Texans coach Bill O’Brien won’t back down, would take a knee if players asked him

Houston Texans coach Bill O’Brien says he would still take a knee during the national anthem if the players asked him to join them.

Houston Texans coach and general manager Bill O’Brien stated in June that he would join his players in kneeling during the national anthem if asked.

The 51-year-old reaffirmed Thursday after the team’s virtual kickoff luncheon that he would take a knee if the players asked.

“I think you asked me if the players asked me to take a knee, would I take a knee, and I said yes,” O’Brien said. “I’m not going back on that. I think now moving forward here we’re going to talk about those things as a team.”

O’Brien, who enters his seventh season as the Texans’ coach, pointed out it is a conversation that will be had after more pressing football matters dictated by deadlines.

“I think right now we have some things that we have to get done,” said O’Brien. “We have to get the roster down here by Saturday. We’ve got to review last night’s scrimmage. We’ve got several other things that are going on.”

O’Brien mentioned that the Texans could coordinate with the Kansas City Chiefs, their hosts for Week 1, on making a statement that would raise awareness of social justice causes across the league.

Said O’Brien: “I know we’ll get to that subject and we’ll talk about it and we’ll put a lot of thought into it and we’ll make the right decision, maybe along with Kansas City as to what we want to do to continue to really make people aware of the social justice initiatives that are taking place across the NFL.”

O’Brien, who has told players since his 2014 arrival that he will always have their back, is considered a partner with the players in their off-field advocacies. Social justice advocates receiver Kenny Stills, safety Michael Thomas, and safety Justin Reid have spoken highly of O’Brien’s willingness to listen.

Hear Jonathan Isaac explain why he didn’t kneel during the national anthem in his own words

This is a lot.

Almost every player, coach and team personnel member in the NBA knelt during the national anthem throughout the start of the league’s opening weekend on Friday. Players from the four teams that played on Thursday did the same.

The only NBA player who did not take a knee during the national anthem was Orlando Magic forward Jonathan Isaac.

Isaac stuck out like a sore thumb. Not only was Isaac not on his knees, he also chose not to wear the Black Lives Matter warmup shirts the NBA provided and he didn’t wear a social justice message on the back of his jersey.

The picture is absolutely jarring.

Isaac is well within his right to stand for the anthem, not wear the warmup shirt and even to forgo devoting the name on the back of his jersey to a cause he believes in.

That’s what the movement is all about — Black folks having the freedom to choose. He doesn’t have to do any of it.

Where things get tricky, though, is in his explanation of why he didn’t. Isaac was asked by Bleacher Report’s Taylor Rooks why he stood for the anthem instead of kneeling with his teammates. Here’s what he had to say.

“Kneeling or wearing a Black Lives Matter t-shirt didn’t go hand in hand with supporting Black lives…I believe that, for myself, my life has been supported through the Gospel of Jesus Christ and that everyone is made in the image of God and that we all fall short of God’s glory. And that each and every one of us every day do things that we shouldn’t do. We say things we shouldn’t say. We hate and dislike whatever we hate and dislike. And sometimes, we get into pointing fingers.”

That’s a lot. Again, Isaac is well within his right to not participate in these acts of solidarity with his contemporaries.

He’s not the only one who didn’t kneel — neither did Gregg Popovich or Becky Hammon. He’s not the only one who didn’t change the back of his jersey. Neither did LeBron James. They all have their reasons as to why they aren’t.

But Isaac’s explanation uses religion to explain away racism and violence against Black people and people of color across America. And that’s highly questionable.

That’s why Rook’s follow up question was so important.

“I don’t think that kneeling or putting on a t-shirt, for me personally, is the answer. I feel like, for me, Black lives are supported through the Gospel. All lives are supported through the Gospel. We all…have things that we do wrong.” 

There you have it. Make of it what you will.

Pete Carroll: ‘Somebody’s interested’ in quarterback Colin Kaepernick

Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll believes there is at least one NFL team who could be interested in signing quarterback Colin Kaepernick.

Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll expressed regret on Thursday for the team not having signed quarterback Colin Kaepernick in 2017 after he opted out of his contract with the San Francisco 49ers.

