dougthonus wrote:2) colin kaepernick's estimated net worth is $20 mil. after earning $43 mil in salary as a player. it certainly didn't benefit him to speak out. including the avalanche of criticism. and he couldn't possibly have thought that kneeling during the national anthem would have blown up into what it did. so anybody who suggests he did what he did for personal benefit isn't making sense on multiple levels. it gives him an awful lot of credit, actually. because while i appreciate his stance, he frankly doesn't strike me as the brightest guy
Hard to say. 43M as a player in salary? That means his take home was probably 26M.
and that's before his agent and others working for him take their cut. and possible some of the extravagent spending that rich athletes tend to engage in. also he's given quite a bit to charity
To have most of that left still seems like he's done okay. He had only a very brief stretch as a marketable player anyway. I think he would likely have 5-10M more if he hadn't done this. I do think he was blackballed for it. He also did seem to get at least some sponsorship for doing it too though, but probably not as much as he lost.
maybe he'd have a bit more money, maybe he wouldn't. regardless, his actions surely weren't with financial benefit in mind
blackballed is a very specific term that suggests some kind of collusion, which i certainly don't think happened. it seems pretty clear that in the first year or two he simply wasn't considered a good enough player to warrant the distraction and possible boycotts that would come with having him on the roster. and at this point nobody could reasonably expect him to even play at an nfl backup level. that public workout he had a while back was clearly for show
3) lebron called the president a bum on social media (which i can't imagine is good for his brand). social media didn't exist decades ago. having a microphone in front of you is very different than being alone with your phone. there are a lot more people saying a lot more things that end up in the public sphere, often not well thought out
I would imagine its great for his brand. I would imagine the vast majority of his market are not Trump supporters. You could stay neutral as Jordan, but I don't think it hurts you even a little bit to be anti-Trump as an NBA player.
think of the racial makeup at nba games. countless white people across america buy lebron jerseys, many of whom are indeed trump supporters. i think that a lot more people would NOT buy his merch because of his political stance than would buy it simply because of what he speaks out about
if my favorite athlete took a stance that offended me, maybe i wouldn't be a fan anymore. whereas if an athlete that i didn't care about said something that i liked, it's very unlikely i'd become a fan based on that alone. there are exceptions certainly. for example, i occasionally see someone in chicago with a kaepernick jersey, which i can't imagine would be the case if he was still known for football
4) i don't recall there being as many prominent social justice groups being around even a decade ago, let alone in the late 20th century. they allow people to speak out to attach themselves to something and partially shield themselves from being singled out. maybe if craig hodges had a black lives matter to support rather than louis farrakhan, he would have lasted longer in the league
I don't know, different groups have been around for as long as I can remember. The causes of prominence change as times change of course.
i remember malcolm x hats being briefly in fashion amongst athletes when spike lee's movie about him came out. but nothing along the lines of black live matter or 'i can't breathe'

guess the fashion statement and the fact that it was his buddy's movie outweighed the political aspect for MJ!