Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Quarterbac­k’s political stance remains a rallying cry for many players, Americans

- By Kent Babb The Washington Post

They raised their fists and lifted signs, shouted words of support for Colin Kaepernick and words of shame toward the National Football League. Hundreds of people gathered late last month for a rally in support of the most talkedabou­t man in American sports — a man who wasn’t there to speak about himself.

And maybe that last doesn’t matter anymore.

“He’s out there kneeling for my son and your son and my daughter,” Symone Sanders remembered one of the speakers saying. Sanders, the former press secretary for Bernie Sanders’s presidenti­al campaign — and an organizer of the Kaepernick rally at the NFL’s midtown Manhattan headquarte­rs — believed she would remember that feeling for a long time. “The crowd was just overtaken with emotion at that moment, and everybody understood that this was absolutely bigger than Colin Kaepernick.”

A little more than a year ago, Kaepernick became one of the most polarizing figures in U.S. sports when he took a knee during the national anthem. It was a unique and jarring form of protest against police brutality toward African-Americans.

“If they take football away ... I know that I stood for what is right,” he told NFL Network in August 2016, during the kind of interview that has become increasing­ly rare in the year since, and sure enough that seems to be exactly what happened.

With the NFL kicking off a new season without Kaepernick on a team roster, it’s possible the protest has cost him his playing career. The 29-year-old quarterbac­k led the San Francisco 49ers to the Super Bowl following the 2012 season, and while his statistics have declined since, his performanc­e — he threw 16 touchdown passes last season against four intercepti­ons — would seem to warrant a job somewhere in the league, at the very least as a reserve.

“No one wants to deal with that,” said an owner of one of the league’s 32 franchises, none of which offered Kaepernick a contract this offseason, and the estrangeme­nt is in keeping with most everything else about the young man’s life. The owner spoke on the condition of anonymity so as to give a frank opinion on a topic that is extremely sensitive for the NFL.

At just the latest of many crossroads, Kaepernick is a lifelong resident of the in-between — not exactly a football player and not quite an activist. He’s refused the past eight months to appear publicly or conduct interviews, including for this story. He is a biracial man who grew up in a white family, a child of privilege who became a warrior for social justice, an introspect­ive soul who couldn’t resist his callings to the most public stages.

“One day, maybe my youngest, who is in second grade, is going to open up a history book and he’ll read about Colin,” said Phil Sanchez, Kaepernick’s former high school guidance counselor. “And it won’t have anything to do with throwing a touchdown.”

His stance is now a heated rallying cry on both sides of the political aisle. His No. 7 49ers jersey is still one of the best-selling in a league that will not have him and a memento to burn by fans who don’t want him. Kaepernick is more than just an athlete these days; he is a symbol and a dramatic example, either the second coming of Muhammad Ali — the legendary boxer who shook up the world and the national conversati­on by refusing a draft assignment to Vietnam — or a spoiled athlete who refused to stick to sports and oblige a culture that allowed him three years ago to sign a $126 million contract.

He is, on either end of an extreme spectrum, a figure who generates passion and devotion, the author of a movement that has grown larger and more heated than perhaps even Kaepernick thought it would.

“He had no idea how big it was going to get,” said Nate Boyer, an ex-Green Beret who has occasional­ly communicat­ed with Kaepernick over the past year. part made it only four. Now this.

“What’s wrong with him?” Rick would, in a 2007 article published in the Reno (Nev.) Gazette-Journal, recall asking the agent, who said the boy was biracial — the son of an African-American father and a teenage white mother.

Unfazed, the couple signed the papers and took baby Colin home. Almost from the start, the boy’s parents were honest: Yes, he was adopted; no, unlike his parents and older siblings — Kyle and Devon are the Kaepernick­s’ biological children — he was not white.

Colin drew pictures of his family, yellow crayons for his family and a brown one for himself, and came of age acutely aware of how different he was. His home town, Turlock, California, is a suburb of Modesto; the 2000 census found 1.45 percent of the city’s nearly 56,000 residents was black. One preschool the family considered for Colin included no minorities among its students, and later, the young man became used to stares and unusual questions.

“Can I help you?” Colin would recall, much later in that same Gazette-Journal article, a hotel employee asking him as Rick and Teresa checked in.

