Trump and NFL at odds over anthem debate

The NFL says its players should stand for the national anthem but will not force them to do so, commissioner Roger Goodell has said.

Some of the San Francisco 49ers take a knee

NFL players kneeling for the US national anthem has further angered the US President. (AAP)

The National Football League has rejected US President Donald Trump's calls to punish players who kneel for the national anthem to protest racism but said on Wednesday players "should" stand and it hopes the demonstrations will stop.

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell made clear he will take a more patient approach than the one urged by the president.

Rather than using discipline, the league will continue to nurture players' efforts to fight racial disparities in the criminal justice system, believing this would make the urge to protest fade.

"We have about six or seven players that are involved in this protest at this point," Goodell told reporters after a two-day meeting with team owners and the players' union, saying he hoped that number would eventually be zero.

"What we're trying to do is deal with the underlying issue and understand what it is they're protesting."

In contrast to Trump, who has scorned any player who protests as a "son of a bitch" who should face suspension, Goodell praised the athletes as political activists trying to improve their communities.

Trump responded to Goodell's approach with impatience.

"Too much talk, not enough action," he wrote, referring to the league, in a Twitter post on Wednesday afternoon.

"Stand for the National Anthem."

It was the most recent in a series of semi-regular rebukes since he first expressed his disdain for the protests at a rally in September.

Earlier on Wednesday, Trump expressed his anger at news that the NFL rule book, which says players "should" stand for the anthem but stops short of mandating it, was not being changed any time soon.

While the president and the league appeared to have reached a stalemate, some fans have said they are heeding Trump's calls to boycott games while the kneeling continues.

Former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who first popularised the gesture last year, said he settled on kneeling as a form of protest because it is widely seen as a gesture of respect.

Some of the league's 32 team owners, including Jerry Jones of the Dallas Cowboys, have said they will bench players who do not stand for the anthem.

Goodell said on Wednesday that the question of what individual teams might do had not come up during the meeting.


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Source: AAP



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