Donald Trump revels in Colin Kaepernick’s costly stance

Former 49ers player chose to protest against racial injustice by kneeling for anthem

Eli Harold, Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid kneel on the sideline during the anthem at Levi Stadium on January 1st. Photograph: Getty Images
Eli Harold, Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid kneel on the sideline during the anthem at Levi Stadium on January 1st. Photograph: Getty Images

Donald Trump has always been proud of the mark he has made on the sports world – his golf handicap, his friendship with Tom Brady and his sterling work as a caddy – and on Monday he took credit for Colin Kaepernick's (so far) fruitless search for a new team.

The former San Francisco 49ers quarterback gained widespread attention last season after he chose to protest against racial injustice in the United States by kneeling for the national anthem. Kaepernick opted out of his 49ers contract during the offseason but NFL owners have so far declined to pick up a player who took San Francisco to an appearance at Super Bowl XLVII.

“There was an article today, it was reported, that NFL owners don’t want to pick him up because they don’t want to get a nasty tweet from Donald Trump,” the president told a rally in Louisville on Monday. “I said, ‘If I remember that one I’m gonna report it to the people of Kentucky — because they like it when people actually stand for the American flag.’”

Trump may have a point. NFL owners skew conservative – during the last presidential election cycle they gave $8,052,410.00 to Republican efforts compared to $189,610.72 for Democratic causes – and New York Jets owner Woody Johnson, who Trump picked as his ambassador the UK, chose to sign the veteran Josh McCown over Kaepernick on Monday. ESPN has reported that Kaepernick will stand for the anthem in the upcoming season.

READ SOME MORE

Earlier this week, the film director Spike Lee described the failure of teams to sign Kaepernick as “MAD Fishy To Me, Stinks To The High Heavens” in an Instagram post.

Kaepernick has been critical of Trump, who he once called “openly racist”, in the past. The quarterback said he did not vote in the presidential elections.

Guardian services