Mississippi State fans chanted ‘Who’s your daddy’ at fatherless Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf

Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf got hectored mercilessly by Mississippi State fans when he was in college.

Abdul-Rauf, who grew up in Mississippi but opted to play for rival LSU, was known as Chris Jackson at the time. He was something of a precursor to Steph Curry as a precision deep shooter, and Colin Kaepernick as a social justice martyr. His journey, which resulted in him getting blackballed from the NBA after choosing to sit during the national anthem, was chronicled in Showtime’s documentary, “Stand.”

The sharpshooter was the subject of a 1989 Sports Illustrated cover story that revealed he did not know his father, and the Starkville crowd relentlessly chanted, “Who’s your daddy?” at him.


Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf, then named Chris Jackson, was a sharpshooter for LSU.
Focus on Sport via Getty Images

Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf, then named Chris Jackson, was heckled mercilessly at Mississippi State.
Getty Images

“When I headed to the court, soon as the fans saw my body, it was some of the loudest boos I’ve ever heard in my life,” Abdul-Rauf said in the documentary.

On the game broadcast, Bill Raftery — who looked like an elder figure even back then! — joked that he thought the boos were for him but they were actually for Jackson.

Shaquille O’Neal, Abdul-Rauf’s teammate at LSU, said in the film, “I’m not going throw the R-word [redneck] around, but they were different … It bothered him that game.”

Dale Brown, who was the coach at LSU at the time, called the chants “sickening” and “preposterous” and said, “I could regurgitate.”

“There was no let-up,” Abdul-Rauf explained in present day in the film. “You could just feel, in that arena, the air of racism.”


Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf speaks to LSU crowd.
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

While LSU lost the game 87-80, Abdul-Rauf put up 40 points, in a performance that Shaq called the greatest he’s ever seen.

“Greatest performance that I’ve seen, ever, in the history of basketball,” he said. “I’ve done seen Jordan, Barkley, Isiah, Magic, Kobe, Penny — I ain’t ever seen nothing like that.”

“Stand” was directed by Joslyn Rose Lyons and debuted on Showtime in early February.

You May Also Like

Did the New York Times Just Call for a Communist Revolution?!

Here’s a thought experiment: Close your eyes and think of all…

Fury as FSU student callously films wounded classmate while sipping on Starbucks iced coffee

A Florida State University student callously strolled past a wounded classmate and…

Pravda: Mom Kills Daughter, Trump to Blame

Surprisingly, this spin on a story ranks only #2 in the…

IVF clinic refuses to reveal if staffer behind embryo mix-up is still working

Monash IVF has refused to reveal whether the staffer allegedly behind the…