The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

John Carlos, Colin Kaepernick share bond

‘Players change but the game stays the same.’

- By Wallace Matthews

Nearly a half-century before Colin Kaepernick took a knee, John Carlos and Tommie Smith raised a fist.

The sight of two black American athletes — one a gold medalist and the other a bronze, standing on the podium with their heads bowed and their black leather glove-encased fists in the air while the national anthem played at the Mexico City Olympics — became one of the most iconic images of the 1960s.

So it is hardly surprising that 50 years later, fate and a similar set of circumstan­ces have brought Kaepernick and Carlos together to discuss how far race relations in this country have come since that explosive summer of 1968 — and how much further they still have to go.

“Mr. Kaepernick is one of those individual­s who step out from the norm and make their presence known because no one else is doing it,” Carlos, 73, said by telephone from his home in Atlanta. “It was a very courageous thing he did and I support him.”

The two first came together shortly after Kaepernick began his protest in 2016 when the two were in New York on separate business matters. It was Carlos who first reached out to Kaepernick, but soon the younger man was asking the older man for guidance and a sense of what was to come for him.

“He wanted to know what it was like for me and Tommie 50 years ago,” Carlos said. “I told him it was pretty much the same scenario he’s in now, that only the dates have changed. I told him I’m sure it was the same for Jack Johnson, and for Paul Robeson, and Jackie Robinson and anyone else who came before us. The players change but the game stays the same.”

For Carlos and Smith, it meant immediate expulsion from the Olympic Village by IOC Chairman Avery Brundage, who had no problem with the Nazi salute when he headed the USOC at the 1936 Berlin Games but was outraged by what was called a “Black Power” salute in 1968.

Over the past 10 years, Carlos has been awarded three honorary doctorates. A bronze statue of him and Smith on the medal stand now stands on the campus of San Jose State University. The two men were honored with the Arthur Ashe Award for Courage at the 2008 ESPY Awards, and both delivered eulogies and served as pallbearer­s at the funeral of Peter Norman, the Australian sprinter who took the silver medal in their 200-meter final and stood in support with them on the medal stand.

Carlos believes that at some point, a similar destiny may await Kaepernick, who recently accepted a settlement in his anti-collusion lawsuit against the NFL.

“I think he did it for the same reason Tommie and I did it,” Carlos said. “For his children and for individual­s who come after him. Maybe someday people will realize that.”

Of course, Kaepernick’s situation is different from Carlos’. Despite being kept off the football field for the past two years, Kaepernick did earn $14 million in his last NFL season and has since scored an endorsemen­t deal with Nike. The terms of the settlement with the NFL were not released but is safe to assume there were monetary considerat­ions, which has led some to criticize Kaepernick as a sellout who abandoned his principles for some NFL cash.

“Anyone who thinks that hasn’t really thought the situation through,” Carlos said. “All those years that he sat out no one was concerned about the millions of dollars he was losing. Nobody was worried about the sacrifice he was making. So now it’s not right to criticize him for settling the lawsuit.”

One bit of advice Carlos did give Kaepernick was one that the former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k may not have wanted to hear.

“I told him that if he was going to stick to his principles, to not even consider going back to football,” Carlos said. “He had his hopes and prayers that he was going to play again, but I told him that once he was out, it was going to be very difficult to get back in. And if they did let him back in, it would only be to crush his ego, to show him that he’s not good enough anymore.”

With the settlement, Kaepernick is now free to pursue a return to the league, but at 31 years old and with two years of inactivity behind him.

“I don’t think that was crystal-clear in his mind when he made this decision,” Carlos said. “I don’t think he realized how when you make a statement like he did, it spills over into far greater than yourself. It affects everyone around you.”

Carlos said he and Kaepernick have not spoken since the QB settled his lawsuit — “He’s a kind of reclusive type of guy” — but said the next time one of them picks up the phone, he will have some advice for the exiled QB.

“This thing is your train and you’ve got to drive it,” he said, referring to the need for Kaepernick to keep up the fight. “Now that you’ve proved your point, you can’t go dormant. Now’s the time to turn the volume up.”

 ?? AP ?? Extending gloved hands skyward in racial protest, Tommie Smith (center) and John Carlos stare downward during the national anthem at the 1968 Olympics.
AP Extending gloved hands skyward in racial protest, Tommie Smith (center) and John Carlos stare downward during the national anthem at the 1968 Olympics.
 ?? NHAT V. MEYER / BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The 49ers’ Eli Harold (from left), Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid kneel during the national anthem before their game in 2016.
NHAT V. MEYER / BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The 49ers’ Eli Harold (from left), Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid kneel during the national anthem before their game in 2016.

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