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Late last week, a 2005 recording of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump boasting about groping women and trying to sleep with a married woman was released. In it, he used vulgar terms, such as “grab them by the pussy,” to describe the events. When this recording came to light, many officials and journalists spoke out against the presidential candidate’s comments. But Trump didn’t care, as he just brushed it as “locker room banter.”

“[It’s] locker room banter, a private conversation that took place many years ago," Trump wrote in a brief statement.

This statement upset many professional athletes, as many of them believe that stories or jokes about sexual assault is not part of locker room talk. One of the athletes is the Miami Heat’s Udonis Haslem, who was joking around with his teammates after a Monday practice.

"I don't know what locker room he's been in," Haslem told ESPN. "No, I didn't appreciate it, to be completely honest. That's not our locker room talk. I don't know Trump very well at all, but I don't know who he's played for the last couple years to even say he's been in anybody's locker room and had those kind of conversations."

Los Angeles Clippers forward Blake Griffin also shared his thoughts on Trump’s classification of “locker room banter,” as he tweeted that all the heavy breathing during the presidential debates resembles locker room talk more than Trump’s comments.

Griffin’s head coach, Doc Rivers, said that Trump’s comments are demeaning to women and no one in the locker room talks like that, as the players in the room have sisters, wives, and daughters.

"They're bad comments. They're demeaning to women," Rivers said. "You know, I think when people throw out that word, 'locker room talk,' there's nobody talking like that in the locker room. Is there swearing in the locker room? Yeah. Every other word. But there's nobody demeaning -- there's players in our locker room with sisters, wives and daughters. There's not that type of talk in anyone's locker room."