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Abner Haynes
News
February 12, 2026
Abner Haynes
By By Michael Barnes
Part two:The boycott that moved a game

The year was 1965. The American Football League had gathered its best athletes in New Orleans for the All-Star Game, an event meant to celebrate the league’s rising prominence and its brightest stars.

But the moment Black players stepped off the plane, the city reminded them of its past.

Taxis passed them by. Hotels turned them away. Restaurants refused service. They were All-Stars in uniform—yet unwelcome on the streets they were supposed to help showcase.

Abner Haynes had seen racism before, but this was different. This was bold. Blatant. Humiliating. And he wasn’t alone in feeling it.

Inside hotel lobbies and narrow hallways, players began to talk. Quiet conversations turned into shared anger and disbelief. What good was an All-Star invitation if you couldn’t sit at a lunch counter? What message would it send if they smiled, suited up, and pretended this treatment didn’t matter?

Abner didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t need to.

“We decided not to play,” he later said. “And it wasn’t just talk. We meant it.”

Twenty-one Black players made it clear they would boycott the game. League officials scrambled. Coaches tried to calm the situation. Promises were floated. But the players, led in part by Haynes and Cookie Gilchrist, stood firm.

Within days, the AFL made an unprecedented decision: the All-Star Game would be moved from New Orleans to Houston.

It was the first major player-led protest in professional football history. No social media. No press conference. Just a group of men who refused to accept being treated as second-class citizens.

One teammate later recalled how Abner carried himself during those tense days.

“He was calm, but you could tell this meant everything to him. He didn’t shout. But when he said we shouldn’t play, people listened.”

The 1965 boycott didn’t end racism in sports, or in America. But it drew a line—clear and unmistakable. It showed that athletes could demand dignity, not just contracts. That silence was not the only option.

The boycott didn’t just move a game. It moved the conversation forward. And Abner Haynes helped make that happen—not with anger, but with quiet, unshakable integrity.

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A: Main, News...
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Heartland Heritage Museum & Gallery to host anthropologist
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A crowded audience filled the Plumb Theatre on Feb. 7, including several members of the Maloy family prepared to sing alongside their father, grandfather, and great-grandfather, Paul Maloy. The evenin...
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