San Francisco Chronicle

Reid calls Jenkins ‘a sellout’

-

Eric Reid and Malcolm Jenkins turned the fight for racial and social justice into a skirmish on the field. Reid then went on offense with his postgame comments, calling the Eagles’ safety and co-founder of the Players Coalition “a sellout.”

Reid, the former 49ers safety, split from the coalition last year because Jenkins had excluded ex-49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick from meetings, and asked players if they would stop protesting during the national anthem if the NFL made a charitable donation to causes they support. Reid, who signed with the Panthers in September, said he believed he no longer had shared interests with the socially active coalition and would continue on his own path with Kaepernick, who remains unsigned. Kaepernick was the first player to sit and then kneel during the anthem to protest racism and police brutality.

“We believe a lot of players should have stepped up for Colin,” Reid said Sunday after Carolina beat Philadelph­ia 21-17. “I believe Malcolm capitalize­d on the situation. He coopted the movement that was started by Colin to get his organizati­on funded. It’s cowardly. He sold us out.”

Jenkins took the high road when told in the Eagles’ locker room of the criticism.

“I’m not going to get up here and say anything negative about that man,” Jenkins said. “I respect him. I’m glad he has a job. I’m glad he’s back in the league. I’ll leave it like that.”

Reid, who was not supposed to be at midfield, and Jenkins jawed at each other shortly before kickoff.

Reid continued his tradition of taking a knee during the Star-Spangled Banner. Reid is trying to call attention to social and racial injustice.

“It’s systematic oppression, which is what I’m protesting, and neocolonia­lism,” he said. “Man, it keeps happening.”

Reid has accused Jenkins of running the Players Coalition essentiall­y through a dependence on the NFL. The league is committing $90 million over the next seven years to social-justice causes in a three-segment plan that involves players.

Reid said Jenkins’ goal was to have the NFL fund the coalition.

“That’s what he set out to do,” Reid said.

Reid said he didn’t set out to confront Jenkins, but that’s what happened before kickoff. Reid had to be restrained by players and coaches and stared down Jenkins during player introducti­ons. Reid continued to pop off toward the Eagles’ sideline after an early tackle, clearly amped.

“As long as we’re able to keep him under control, I don’t even want to use that word ‘control,’ but as long as we’re able to try to get him calm so we can get focused and back on playing the game, I really do appreciate the effort he put in playing the game,” Carolina head coach Ron Rivera said.

Reid, signed by the Panthers when safety Da’Norris Searcy suffered a season-ending concussion, wore a T-shirt reading “I KNOW MY RIGHTS” in the locker room and refused to ease up on Jenkins or apologize for slamming Zach Ertz to the turf. Reid hit Carson Wentz well after a handoff and Ertz gamely tried to defend his QB. Ertz charged at Reid, who put his head down and flipped the tight end with a WWE-style slam. Both players received personalfo­ul penalties.

“I think it was James Baldwin that said, ‘To be black in America and to be relatively conscious is to be in a constant state of anger,’ ” Reid said. “I’m in a constant state of anger.”

He filed a grievance against the NFL, alleging teams colluded against signing him during free agency because he knelt during the national anthem alongside Kaepernick and was out of work until Searcy was hurt. Kaepernick also has filed a grievance alleging he was not signed because of collusion by owners who wanted him out of the league because of his protests.

“Eric Reid!!! Enough said!!!” Kaepernick tweeted in response to Reid’s comments, adding the hashtag #ImWithReid.

 ?? David T. Foster III / Charlotte Observer ?? Carolina safety Eric Reid (right) has words for Philadelph­ia safety Malcolm Jenkins prior to kickoff.
David T. Foster III / Charlotte Observer Carolina safety Eric Reid (right) has words for Philadelph­ia safety Malcolm Jenkins prior to kickoff.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States