Boston Celtics forward Jaylen Brown made what he intended as a compliment for Toronto Raptors forward Scottie Barnes following a gritty game Sunday night.
Instead, fans and critics have since come after him for his poor phrasing, suggesting a praise that many viewed as tonedeaf or even offensive.
On a live stream, Brown said of Barnes: “Scottie Barnes is strong… he got that extra chromosome strength.”
A wave of backlash has since been triggered, which also highlights how easily language in sports commentary can cross into insensitive territory, especially around neurodiversity.
A comment intended as praise, that landed all wrong
Brown‘s stream came after Boston‘s narrow 121-113 victory over Toronto, a game in which Barnes held his own, dropping 18 points and grabbing 11 rebounds, plus tough defense late in the second half as the Raptors nearly erased a 23point gap.
In that postgame mood, Brown lauded Barnes‘ physicality and compared him to a cartoonlike figure of brute strength, “some type of Ninja Turtle.”
But then he added that Barnes had “extra chromosome strength,” a phrase many took as an allusion to Down syndrome, or as a weak attempt to hint at the slur “rstrength.”
While Brown might have meant no real offense, the phrasing was enough to spark outrage on social media, with many condemning the comment as ableist and tone-deaf.
Many found the comment deeply problematic
Using “extra chromosome strength” to describe someone’s physicality is seen by many as invoking a derogatory stereotype, suggesting people with intellectual or developmental disabilities are merely defined by a physical or mental deficiency.
Social media lit up quickly. Fans called the remark “disappointing” and “tone-deaf,” especially coming from someone who often cultivates the image of an intellectual and thoughtful player.
Some compared this incident to other recent controversies involving Brown, including his socalled “painted hairline fiasco,” which many viewed as another example of offcourt misjudgment.
Meanwhile, some observers called out the fact that when someone repeatedly paints himself as one of the “most intelligent players in the league,” comments like this only deepen the dissonance.
How awareness around language is changing in sports
The backlash reflects a growing awareness, especially in major sports leagues and their global audiences, around using stereotypes linked to disability in jokes, metaphors, or comparisons.
What might have once been shrugged off as “locker room humor” now carries consequences.
For a widely followed public figure like Brown, whose words reach millions even off the court, every phrase can be scrutinized, particularly when it touches on topics like disability, identity, or mental health.
Given that languages of strength, toughness, and domination are deeply ingrained in athletic praise, there’s a fine line between admiration and insensitive metaphor. In this case, many say Brown crossed that line.









