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Mike Ditka rips NFL protests: 'There has been no oppression in the last 100 years'

- Guardian sport

Hall of Fame coach Mike Ditka said on Monday that he doesn’t believe there has been oppression in the United States “in the last 100 years”.

The 77-year-old Ditka made the remarks during an interview on Westwood One’s Monday Night Football pregame show when asked about the ongoing wave of NFL players opting to sit or kneel during the national anthem as a way to protest social injustice in America.

“All of a sudden, it’s become a big deal now, about oppression,” Ditka said. “There has been no oppression in the last 100 years that I know of. Now maybe I’m not watching it as carefully as other people. I think the opportunit­y is there for everybody . ... If you want to work, if you want to try, if you want to put effort into yourself, I think you can accomplish anything.”

He added: “Is that the stage for this? If you want to protest, or whatever you want to protest, you’ve got a right to do that, but I think you’re a profession­al athlete, you have an obligation to the game. I think you have to respect the game. That’s what I think is the most important thing. I don’t see a lot of respect for the game. I just see respect for their own individual opinions. Opinions are like noses, we all have one. Some are good. Some are bad.”

Steve Smith, a five-time Pro Bowl wide receiver who played 16 seasons with the Carolina Panthers and Baltimore Ravens before retiring in January, was among those who took objection with Ditka’s remarks.

It’s not the first time Ditka has spoken on the issue. The longtime NFL coach said last year he had “no respect” for quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick, then with the San Francisco 49ers, shortly after he first kneeled during the anthem, sparking a national discussion and inspiring dozens of NFL players to follow suit.

“I think it’s a problem, anybody who disrespect­s this country and the flag,” Ditka said then in a radio interview on KRLD-FM in Dallas. “If they don’t like the country, if they don’t like our flag, get the hell out. That’s what I think.

“I have no respect for Colin Kaepernick. He probably has no respect for me, that’s his choice. My choice is that I like this country, I respect our flag, and I don’t see all the atrocities going on in this country that people say are going on.

“I see opportunit­ies if people want to look for opportunit­y. Now if they don’t want to look for them, then you can find problems with anything, but this is the land of opportunit­y because you can be anything you want to be if you work. Now if you don’t work, that’s a different problem.”

Ditka, who was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1988, is one of two people in NFL history to win a league title as a player, an assistant coach and a head coach. He graduated from local hero to Chicago icon during an 11-year coaching stint with the Bears that included the team’s only Super Bowl win during the 1985 season, then retired permanentl­y after a failed comeback with the New Orleans Saints in 1999.

The outspoken conservati­ve publicly flirted with running against Democratic candidate Barack Obama, who was then a state senator, for the open seat in the US Senate vacated by Illinois senator Peter Fitzgerald in 2004 – an election that jump-started Obama’s ascent to the presidency in four years’ time.

“Biggest mistake I’ve ever made,” he told the Dickinson Press in 2013. “Not that I would have won, but I probably would have and he wouldn’t be in the White House.”

Last year, Ditka called Obama “the worst president we’ve ever had”.

 ??  ?? Longtime NFL coach Mike Ditka walks the sidelines during a September game between the Bears and Falcons. Photograph: Kena Krutsinger/Getty Images
Longtime NFL coach Mike Ditka walks the sidelines during a September game between the Bears and Falcons. Photograph: Kena Krutsinger/Getty Images

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