotron, it was emotional.”
“It was bigger than me,” Ellis said. “I knew me standing there would make people ask questions. After that, you put on your helmet and you ball.”