Since then, the famous, one-starting signal-caller has yet to find a new NFL home.

That could all change, however, if Carroll’s information on the subject is indeed correct.

“After all of the time, the years that have passed, I never received a phone call, I never talked to another head coach about it, never talked to anybody about it until today,” Carroll told reporters Thursday during a video conference. “I got a phone call today. I’m not going to tell you who it was. I got a phone call today asking and inquiring about the situation. So somebody’s interested, you know, and we’ll see what happens with that.”

Carroll himself does not see a place for Kaepernick on the Seahawks squad in the immediate future with Russell Wilson the solid starter and Geno Smith a good fit for the backup position.

Hopefully, there truly is a club with a need and an interest.

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Texans coach Bill O’Brien on taking a knee with players: ‘I’m all for it’

Houston Texans coach and general manager Bill O’Brien says he would be willing to take a knee with players during the national anthem.

NFL players have taken a knee during the national anthem since the 2016 season when Colin Kaepernick of the San Francisco 49ers started the practice. However, Bill O’Brien might join the ranks.

The Houston Texans coach and general manager believes players have the right to protest and be heard, and he would take a knee in solidarity with his players.

“Yeah, I’ll take a knee — I’m all for it,” O’Brien said via John McClain of the Houston Chronicle. “The players have a right to protest, a right to be heard and a right to be who they are. They’re not taking a knee because they’re against our flag. They’re taking a knee because they haven’t been treated equally in this country for over 400 years.”

The response is part of a larger feeling inside the organization that the club needs to be a part of social justice. Chairman and CEO Cal McNair hopes his club be the “pebble in the pond” to create larger ripples of change following the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police on May 25.

“When you think about how big the issue is, if we can help make a little change in Houston, maybe it’ll be like a pebble in the pond that creates a ripple,” McNair said. “What happened to George Floyd brought to life something that’s bigger than football, and you can’t ignore it. We felt like we couldn’t stay silent. We felt like we had to say and do something. We want to help make changes.”

Unlike boxing where heavyweight legend Muhammed Ali was able to champion causes because the spotlight was on him, football is a team sport. The players have a natural cap on their impact. However, much like the concept of teamwork in football, if backed by coaches and the organization, players’ messages of change have greater impact.

Seahawks coach Pete Carroll regrets not signing Colin Kaepernick

Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll regrets not signing quarterback Colin Kaepernick in 2017 after his visit with the team.

Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll regrets not signing quarterback Colin Kaepernick when the team had the opportunity in 2017.

After Kaepernick opted out of his contract with the 49ers, he had a visit with the Seahawks. Carroll said Kaepernick had had actually reached out to him the year before for some career advice.

“We had great meetings,” Carroll told reporters during a video conference on Thursday. “I don’t know if I had ever explained it in as much depth, but we spent half a day together and he spent time with our people throughout the building and almost a full day, and he was awesome. He just backed up even more of the play that we had seen and the character and his smarts and his togetherness and his competitiveness to the point where it was so obvious that he’s a starter in the NFL.”

Carroll explained Seattle clearly had a starter in Russell Wilson, a justification for not signing Kaepernick at the time. But many believed Kaepernick was unable to garner a contract in the NFL because of the attention his kneeling in support of social protest would bring to teams. Carroll now acknowledges Kaepernick’s message was clear.

“He was right on it,” Carroll said. “He was right on the topics about police brutality and inequality, and he was right on the subject matter at the time. That’s so obvious now where maybe all of the flak that flew about not honoring the flag and all the other things that were not even a part of the demonstration or what his intent was at all, that just skewed the whole discussion, I don’t think that’s around now. It’s different at this time frame.”

So while Carroll and the Seahawks believe they are set with Wilson as the starter and Geno Smith as the backup quarterback for now, Carroll still has regrets about what could have been.

“I regret that we weren’t the one way back when that just did it just to do it, even though I thought that it wasn’t the right fit necessarily for us at the time,” Carroll stated. “The reason it wasn’t the right fit is because I held him in such a high regard I didn’t see him as a backup quarterback and I didn’t want to put him in that situation with Russ. It just didn’t feel like it would fit right. That’s the way I felt about it. So I just wish it would happen, and I wish we would have been a part of it when the time was available then.

