NFL owners are a peculiar group of social justice benefactors.Since they colluded to sideline Colin Kaepernick in 2017, the league has been far louder about racial bias than any of Kaepernickās silent protests. It brought in Jay-Z, hip-hopās living embodiment of capitalism, to advise on social justice initiatives (and the Super Bowl halftime show). It pledged a quarter-billion dollars to fund programs addressing everything from police-community relations to the racial-wealth gap. Itās played āLift Every Voice and Singā, the de facto Black national anthem, as a processional before games and plastered slogans like, āEnd Racismā and āIt Takes All Of Usā painted in its end zones and on the helmets of its stars. Theyāve even flown Black Lives Matter flags in stadiums.Itās done almost everything it can do publicly to indicate that it took Kaepernickās message to heartāeverything except give Kaepernick an opportunity to play again. So excuse me if I twist my lips and roll my eyes at yet another NFL exec, this time Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark Davis telling NBC Sports over the weekend that he ābelievesā in Kaepernick and would āwelcome him with open armsā if his teamās head coach and general manager thought it was a good idea.
Davis said heās talked to Kaepernick, gotten educated on the quarterbackās opinions about social justice and evolved some of his own thinking.
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āI think Colinās a very misunderstood human being,ā Davis said. āIāve gotten a chance to talk to himā¦I didnāt understand the kneeling, what that meant initially. Over time Iāve learned a little bit more about it and I understand where he was coming from and heās got a message for society as a whole.ā
Thanks, Mark, for your consideration. If only Kaepernickās gainful employment didnāt depend on the understanding and acquiescence of 32 mostly white billionaires, thatād be great. As it stands, weāre on the verge of the sixth NFL season in which Kaepernick wonāt be on a roster mainly because no NFL owner or their underlings has offered him a real opportunity. This despite his numerous explanations of exactly why he kneeled so long ago and the list of things heās done or said heās willing to do just to get back on an NFL sideline.Those things include continuously working out with current and former NFL receivers, releasing videos of those workouts to the public and saying heād be a willing backup QB playing for the league minimum salary. This year that number is $1.035 million for someone with Kaepernickās experience, chump change compared with what the NFL has already spent to virtue signal that itās anti-racist. Itās likely a lot less that what former U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch is charging to defend it against a racial discrimination lawsuit, or the less than $10 million settlement the league reportedly paid to Kaepernick and similarly exiled kneeler Eric Reid in 2019. Since his last snap for the San Francisco 49ers in 2016, NFL execs have occasionally broached signing him. In 2017, Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciottiāwho personally donated $4 million to HBCUs last yearāsaid his team considered it. The league itself set up a bizarre private workout for Kaepernick to show what he had to teams in 2019, but that plan fell apart after the league and Kaepernick couldnāt agree to legal terms. In March, Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll said heād spoken with Kaepernick and that he believed the quarterback deserves āa second shotā in the NFL. And now, Davis. Somehow, NFL execs seem capable of doing every thing except the simplest thing. A cynical person might think theyāre trolling at this point. But hereās a cheap and easy suggestion if anyone in the league wants to prove theyāre not just talking shit Kaepernick deserving another shot: just call the guy already.
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