Most of NFL's Houston Texans kneel during
anthem after owner's 'inmates' remark
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[October 30, 2017]
(Reuters) - Most of the National
Football League's Houston Texans team knelt in protest as the national
anthem was played for Sunday's game in Seattle, an apparent rebuke of
team owner Bob McNair for his remark about "inmates running the prison."
Backlash over the comment rekindled a national debate over NFL players,
mostly African-Americans, who have broken with tradition by taking a
knee or raising their fists during "The "Star-Spangled Banner" to
protest racial bias in the U.S. criminal justice system.
U.S President Donald Trump escalated the controversy in September when
he suggested owners should fire any "son of a bitch" who refused to
stand for the anthem.
The opening ceremonies of the Texans' late-afternoon game against the
Seattle Seahawks were not broadcast live on CBS. But the network's "Post
Game Show" aired a brief clip of Houston's players collectively taking a
knee with arms linked along the sideline during the national anthem.
According to the Seattle Times, nine of the Texans stood for the anthem,
but the rest were kneeling or seated. The New York Times said about 40
players in all refused to stand. It marked the first time that the
Texans as a team knelt in protest during the national anthem, the
Houston Chronicle reported.
The players were widely reported to have been planning an en masse
demonstration against McNair over his choice of words.
"We can't have the inmates running the prison," McNair was quoted as
saying during a recent meeting with league executives and owners,
exhorting them to consider how the kneeling protests could hurt the
NFL's bottom line.
The comment, first disclosed in an article published online by ESPN The
Magazine on Friday, sparked immediate outrage from players, fans and
supporters of the anthem protests as the NFL sought to tamp down the
issue.
In a public apology after meeting on Saturday with the players, McNair,
79, a billionaire who like many NFL owners contributed to Trump's
presidential campaign, insisted that his "inmates" metaphor had been
misinterpreted.
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Houston Texans inside linebacker Benardrick McKinney (55),
linebacker Ben Heeney (50), strong safety Marcus Gilchrist (21) and
teammates kneel during the national anthem before kickoff against
the Seattle Seahawks at CenturyLink Field. Mandatory Credit: Joe
Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports
"I was not referring to our players when I made a very regretful
comment during the owners meeting last week," he said. "I was
referring to the relationship between the league office and team
owners and how they have been making significant strategic decisions
affecting our league without adequate input from ownership over the
past few years."
He added: "I am truly sorry to the players for how this has impacted
them and the perception that it has created for me which could not
be further from the truth."
Asked after Sunday's 41-38 loss in Seattle how the Texans players'
meeting a day earlier went with McNair, Houston offensive tackle
Duane Brown told the Chronicle, "not too well."
The newspaper said McNair did not attend Sunday's away game due to
health issues.
The national anthem protests began in 2016 when Colin Kaepernick,
then a San Francisco 49ers quarterback, began sitting and later
kneeling during the anthem to call attention to police shootings of
unarmed black men in the United States.
Kaepernick was not signed by any team after becoming a free agent
following the 2016 season. He has filed a claim of illegal collusion
against the league's owners.
(Reporting by Gina Cherelus in New York and Steve Gorman in Los
Angeles; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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