USA TODAY US Edition

For Kaepernick, principles trump QB job

- Dan Wolken

No matter how systematic­ally and powerfully the NFL has tried to tell its players to stick to sports, scared witless of jeopardizi­ng its ability to profit off a fantasy, Colin Kaepernick and what he created by protesting the national anthem is bigger than any backup quarterbac­k job when it comes with strings attached.

So while there’s certainly going to be a segment of the public that uses Thursday’s reported turn of events with Kaepernick and the Seahawks to wave their I-told-you-sos at the so-called Social Justice Warriors they despise so much, perhaps the real story here is that Kaepernick remains a man of exceptiona­l principle.

Faced with an opportunit­y to potentiall­y return to the league, according to ESPN, Kaepernick refused to assure Seattle brass that he would stand for the anthem this season, causing the team to postpone a scheduled workout. USA TODAY later confirmed the report through a person with knowledge of the discussion­s who requested anonymity because of the sensitive nature.

Surely by now, Kaepernick knows what that means. Teams that needed a quarterbac­k last season passed. He hasn’t even had a tryout since he last played in 2016. The more time that passes since his last live snap, the less likely it is he’ll ever get another one.

But at this point, any attempt to sign Kaepernick with the condition that his kneeling days are over feels like little more than a setup. Given his historical significan­ce in the context of sports protests — and how he built credibilit­y that extends beyond the culture of football — going back now on the league’s terms would do more harm than good.

The history of the NFL has given us lots of good quarterbac­ks, lots of bad ones and a whole bunch in between. But Kaepernick is a singular figure who transcends all of that, now the face of a particular moment in time when many African-American athletes who play sports at the highest level decided they had something to say about what’s been happening in the real world.

In the end, whether you cheer the boldness to protest on such a risky stage or would rather roll your eyes and just watch people hit each other, Kaepernick stood for the greater good and took the more righteous path. That he’s still taking, even when there’s seemingly direct evidence that it’s costing him a chance to play, proves he’s anything but a phony or an opportunis­t. Whether you like what Kaepernick stands for, he continues to be authentic while the NFL continues to pretend the world outside its 31 stadiums doesn’t exist.

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