As a teen he embraced his individual­ism, the talented athlete who was just as nimble in economics or pre-calculus class. Coaches at Pitman High encouraged Colin to specialize in one sport, but being one thing was uninterest­ing, and so he played three.

“He does things that he thinks are right and what he thinks is true,” said Brandon Harris, who was Pitman’s quarterbac­ks coach when Colin played.

The kid was talented enough, friendly enough, empathetic enough that after a while, peers and teachers just got used to the star athlete going to sit with the lonely kid at lunch or inviting friends to his home to meet his pet tortoise, Sammy.

“That’s Colin,” said Sanchez, the Pitman guidance counselor. “He beats to a little bit different drum.”

How else to explain the time he took his first stand — one that could’ve derailed Colin’s football career entirely? A decade ago, he was determined to play college football, but some teams believed he’d pursue a pro baseball career. Only one school, the University of Nevada, offered Colin a scholarshi­p, and its football coach, Chris Ault, asked the young man to skip his senior baseball season.

Pitman coaches advised Colin to do what he’d been asked. Teammates told him to look out for his own future. Colin, though, was not willing to let down the baseball team, so no, he told Ault, he could not oblige.

Do what you must, he told the one football coach who wanted him, but he believed some things were worth standing up for. Pack’s black players. But his skin tone and middle-class dialect gave him away, and a few of Kaepernick’s new friends sometimes referred to him as “whitewashe­d.”

“A lot of white people are racist toward him,” former Nevada offensive lineman John Bender said, “but a lot of black people are racist toward him, too.”

Bender, who remains close with Kaepernick, thought about it and continued.

“He’s kind of on the fence here, in-between,” he said.

Unable to find himself, he drifted in the locker room with a different objective: If his story was unique and unrelatabl­e, he would learn theirs — struggle and experience absorption, the only way he knew to connect.

“You could just kind of see him working through that identity and feeling compelled to relate,” said Tyler Lantrip, a former Nevada quarterbac­k who was Kaepernick’s roommate during road trips.

The years passed, and Kaepernick found purpose in the exercise; if he could understand the journeys of others, perhaps he could feel more at ease with his own. After he had mastered the Nevada locker room, absorbing its stories and developing a kind of compassion-based leadership teammates would recall years later, he moved on — working at the Reno Boys & Girls Club and, after the 49ers drafted him in 2011, asking old friends and former Phil Sanchez, Kaepernick’s former high school guidance counselor. coaches what they needed.

Once, a former Pitman coach said, he casually mentioned to Kaepernick about an underprivi­leged school he’d visited in Southern California; before long Kaepernick had arranged for a truck to be loaded with Nike gear and offloaded at a school he’d never been to. All he asked in return was for the former coach to keep his generosity a secret.

And that became one of his things: He loved football, but it was the fame he sometimes struggled with. He sometimes came off as aloof or difficult to reporters, withdrawin­g further after a columnist criticized Kaepernick’s tattoos and compared his appearance with that of a prison inmate. The young player with the household name and cocky finishing move — “Kaepernick­ing,” during the 2012 NFL season, was the celebrator­y act of kissing those tattooed biceps — seemed to blanch in the spotlight.

Seen by some friends as an introvert, he passed on the restaurant or bar crowds and preferred to read — books about colonialis­m, black empowermen­t and feminism seemed to strike a chord — or invite friends to his home and exchange stories. When he did go out, it was to quietly attend lectures on black representa­tion at the University of California­Berkeley or to slip over to Modesto to visit a youth camp for children with heart defects, the silent affliction­s Kaepernick himself had never experience­d but had nonetheles­s absorbed through his parents’ stories and hopes for Lance and Kent. He’d play with the youngsters and collect their Valentines and belt out “This Little Light of Mine” with one stipulatio­n: He often preferred the camp’s founder, Kimberlie Gamino, not tell anyone.

“It was something that had to do,” Gamino said.

Early last summer, Kaepernick found himself feeling drawn to a different kind of story: those involving police and African-Americans. His social media feeds, previously used for motivation­al quotes or to chirp at teammates, became a pulpit. He shared videos and unvarnishe­d reactions, a dramatic break from the normally bland public commentary of NFL quarterbac­ks.

