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Source: Ezra Shaw / Getty

It’s been well over a year since Colin Kaepernick last touched an NFL football field, as the outspoken proponent of civil rights and the player that led the way on players silently protesting by taking a knee during the national anthem as all but been blackballed from the league.

There’s a lawsuit currently in the works about that very issue between Kaepernick and the NFL, and what transpired on Thursday only figures to add more fuel to the fire (and further illustrate Kaepernick’s point).

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the Seahawks had plans to bring Kaepernick in for a workout this week to see what he still had and if he’d make for a quality backup option to Russell Wilson. However, that workout was canceled after Kaepernick refused to promise Seattle he would not kneel for the anthem next season.

Considering most have pointed to Seattle as one of the league’s most progressive teams, this is both a disappointment but also not a shock. Progressive in the NFL is not exactly a high bar to clear, especially with the Bob McNair’s of the world owning teams elsewhere. For all of those that have claimed Kaepernick isn’t on a roster because he isn’t good enough, the refusal of Seattle to let him even workout over his stance on kneeling in protest of police violence against African-Americans is damning evidence that isn’t the case.

If Seattle let him workout and checked in on what he could do on the football field, they could use that cover for why they didn’t sign him, but instead they’ve chosen to take the worst possible route, if what Schefter reports is true.

 

READ MORE: Uproxx.com

Article Courtesy of Uproxx

First Picture Courtesy of Michael Zagaris and Getty Images

Second Picture Courtesy of Ezra Shaw and Getty Images

Tweet Courtesy of Twitter and Uproxx

Colin Kaepernick’s NFL Comeback Has Now Gone South  was originally published on wzakcleveland.com