Steve Kerr tells Donald Trump “Night night” at the Democratic National Convention. (Aaron Rupar on X/Twitter.)

Nine days after Steve Kerr coached the USA Basketball men’s national team to a gold-medal game victory over France, one led by spectacular shooting down the stretch by Kerr’s Golden State Warriors’ guard Steph Curry, Kerr brought up Curry again. But this time, he did so in a speech at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, referencing Curry’s famed “Night night” celebration and urging voters to give that to former president and 2024 Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on November 5:

“I’ll be working every day to help people get out the vote on November 5 and elect Kamala Harris and Tim Walz as the next president and vice-president of the United States. And, and, after the results are tallied that night, we can, in the words of the great Steph Curry, we can tell Donald Trump ‘Night night.'”

That celebration reference was only the end of Kerr’s remarks. He also spoke about why he felt the need to comment here:

And he had a joke about Walz’s football coaching days:

And, as a 1993-1998 player for the hometown Bulls, Kerr of course got the renowned Alan Parsons Project “Sirius” intro:

Speaking out on politics is far from new for Kerr. He’s often spoken out against gun violence (including the attempted assassination of Trump) following his father’s assassination in Lebanon in 1984, and he’s also chimed in on Colin Kaepernick, media, race, “stick to sports,” and more. But as per endorsements of specific candidates and parties, that’s a little more unusual for Kerr. But there is precedent for his actions here: he blasted Trump and his administration repeatedly from 2017-20 (and took some fire in return), and endorsed Harris last month. In a December 2016 New York Times feature on him and his family history, Kerr told John Branch why he was speaking up:

In November, after the presidential election, Kerr was among the N.B.A. coaches, including Popovich, who criticized the state of political discourse in the age of Donald J. Trump.

“People are getting paid millions of dollars to go on TV and scream at each other, whether it’s in sports or politics or entertainment, and I guess it was only a matter of time before it spilled into politics,” Kerr said. “But then all of a sudden you’re faced with the reality that the man who’s going to lead you has routinely used racist, misogynist, insulting words.”

So Kerr has certainly stuck to that anti-Trump tack. And he did so in a highly-prominent way Monday.

[Aaron Rupar on X/Twitter]

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About Andrew Bucholtz

Andrew Bucholtz has been covering sports media for Awful Announcing since 2012. He is also a staff writer for The Comeback. His previous work includes time at Yahoo! Sports Canada and Black Press.