The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Bills rookie Fromm QB apologizes for racially insensitiv­e comment

- By John Wawrow

BUFFALO, N.Y. » Buffalo Bills rookie quarterbac­k Jake Fromm apologized for using the phrase “elite white people” in a text conversati­on from more than a year ago, and posted on social media early June 4.

The former Georgia starter posted his apology on his Twitter account, in which he wrote: “I’m truly sorry for my words and actions and humbly ask for forgivenes­s.”

In saying he never meant to imply he was an elite white male, which he noted during the text conversati­on, Fromm added: “There’s no excuse for that word choice and sentiment. While it was poor, my heart is not.”

Fromm, selected in the fifth round of the draft in April, said he also apologized to his teammates and coaches in a team meeting.

“He was wrong and he admitted it to us. We don’t condone what he said,” the Bills said in a released statement. “We will continue to work with Jake on the responsibi­lities of being a Buffalo Bill on and off the field.”

Defensive coordinato­r Leslie Frazier, who is black, addressed Fromm’s comments and apology during his already scheduled Zoom call with reporters. He expects the Bills leadership group to reach out to the quarterbac­k and hoped this can become a teachable moment.

“Jake seemed very sincere in his apology,” Frazier said.

“He made a mistake and he acknowledg­ed it. There are a number of us that can say the same thing at some point or another, especially in our youth,” he added. “You move on and you grow from it. And that’s what we’re going to try to do I’m sure as a team, grow from it. I know Jake wants to grow from it as well.”

Fromm’s text conversati­on was captured in two screen shots and posted on an account with the name of @ashleymp20 shortly before 1 a.m. The exchange, which took place in March 2019, features four consecutiv­e texts from Fromm, which begin with: “I thought we were talkin about lots of stuff.”

Fromm then proceeds to write: “But no guns are good. They need to let me get suppressor­s. Just make them very expensive so only elite white people can get them haha.”

The revelation of the text exchange comes at a sensitive time, a little over a week after George Floyd was killed while being arrested by police in Minnesota. Floyd’s death has resulted in a large number of protests taking place across the nation, including Buffalo.

“Now, more than ever, is the time for support and togetherne­ss and I stand against racism 100%” Fromm wrote in his apology. “I promise to commit myself to being a part of the solution in this country.”

Frazier shared a story with the team dating to when he played for the Chicago Bears in the 1980s. He recalled being stopped and questioned by police for being in a suburban Chicago mall. It wasn’t until after police realized he was a Bears player when the tone of the conversati­on changed.

“If I had been Leslie Frazier, Citizen A, who knows where the conversati­on would’ve gone,” Frazier said.

“But that’s the platform athletics gives you,” he said. “I wanted our guys to understand they have a golden opportunit­y at this moment to use the pedestal and the platform that they have to get involved and make a difference in their own way.”

In Fromm’s case, Frazier hoped players don’t judge the rookie too harshly.

“It’s easy to just continue down that hate, hate, hate, road, but that’s not where we want to be,” Frazier said. “If we want to change this, there has to be a reciprocal effort on both sides, and we have enough guys on our team that want change for the better.”

The Bills had a similar situation occur with current starter Josh Allen upon being selected in the first round of the 2018 draft. Allen apologized after it was revealed on the day of the draft that he posted a series of racially insensitiv­e tweets while still in high school.

Though the Bills did not have an immediate need at quarterbac­k, general manager Brandon Beane acknowledg­ed Fromm was too good of a talent to pass up when Buffalo made the 167th pick. With Allen as Buffalo’s establishe­d starter, and with the NFL’s spring practice schedule wiped out by the coronaviru­s pandemic, the expectatio­n is for Fromm to compete with Matt Barkley and Davis Webb for the backup job.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Georgia quarterbac­k Jake Fromm speaks during a news conference at the NFL scouting combine on Feb. 25 in Indianapol­is.
MICHAEL CONROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Georgia quarterbac­k Jake Fromm speaks during a news conference at the NFL scouting combine on Feb. 25 in Indianapol­is.

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