“This is what lynchings look like in 2016!” he wrote on an Instagram post about the death of Alton Sterling, who died in Baton Rouge, after two police officers shot him.

“We are under attack! It’s clear as day!” Kaepernick wrote a day later, alongside a video showing the immediate aftermath of Philando Castile’s shooting by a Minnesota police officer.

“Apparently this is what our system calls justice,” he wrote a few weeks later, after charges were dropped against three Baltimore police officers following the death of Freddie Gray.

Kaepernick was absorbing again, and as it turns out this was his identity; by last September, he had taken on all he could. Now there was something else he just had to do.

“I couldn’t see another ‘hashtag Sandra Bland,’ ‘hashtag Tamir Rice,’ ‘hashtag Walter Scott,’ ‘hashtag Eric Garner,’” Kaepernick told reporters late last summer. “The list goes on and on and on.

“At what point do we do something about it?” he just ongoing protest, he did not vote in the 2016 election and suggested his participat­ion would’ve been “hypocritic­al.”

Though he sends occasional statements via his social media channels, Kaepernick has again shown himself to be a reluctant messenger: He moved to New York earlier this year but has not conducted an in-depth interview since January; he rarely appears in public and has in fact been asked by event organizers to not appear at rallies in his name.

Critics wonder what it is Kaepernick actually hopes will come out of this, and when it comes to his endgame, he has so far allowed others to speak for him. Symone Sanders, the former Bernie Sanders spokeswoma­n, said it’s for the NFL to institute an advocacy policy and form a commission on race relations. Bender, Kaepernick’s former college teammate, said his friend hopes to bring continued awareness and further advance the conversati­on on race. Kevin Livingston, an activist who staged a smaller rally for Kaepernick in May, said there is no finish line; that “Colin won already” by forcing people to rethink the national anthem.

Boyer, the former Green Beret and college football player, has a different theory: that there was no long-term plan; that Kaepernick, an introverte­d man who now stands at the center of one of the most controvers­ial issues in America, has once again thrust himself into the in-between.

It was last summer when Boyer wrote an open letter to Kaepernick, who until then had sat on the 49ers’ bench while the national anthem was performed, explaining the message Kaepernick’s actions sent to veterans.

“Even though my initial reaction to your protest was one of anger,” Boyer wrote in the letter published by the Army Times, “I’m trying to listen to what you’re saying and why you’re doing it.”

Boyer’s words reached Kaepernick, and the veteran’s willingnes­s to listen felt familiar. Kaepernick himself collected the motivation­s of others, and so on a Thursday last September, the quarterbac­k sent an UberX to transport Boyer the three hours to San Diego, where that evening the 49ers would be playing their final preseason game.

They met in a hotel lobby, and Kaepernick listened as Boyer shared stories from the battlefiel­d and recovery rooms. The player had never thought of it from that perspectiv­e, didn’t know — before Boyer pointed it out — that the Chargers would be honoring current and former military personnel that evening before kickoff, hadn’t fully considered the passion and fury he was igniting on either side.

And as Kaepernick absorbed as he had so frequently done, he asked a question. “What can I do?” Boyer would remember Kaepernick asking, and Boyer suggested a few ideas.

Kaepernick liked one more than the others, and later that evening Boyer joined Kaepernick on the 49ers’ sideline and heard cheers from some pockets of Qualcomm Stadium and boos from others. As color guards unfurled an American flag and paratroope­rs descended toward the field, Boyer saw the coming moments as an important crossroads.

He hoped the quarterbac­k next to him would reconsider his plan; how moving would it be, Boyer wondered, if Kaepernick remained standing? Then a moment later, with a Navy petty officer preparing to sing “The Star-Spangled Banner,” Boyer covered his heart and, out of the corner of his eye, saw Kaepernick drop to one knee.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Activists rally in support of NFL quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick outside the offices of the National Football League on Aug. 23 in New York City.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES Activists rally in support of NFL quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick outside the offices of the National Football League on Aug. 23 in New York City.
 ?? AP/FILE ?? 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick began his kneeling protests for human rights during the national anthems before NFL games.
AP/FILE 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick began his kneeling protests for human rights during the national anthems before NFL games.

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