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Adam Jones defends Colin Kaepernick, explains why NFL anthem protests haven't spread to MLB

The Baltimore Orioles stand on the field before the national anthem at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. (Karl Merton Ferron / Baltimore Sun)

Colin Kaepernick's preseason anthem protest crept into several NFL regular season openers and has remained a hot topic in the sports world for several weeks, but it has not bled over into Major League Baseball.

Orioles outfielder Adam Jones told USA Today over the weekend that the reason for that should be obvious.

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It's all about demographics.

"We already have two strikes against us already,'' Jones told USA Today Sports reporter Bob Nightengale, "so you might as well not kick yourself out of the game. In football, you can't kick them out. You need those players. In baseball, they don't need us. Baseball is a white man's sport.''

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Ravens staying out of the fray of staging protest during playing of the national anthem

Jones is right about the demographics, since fewer than one in 10 major league players is African-American – far less than the majority representation in the NFL and NBA. But I don't think that Jones is really afraid he'll get kicked out of the sport for speaking his mind, because he has done that for his entire career.

He has been talking about African-American issues throughout and he has chosen real action over symbolic protest. That's why he's been nominated for the Roberto Clemente Award and won several other honors for community and public service. But he's not critical of Kaepernick for taking a different approach.

"He believes in what he believes in,'' Jones said, "and as a man of faith, as an American who has rights, who am I to say he's wrong?"

Kaepernick's decision to sit or kneel during the national anthem is nothing new. It's just gotten the benefit of the 24-hour news and sports cycle to make it seem that way. African-American athletes have been fighting for civil rights since there have been high-profile sports to serve as their platform. There's nothing wrong with that and some of it has affected real, tangible change.

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