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Seattle Seahawks

Seahawks postpone meeting with Colin Kaepernick over anthem, off-field questions

In this Dec. 11, 2016, file photo, San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick stands in the bench area during the second half of the team’s NFL football game against the New York Jets in Santa Clara, Calif. According to reports, Kaepernick is still unsure what his plans would be for his off-field activities if he were to play football in 2018. (Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP)
By Bob Condotta Seattle Times

SEATTLE – The Seattle Seahawks had planned to bring in former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick for a workout in their ongoing search for a backup to Russell Wilson, but postponed the meeting when he said he did not know what his plan for his off-field social activism is going forward, including whether he would continue to kneel for the national anthem.

The news was first reported Thursday by ESPN’s Adam Schefter and later confirmed by the Seattle Times.

A source told the Times that the Seahawks asked Kaepernick what his plans would be for his off-field activities if he were to play football in 2018 and that Kaepernick – who kneeled for the anthem during his most recent season in the NFL with the 49ers in 2016 – said he didn’t know. The Seahawks apparently are not solely concerned about Kaepernick kneeling for the anthem but want assurances of his commitment to football.

With Kaepernick saying he was unclear of his future off-field plans, the Seahawks then decided to postpone the trip for now so that coach Pete Carroll and general manager John Schneider could further discuss the situation, but left the door open that Kaepernick could still be considered and brought in for a visit. The team’s hope is that Kaepernick can still be brought in for a visit and considered as an option at backup quarterback.

Seattle has only Wilson on its roster at quarterback after releasing Trevone Boykin last month following his arrest in Texas on suspicion of domestic violence.

Seattle also brought in Kaepernick for a visit last May after which Carroll said the team did not sign him due in part because “he’s a starter in this league and I can’t imagine – we have a starter. But he’s a starter in this league and I can’t imagine somebody won’t give him a chance to play.”

Under Carroll, the Seahawks have been regarded as being as supportive of players’ social stances and on- and off-field activities as any team in the NFL. Carroll publicly supported the decision of Michael Bennett to sit for the anthem last season (with Bennett often joined by most of the rest of the defensive line). Carroll also supported the team’s decision to stay in the locker room for the anthem before a game at Tennessee when the players wanted to make a statement following a tweet from President Donald Trump criticizing players who did not stand for the anthem.

But Carroll also said at the end of last season that he thought some of the off-field activities took a toll on the team’s performance on the field, especially the loss at Tennessee following a day of meetings to discuss what the team should do, and seemed to hint that he hoped the team would be more focused on football in 2018. Since then, the team has traded Bennett to Philadelphia.

“You know, I think it had an effect in the game that week in Tennessee, yeah, I really do think it had an effect,” Carroll said in his season-ending press conference on Jan. 2. “I think it had an effect on a lot of teams and a lot of players. It was an extraordinarily heated time. I think that was a different amount of emotional output that occurred before the game. It looked like it the way we played; it looked like it took its toll, and we had gone through the whole process in doing what we did. We needed to do it, and we couldn’t avoid it. We had to face it and we had to deal with it, and the other team called us up and said ‘What are you guys going to do,’ and they said ‘OK, we’ll do that, too.’ I don’t know if they went through the same process that we went through or not, I don’t know, but I know we did. Honestly, if I could’ve done something about it I would’ve. I don’t think that there was anything but needing to face it; it’s too real.

“I did find out during the course of the year that guys didn’t want to stay on the topic. It was too draining and it was too deep and I hope in the off-season, guys can come back around to find what they want to work at and learn and grow with, but it was draining. It’s a real-life discussion that we’re talking about here when we’re talking about inequality and justice and stuff like that. There’s real-life stuff here that needs to be talked about and needs to continue to be connected with, but in the course of a football season and all of those factors that contributed to keeping that alive, some came from across the country, and some came right internally from the locker room, and it was all over the place. It was taxing; and I think it is something to not be forgotten about this football season. I think it was part of it.”

Kaepernick did not play in 2017 after spending the 2011-16 seasons on the roster of the 49ers. He led San Francisco to the Super Bowl following the 2012 season and then to the NFC title game following the 2013 season when the Seahawks beat San Francisco 23-17 at CenturyLink Field when Richard Sherman tipped a Kaepernick pass into the hands of Malcolm Smith for a game-clinching interception in the final seconds.

The 30-year-old is 28-30 in his career as a starter.