Kevin Johnson rises to the occasion in Sterling affair
NBA stalwart turned Sacramento mayor earns praise in helping defuse Sterling drama

Kevin Johnson walked slowly to a microphone outside Los Angeles City Hall, more than ready to face dozens of reporters and the defining moment of his political career.
He had spent the previous three days at the centre of an American firestorm. In nationally televised interviews and in private meetings with NBA executives, Johnson had insisted that Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling had to be permanently removed from the league after he was caught on tape reportedly making racist comments.
Then, Johnson was about to respond on behalf of NBA players.
When you have institutional racism, when you hear those audio tapes, you just can't believe that it's 2014
"I hope every bigot in this country saw what happened to Mr Sterling," Johnson said, flanked by Los Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti and several current and former NBA stars, including Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

The episode has been a deeply personal one for Johnson, who has been serving as the lead advocate for the NBA players union as the scandal unfolds.
Not only is Johnson a former NBA star, he is also Sacramento's first African American mayor and a man whose office at City Hall is filled with history books on race relations in this country.