The atmosphere was already electric as I tuned in to watch Clarissa Shields defend her crown. Great fighting energy. Big stage. Big moments.
Before the punches were thrown, the pregame ritual set a powerful tone. A singer named Passion sang “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” widely known as the Black National Anthem, which was written by James Weldon Johnson in 1900 and has long been viewed as an anthem of hope and resilience for the black community. Everyone welcomed him warmly. It feels intentional. It feels very ritualistic.
It was then announced that R&B superstar Kelly Price would sing “The Star-Spangled Banner.” If you know Kelly Price, you know that voice carries weight.
She began the national anthem in traditional, exciting fashion. Strong notes. Controlled power supply. The TV is ready. But then something happened that no one on the field or at home could have predicted.
Halfway through the show, the song changed.
Without any warning, the arrangement transitions seamlessly into “Lift Every Voice and Sing.” Not a mix-and-match tease. Not a brief interpolation. She turned completely around. The background music follows her perfectly, making it clear that this isn’t a mistake. This was rehearsed. This is intentional.
The results left some viewers confused. The national anthem is unfinished. The black national anthem, which had been performed earlier in the program, was again sung in its entirety. Instantly, you can almost feel social media scrambling to process what just happened.
This is bold. This is dramatic. This is political, whether intended to be so or not.
The show also paid tribute to the late Rev. Jesse Jackson, making the moment even more serious. Jesse Jackson was a prominent civil rights leader who marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., founded Operation PUSH and the Rainbow Coalition, and ran for president twice in the 1980s. Jackson’s decades of advocacy for voting rights, economic justice and global human rights made him one of the most influential black political figures of the late 20th century. While presidents typically declare flags to be flown at half-staff in response to certain public officials or national tragedies, states and municipalities have historically honored civil rights leaders differently. The pregame acknowledgments felt like Detroit was showing its respect.
The whole scene was made even more tense by the symbolism of a championship boxing match starring Claressa Shields (one of the greatest boxers of her generation). Shields has always considered himself more than an athlete. She represents Flint. She represents resilience. She represents unapologetic excellence.
Kelly Price’s vocal detour isn’t sloppy. It’s not out of tune. In fact, it’s musically brilliant. But excellence doesn’t eliminate controversy.
Some would call it revolutionary. Others will consider this disrespectful. Cable news panels like Faux are likely to debate the intent versus the agreement. But there’s no denying that it was a moment. The live televised moment blurred the lines between tradition, protest, tribute and art.
Sports and music have always been the stage for cultural tension and cultural progress. From Muhammad Ali’s rebellion to Colin Kaepernick’s protests, the ring and arena have never been divorced from the social climate of this country. What happened before the first punch was thrown is as likely to be repeated as the fight itself.
Kelly Price didn’t whisper her words. She sang that chin.
Kelly Price was visibly confused and didn’t know the national anthem.
Someone pull her off the stage and give her an American history lesson before she embarrasses herself or confuses the kids. Thanks!
— Aric Cougar (@AricCougar) February 23, 2026
What are your thoughts on the switch? Revolutionary or reckless? Please comment below.
I don’t know if Kelly Price didn’t get the memo and I thought she was supposed to sing the national anthem instead of the black national anthem. But Shields also let Lil Boosie take her out and I rocked with Boosie! @BOOSIEOFFICIAL @Claressashields
— Rico Dupree Walker (@CoachRicoWalker) February 23, 2026
Kelly Price is hilarious about this
— sᴛɪɪɪᴢʏᴍᴄɢᴜɪʀᴇ🍃💨 (@s3Xnine) February 23, 2026
A classic move from Kelly Price. I am
She was a fan, but she postponed the show because apparently she didn’t want to sing the national anthem, so she went into business herself. and thoroughly outraged the passions, which he did not deserve. #Shieldvscrews— Timothy J. Jones (@tjayjones8) February 23, 2026
Kelly Price is a national treasure!
— Uma Tourch (@UmaTurch) February 23, 2026
Kelly Price says star held up banner and sang black national anthem during Black History Month lol
— Ray (@ShuggahRay) February 23, 2026
Trump is now rolling the “X” to see Kelly Price’s stunt.
Pure anarchy is brewing and the boy’s revenge mode is about to begin. What did she drop?
— USAI 🇺🇸 (@researchUSAI) February 23, 2026
Kelly Price’s bracelet banner from the stars brings everyone back to the national anthem #ShieldsCrewsDezurn2
— Yong Yong Diesel (@DieselKenevil) February 23, 2026
Kelly Price says she can’t sing this song ### 😂
— Ron.B (@Ronbiamking) February 23, 2026

