The Manila Times

Cowboys owner says players will stand for anthem

- PHOTO COURTESY OF ONE FC

Protests

for the interim bantamweig­ht

“This is without a doubt the biggest bout of my career. Everything that I have worked on to this point, all the countless nights spent in the gym, endless rolls with my teammates at Team Lakay, all the wins and the sacrifices, it all comes down to this,” said Belingon, a former wushu sanshou fighter.

Despite a guaranteed title shot versus ONE bantamweig­ht world champion Bibiano Fernandes, Belingon opted to challenge Nguyen.

“Beating Martin will be huge for my career. He is a two-division world champion in the featherwei­ght and lightweigh­t classes. If I beat him, I just beat a two- division world champion,” added Belingon, who holds a

Nguyen expressed respect for the Team Lakay standout.

“And that just speaks volume of the kind of warrior this guy is. I have complete and total respect for a martial artist with his values Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said Wednesday (Thursday in

to stand for the US national anthem this season but described President

on the subject as “problemati­c.”

Speaking as the Cowboys opened their training camp in Oxnard, California, Jones said the team had a policy to stand during renditions of “The Star- Spangled Banner.”

“Obviously I wouldn’t dare speak for any of the other owners, but as far as the Dallas Cowboys are concerned, you know where I stand and our team knows where I stand on the issue,” Jones told reporters.

“Our policy is that you stand for the anthem, toe on the line.”

The National Football League and the NFL Players Associatio­n last week said they had reached a “standstill agreement” on the anthem issue, declaring that no new rules would be put in place

in

which

players kneeled during the anthem -- first launched by San Francisco 49ers

injustices— put America’s most popular sport at the center of a political firestorm last year.

This came after Trump described players who took part as “sons of bitches” who were insulting the flag, the US military and the nation.

The remarks prompted a wave of kneeling protests across the league last September, angering some fans and placing several conservati­ve, Trump- supporting team owners in an awkward position as NFL television ratings dropped.

In an attempt to defuse the

the NFL in May announced a new

the field to stand for the anthem. However players had the option of remaining in the locker room.

The NFL backed away from that position last week however following a challenge from the players union.

Some team owners had already said they would not punish players who protested.

That in turn prompted Trump to return to the subject on Twitter, calling for players who did not stand for the anthem to be suspended without pay.

“The NFL National Anthem Debate is alive and well again - can’t believe it!,” Trump tweeted last Friday.

“Isn’t it in contract that players must stand at attention, hand on

- sioner must now make a stand. First time kneeling, out for game. Second time kneeling, out for season/ no pay!,” he wrote.

Jones said Trump’s involve - ment in the issue had given the league a headache.

“Yes, his interest in what we’re doing is problemati­c,” Jones said.

“Unpreceden­ted if you really think about it. Like the very game itself, that’s the way it is and we’ll deal with it. Everybody would like for it to go away.”

 ??  ?? Kevin “The Silencer” Belingon
Kevin “The Silencer” Belingon

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