“We’re kind of set up right now, so football-wise, it doesn’t seem to fit us like I said. But there’s a lot of time here. We’ll see what happens.”

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C.J. Mosley unsure if he’ll kneel in 2020, wants Jets to have players-only meeting

C.J. Mosley wants the Jets can make a team decision on kneeling during the national anthem to protest police brutality and racial injustice.

Many NFL players will likely kneel during the national anthem in 2020 to continue raising awareness for societal and racial injustices in America. For some, it will be a personal choice. For others, like Jets linebacker C.J. Mosley, it might be a team choice.

Mosley knelt alongside players with the Ravens and the Jaguars before a 2017 game in the wake of President Donald Trump’s incendiary comments on the subject, but he said he isn’t sure if he’ll kneel in 2020. He would like the decision to protest by kneeling to be a group choice decided in a players-only meeting rather than an individual one.

“That’s something we [as Jets] have to do because it’s going to come up again. Some guys are definitely going to kneel again. Some guys won’t,” he said, according to ESPN. “I feel that as a team, as a leader, I need to talk to my teammates first and talk to coach [Adam] Gase and talk to the owner.”

The fight against police brutality and systemic racism continues to be one of the most important issues in the NFL – and the world – this year. Some of the most popular NFL players, including Jets safety Jamal Adams, vocalized their concerns on social media, took to the streets with protesters and sent a video to commissioner Roger Goodell asking him to condemn racism and say “Black Lives Matter.” Athletes from across the sports world even signed a petition urging Congress to pass a bill to eliminate qualified immunity for police.

Mosley hopes the increased activism among players will open up better communication between the front office and the locker room. He wants the dialogue to be help move the NFL through trying times, something it failed to do when Colin Kaepernick and other players first knelt during the anthem in 2016 and 2017.

“I hope the NFL and the owners can look back at that situation [in 2017] and make sure they handle it the right way,” Mosley said. “I would think the NFL and the owners and the coaches would have our backs 100 percent for support. We have to have that conversation to see where everybody’s mindset is.”

That process has already started. Goodell released a video apologizing for not listening to players who brought up the problems being protested in 2016 and said he encouraged them to keep peacefully protesting as well. Jets CEO Christopher Johnson recently gave his cell phone number to every player on the team and joined a players’ video conference to talk about the issues at hand in the hopes of opening up that line of communication.

Richard Sherman calls out Jerry Jones, Dez Bryant defends Cowboys owner

The 49ers cornerback singled out the Cowboys boss in a quote about NFL owners remaining largely silent regarding racial justice talks.

In a week where so many, from celebrities to CEOs, have come forward with formal statements and calls for change regarding racial inequality and social injustice in America, Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has remained uncharacteristically silent.

That is precisely part of the problem, says San Francisco 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman.

In an interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, Sherman expressed optimism at the growing movement within the NFL to address race. But the five-time Pro Bowler said he felt that team owners haven’t been vocal enough about joining the conversation. He singled out Jones in particular.

“It’s not pulling them like it is the rest of the country,” Sherman told the newspaper, as per ESPN. “Because if it was, then they’d speak. Jerry Jones, especially, has no problem speaking up any other time about anything else. But when it’s such a serious issue, and he could really make a huge impact on it with a few words, his silence speaks volumes.”

The Cowboys organization released a video statement late last week meant to be the first in a series that shares ongoing interactions between the team, players, and community leaders.

Jones does not appear in the video, nor has he weighed in publicly about the recent instances of police violence that have shocked the nation, the resulting protests that have taken place in cities around the globe, or the subsequent conversations and outreach efforts that have begun to spring up.

Jones’s absence at a large protest in Austin over the weekend caught the attention of former Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant. On Sunday, Bryant issued a tweet in which he wrote, “Somebody should have brought Jerry Jones, Stephen Jones, and Jason Witten to this protest down in Austin. This is not a policy change; this is a heart change. And yeah, I said it.”

