Lights! Camera! Action! This isn’t a Hollywood movie set, but a publicity stunt on a high school football field in Scottsdale, Ariz. NFL quarterback wannabe Colin Kaepernick backpedals, throws a pass to Seattle Seahawks’ receiver Ty Lockett, who is standing flat-footed still, 10 yards downfield. A man holding a camera and taking video of Kaepernick, captures the unwelcome NFL free agent.
Following Kaepernick’s workout, the video is loaded on his social media, supposedly in hopes of attracting an NFL contract. It’s been six years since the radical social justice warrior has played in the NFL, and none of the league’s teams have given Kaepernick a sniff, but his trainer insists five teams inquired about his client’s fitness after the video went public.
David Robinson, a trainer who has worked with NFL stars like Dez Bryant and Antonio Brown, told TMZ Sports that the NFL teams contacted him for details on Kaepernick’s physical fitness.
TMZ’s report states:
“David Robinson — a famous football trainer who works with some of the NFL’s best — says multiple NFL teams have contacted him to inquire about Colin Kaepernick following a recent work-out he had with the QB.”
Kaepernick, the man responsible for the new kneeling movement during sports events’ national anthem renditions in 2016, is Kaepernick. Later, he accused the NFL of conspiring to stop him signing in a suit. The case was settled for millions. He doesn’t really want to return to the NFL and reap the league minimum salary because he makes a lot more money by playing the social justice warrior/victim’s role. He has also often criticized the NFL.
Kaepernick’s radical activism gained him millions of dollars in profits from NIKE endorsements and ESPN and Netflix documentaries. He also released a book of essays calling for the abolition of police officers. He needs NFL pass rushers like the Rams’ Aaron Donald smashing him to the ground like he needs a hole in the head.
In an interview with Ebony Magazine last fall, Kaepernick said he won’t give it up because he believes he can still lead another team to the Super Bowl. That’s the false perception he wants out there, so that when he doesn’t get a chance to play again, the dollars roll in for him as a pariah and victim of racism.
Robinson insists that the NFL teams contacting him “appeared to have a legitimate interest in getting his take on the QB — after the 34-year-old threw in front of him for several hours at a Texas H.S. last week.”
Robinson said that Kaepernick has “definitely the ability” to be on a roster. Some of the NFL players that attended the session said his arm strength is comparable to the NFL’s.
“So, yeah. He looked real good.”
Kaepernick hasn’t lost his “fastball,” and still has “a cannon” for an arm, Robinson added.
Kaepernick has been traveling around the US (which he doesn’t like) for this month. Kaepernick, who has been working out with Lockett recently, often only had his trainer to throw to. He is looking for more professional to help him practice. He isn’t quite up to Cooper Kupp or Davante Adam in terms of his trainer.
It doesn’t matter who is receiving those passes. Because it’s all a big publicity stunt, played by an actor playing the role of a victim of racial injustice. And he continues to make big SJW bucks. Lights! Action! Camera!