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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Chris Perkins

Dolphins WR Kenny Stills reaches out to support free-agent QB Colin Kaepernick

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. _ Kenny Stills hasn't been afraid to speak his mind on social issues, considering the Dolphins wide receiver chose to kneel during the national anthem last season.

Recently, he reached out to quarterback Colin Kaepernick, the pioneer of the anthem kneeling movement, who has been unable to find a job in the league this offseason.

"I wanted to tell him that I admire everything that he's been doing," Stills said Friday at the Fins Weekend golf tournament at Miami Beach Country Club.

"I gave him my number to reach out to say, 'Hey, if there's anything I can do to be a part, I'm here.' "

Kaepernick, who spent all six of his NFL seasons with San Francisco, is a free agent and there's wide belief that he hasn't been signed by a team because of his national anthem protests and outspokenness on social issues.

Among Dolphins players, Stills, safety Michael Thomas, running back Arian Foster and linebacker Jelani Jenkins all took part in similar anthem protests last year, which they said was intended to bring attention to social injustices. Jenkins did it for one game, Foster did it until retiring in October, and Stills and Thomas did it the whole season.

Stills, who finished with 42 receptions, 726 yards and nine touchdowns, said he's not surprised Kaepernick remains unemployed.

"That's just sometimes the way things go," Stills said. "Obviously, I'm a supporter of his. He's a great player, regardless of the things he's done off the field. I think he should be on a team."

Stills, who won the Dolphins' Nat Moore Community Service Award for his charitable work last season, said being at events such as Friday's golf tournament, which benefits City Year Miami, has always been a priority.

"It was something that was important to me, especially after we took a knee, that I was out in the community," he said. "It really just helped me with a tough time we were going through. I knew it was coming after taking a knee. I just didn't realize how bad it was going to be.

"Getting in the community, working with the kids, was a way that I felt like I could get out and make a change. I want to be here in Miami for a long time, and obviously I signed my extension, so I'm going to be here. Just making a difference in the community, making a difference in the young kids' lives, because I know they're the future generations. I know they're going to be running this country."

Stills, who won the Dolphins' Nat Moore Community Service Award for his charitable work last season, said being at events such as Friday's golf tournament, which benefits City Year Miami, has always been a priority.

"It was something that was important to me, especially after we took a knee, that I was out in the community," he said. "It really just helped me with a tough time we were going through. I knew it was coming after taking a knee. I just didn't realize how bad it was going to be.

"Getting in the community, working with the kids, was a way that I felt like I could get out and make a change. I want to be here in Miami for a long time, and obviously I signed my extension, so I'm going to be here. Just making a difference in the community, making a difference in the young kids' lives, because I know they're the future generations. I know they're going to be running this country."

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