While Witten responded (via Twitter) to his former teammate, Bryant’s former employer still has not. Yet on Monday, the free agent receiver defended Jones to Sports Illustrated.

“I know Jerry’s heart. He’s a compassionate person, and he’s not a racist,” Bryant said. “I have love for Mr. Jones. Almost everything I know about business- and of course, I’m still learning- I learned from him. But I believe this is a time, right now, where Mr. Jones could learn some things, too. To learn about the culture.”

The same goes, Bryant says, for chief operating officer (and Jerry’s son) Stephen.

“I’ve seen some of the other coaches and GMs from other teams start to reach out and even march,” Bryant went on. “I think that will help those teams in the locker room and on the field, for players to know that the boss is at least trying to understand.”

As for Witten, Bryant says he and the eventual Hall of Famer still have a close relationship.

“I’d like to tell Witt what I’m telling you: He can’t know what it’s like being a black man walking into a restaurant and only feeling accepted because he’s an athlete. I don’t know that Witt can know that, or that Jerry or Stephen can know it. I want them to listen to us telling them that.”

According to ESPN, Witten- now a member of the Raiders- has already met with police, religious, and business leaders in Las Vegas, looking for ways to improve relations in his new home city.

Sherman said he has been encouraged by the discussions happening within his own team.

San Francisco, of course, was the epicenter of controversy in 2016 when then-quarterback Colin Kaepernick began silently taking a knee during the playing of the national anthem in protest of systemic black oppression.

At the time, Jones famously made it clear that he would not tolerate any Cowboys player kneeling, believing it was disrespectful to the American flag. In 2017, though, as the gesture spread throughout the league, Jones joined the team in kneeling, linking arms with the players during one memorable pregame.

Given recent events, many around the sport expect there to be similar showings once games are played in 2020. It is unclear what the Cowboys- either the players or the ownership- will do, or if the two sides will agree on a unified approach. But Bryant has a suggestion on how the team owner could endear himself to his players in the meantime.

“If Jerry [participated in a protest], those guys in that locker room at The Star- knowing what he might be changing and might be sacrificing- would run through a brick wall for him,” Bryant predicted. “Jerry does that, he might just win another Super Bowl because of it.”

For now, though, Jones is inexplicably letting his silence do all the talking. And the message it’s sending is leaving a bad taste in the mouths of fans and players who are looking for the outspoken owner to do what he normally does best: speak out.

Adrian Peterson says he will ‘without a doubt’ kneel during National Anthem in 2020

With much of the world protesting racial injustice and police brutality, Peterson says he will ‘without a doubt’ kneel for national anthem.

This past week has been a crazy one in the NFL, where football players of all backgrounds have taken to social media to denounce police brutality, with many showing up to respective protests in their area to march for Black Lives Matter.

The real drama unfolded earlier in the week when New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees announced that he was against the peaceful protests that many NFL players had taken in the past, and were planning to take again when they declared that they would be kneeling during the national anthem. Brees said, “I will never agree with anybody disrespecting the flag of the United States of America.”

For Washington Redskins running back Adrian Peterson, this was a shock to hear, and something that he couldn’t stand behind.

“Once I saw the question that was asked, it was like he diverted and went straight to what he wasn’t going to participate in and what he stood for,” Peterson said, via the Houston Chronicle. “I know Drew Brees. He’s not a racist at all, and I have a lot of love for him, but I think this was a situation where he should have thought things out more and tried to look at things in a different view. He made a comment about what he thinks about his grandfather and his great-grandfather going to war.”

After Brees experienced a significant backlash in the hours after his comments went public, he later apologized for the statement and vowed to better educate himself going forward. He later disagreed with President Trump of Twitter after Trump said that Brees was one of his favorite players and that he supported his cause.

Going into the 2020 season, Peterson made it be known that he has little doubt about how players will act before games when the national anthem sounds. There will be kneeling, and they will band together as one, hoping that their message will finally be heard.

“Just four years ago, you’re seeing Kaepernick taking a knee, and now we’re all getting ready to take a knee together going into this season, without a doubt,”

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