USA TODAY US Edition

Raiders teammates give Lynch support

Coach: Players free to express selves

- Lindsay H. Jones @bylindsayh­jones USA TODAY Sports

CALIF. Whether he chooses to sit or stand during renditions of the national anthem, Marshawn Lynch has the support of his Oakland Raiders teammates and coaches.

Tuesday, head coach Jack Del Rio told USA TODAY Sports that he encourages his players to be themselves.

“We want to have a collection of individual­s that come together as a team to play football. We don’t need everybody in the organizati­on to think the same way I think or have the same feelings that I have about different topics,” Del Rio said.

“I mean, we’re in America. That’s one of the things we have. We have the freedom to be ourselves.”

Lynch, who joined the Raiders after a one-year retirement in 2016, sat on a cooler near the Oakland bench while The StarSpangl­ed Banner played before Saturday’s preseason game at the Arizona Cardinals. He declined multiple requests to speak to reporters Tuesday after the first open practice since the game.

Del Rio said Saturday that his new star explained to him that he’d sat during the anthem while playing for the Seattle Seahawks. The gesture has taken greater significan­ce in the last year, however, after former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick opted to sit, and later kneel, during the anthem to protest social injustice.

Lynch did not tell teammates beforehand that he planned to sit last weekend, nor has he discussed it at length in the days since, said Raiders linebacker Bruce Irvin, who also played with Lynch in Seattle.

Irvin said he’d always support Lynch.

“I’ve seen ‘Beast Mode’ (Lynch’s nickname) sit down during the national anthem when I was in Seattle. I don’t know if he’s taking part in a protest or he’s just being ‘Beast Mode,’ ” Irvin, who raised a fist during the anthem during several games last season himself, told USA TODAY Sports.

Irvin is undecided about whether he’ll do any sort of protest this season. He said he had a long conversati­on with former Seattle teammate Michael Bennett, who sat during the anthem before a game in Los Angeles on Sunday. Bennett told reporters his decision was “bigger than football” as he wanted to use his platform as a prominent NFL player to discuss racial issues and social injustice.

“When you do something like that, you have got to back it up, you’ve got to know what you’re going to say, you’ve got to give a reason why you’re doing it,” Irvin said.

“I think (Bennett) did a great job in doing that.”

Lynch, who debated with Raiders officials about addressing his own actions Tuesday, might soon do the same.

 ?? MARK J. REBILAS, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Raiders coach Jack Del Rio, shown with Marshawn Lynch, says, “We have the freedom to be ourselves.”
MARK J. REBILAS, USA TODAY SPORTS Raiders coach Jack Del Rio, shown with Marshawn Lynch, says, “We have the freedom to be ourselves.”

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