Los Angeles Times

Kaepernick continues to grab the headlines

NFL tryouts continue to stir questions about ex- 49ers quarterbac­k, who is unemployed.

- By Dan Woike dan.woike@latimes.com Twitter: @DanWoikeSp­orts

Griffin works out for Chargers, but it’s the subplot as usual.

The Chargers will be the latest NFL team to learn that sins of omission in this league, at this time, are just as powerful as sins of commission.

Tuesday, they worked out Robert Griffin III, a former Heisman Trophy winner trying to resuscitat­e his career as a profession­al football quarterbac­k.

It was a low-risk, lowcommitm­ent move, even if it ends with a deal (most fringe NFL contracts are largely non-guaranteed).

Philip Rivers is as durable as NFL quarterbac­ks come, and the guys who have backed him up make most of their impact in meeting rooms and not on the field.

But, as teams throughout the league in 2017 have learned, the decisions of which quarterbac­ks to audition and which quarterbac­ks to sign are every bit as newsworthy as the actual tryouts and signings because of one quarterbac­k who is still unemployed. Colin Kaepernick, who led the San Francisco 49ers to Super Bowl XLVII, is without a team, and every time a NFL franchise says “yes” to a Griffin or to a Ryan Fitzpatric­k or to a Dan Orlovsky, they’re also saying “no” to Kaepernick.

That, for some, is the perception, and in the Chargers’ case, it’s an easier connection to make because of some similariti­es in two players’ career arcs.

Like Griffin, Kaepernick’s most productive years came earlier in his career, and in 2015, he lost his job as the team’s starting quarterbac­k to Blaine Gabbert.

But last season, Kaepernick’s actions before games, when he took a knee during the playing of the national anthem, garnered more attention than any of his action on it. He found himself at the intersecti­on of social issues and sports, protesting against police shootings of unarmed black men.

“I am not going to stand up to show pride in a f lag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color," Kaepernick told NFL.com last August. “To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way. There are bodies in the street and people getting paid leave and getting away with murder.”

He regained his starting spot later in the season and eventually became a free agent.

In an image-conscious league, Kaepernick­s’s unemployme­nt is, in part, tied to the attention that may come from his activism, which has extended beyond his anthem protests to include $700,000 of donations to charities supporting various causes, according to his website. He pledged to donate $1 million.

When news broke Monday that the Chargers were bringing in Griffin for a workout it became as newsworthy that another team was passing on Kaepernick, with social media and football websites citing further proof that Kaepernick’s been blackliste­d by NFL teams.

While he’s two years older than Griffin, Kaepernick threw only one more intercepti­on than him last year despite attempting more than twice as many passes. And despite San Francisco’s struggles last season, he flashed plenty of ability with a 296-yard passing, 113-yard rushing performanc­e against Miami in Week 11. He comes with almost none of the same injury baggage as Griffin, who hasn’t been healthy for a stretch since his rookie season.

Griffin’s workout with the Chargers came as a surprise because his name had hardly been mentioned this summer. Kaepernick, on the other hand, has come up virtually every time a team has signed a quarterbac­k.

Are the Chargers missing an opportunit­y to win over fans in a new market by taking a popular and potentiall­y more productive player (Kaepernick’s jersey was the No. 17 best-selling uniform on NFLShop.com in May)? Are they afraid of alienating fans who are turned off by Kaepernick’s politics? Did Kaepernick not want to be in a situation where he’d clearly be the No. 2 guy? Did the Chargers ask? Or, did they simply think Griffin would be a better fit?

These aren’t the questions the Chargers probably want to answer when training camp in Costa Mesa opens on Sunday. But, they’re the questions facing every team that picks a quarterbac­k other than Kaepernick.

 ?? K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune ?? COLIN KAEPERNICK, center, who led the San Francisco 49ers to Super Bowl XLVII, was criticized by some after taking a knee during the playing of the national anthem last season.
K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune COLIN KAEPERNICK, center, who led the San Francisco 49ers to Super Bowl XLVII, was criticized by some after taking a knee during the playing of the national anthem last season.

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