New York Daily News

SHOOTING FROM THE LIP

Fins owner wants to play politics the way players can’t

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Dolphins owner tries to have it both ways with politics, but players don’t get to do the same

Here was Colin Kaepernick’s political statement in the National Football League, at least when he was still in the National Football League: He began to take a knee during the playing of the national anthem. He did that and other players did that along with him in solidarity and eventually the president of the United States called them SOBs because of it. The others didn’t lose their jobs, at least not permanentl­y. Kaepernick, who once had a pass in the air to win a Super Bowl for the 49ers, sure did.

So he’s the guy from the NFL, a young African-American player, who lost his job because of his political beliefs, which were clearly deemed very bad for business.

This isn’t about what you think about his political beliefs. People lined up for Kaepernick and against him. Still do. He was that kind of polarizing figure. Still is. No, this is about what happened to him. And what happened is that he lost his job in America because of what he thought. Not because he wasn’t good enough, as Donald Trump suggested on Friday.

Steve Ross, on the other hand? He’s the 79-year-old white guy who owns the Dolphins and a lot of other companies as well, including Equinox fitness clubs and SoulCycle. He is a friend to Trump the way Robert Kraft, the owner of the New England Patriots, is. And now Ross lets us all know about his political (and financial) beliefs by holding

a fundraiser for President Trump in the Hamptons on the second weekend in August.

Ross wasn’t looking to take a knee here. Just looking to take in a whole lot of money for his friend, the president. In the process, though, he made just as powerful as political statement as Colin Kaepernick’s. Just far more self-serving. And in his own self-interest.

Has there been blowback against Ross? You bet. Only nobody will have to run a benefit for him because of the blowback. He won’t have to sell any of his businesses, including the Dolphins, because people have been cancelling their Equinox membership­s and their SoulCycle membership­s.

Ross looks for cover anywhere he can find it right now, especially behind RISE, the Ross Initiative in Sports for Equality, which he founded. But he can’t. This is what my old friend Jemele Hill had to say about that on Twitter:

“(Ross is) hosting a fundraiser for Trump, despite having an organizati­on called RISE…..Sounds like somebody is talking out of both sides of their neck.”

Well, at least both sides. Now Ross wants to act like some kind of victim, shocked that people would come after him – maybe even think he’s the SOB this time — for his own political beliefs the way people went after Kaepernick. Perhaps his most visible and vocal critic is a member of the Dolphins, wide receiver Kenny Stills, an NFL player who once knelt during the anthem along with Kaepernick, even though Stills didn’t pay with his own career.

“Someone has to have enough courage to let him know he can’t play both sides of this,” is what Stills said of Ross after the Dolphins first preseason game on Thursday night. This was after he’d originally called out his owner on Twitter for the fundraiser.

“It’s something that I can look back on and say I made the right decision,” Stills continued. “Maybe I shouldn’t have done it on social media, but I did. If you’re going to associate yourself with bad people, then people are going to know about it. I put it out there for everybody to see it.”

Ross tries to defend himself, even though his own defense is about as good as his team’s. And he does seem genuinely shocked at the public reaction to the fundraiser at his Southampto­n home, including calls for his businesses to be boycotted. It seems disingenuo­us at the very least, or perhaps just completely chowderhea­ded, and more than somewhat out of touch.

Here is part of the statement he released on Wednesday night:

“I have been, and will continue to be, an outspoken

champion of racial equality, inclusion, diversity, public education and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity, and I have and will continue to support leaders on both sides of the aisle to address these challenges.”

You wanted to ask him to clarify the part about “inclusion,” considerin­g the beneficiar­y of the luncheon he threw, a luncheon where rich guys like Ross got to pay $100,000 for a photo op with the president and $250,000 for participat­ion at a “roundtable discussion” during the event. We can only assume the conversati­on was about making America even greater for all those attending the event, not so much the likes of Kaepernick and Kenny Stills.

There is absolutely no law against rich guys like Ross, made richer by his friend the president, exercising their own freedoms to raise money for his re-election campaign. Ultimately the financial repercussi­ons of the event won’t affect a single day of the rest of Steve Ross’s life. Are his politics going to hurt him in the short run? Yeah, they are. So will becoming the current face of Trump’s support, even in the current political climate. This is the one about reaping what you sow.

Steve Ross decided to throw a million-dollar lunch for a president who didn’t just call dissenters in the NFL SOBs, he called for them to lose their jobs. One football prominent football player, a Super Bowl quarterbac­k named Kaepernick, did. Players lose their jobs because of politics. Owners never do.

Now Ross knows what it’s like to get hit. Good.

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 ?? GETTY ?? Colin Kaepernick hasn’t found a job in the NFL since he protested the National Anthem.
GETTY Colin Kaepernick hasn’t found a job in the NFL since he protested the National Anthem.
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 ?? AP ?? Dolphins receiver Kenny Stills spoke out in disagreeme­nt with team owner Stephen Ross (inset) and his support of Donald Trump.
AP Dolphins receiver Kenny Stills spoke out in disagreeme­nt with team owner Stephen Ross (inset) and his support of Donald Trump.

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