Malcolm Jenkins says a meeting between NFL owners and players has been cancelled

Image: Malcolm Jenkins #27 raises his fist during the national anthem

Philadelphia Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins, one of the founders of The Players Coalition, says the next proposed meeting between the owners and players to discuss social justice initiatives has been cancelled.

"The league didn't accept our invitation," Jenkins said on Sunday ahead of a proposed meet-up on Monday in Philadelphia. Jenkins said the league cited scheduling issues.

"At this point, the ball is in their court," Jenkins added. "We'll continue to do what we've been doing. Guys are working around the league."

The league and players met last week in New York to discuss player demonstrations during the national anthem and other issues.

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"They want to get back to football; we want to move past anthem demonstrations," Jenkins said. "But to do that, we need to be able to replace the platform that we have."

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Jenkins wants a venue outside the stadium and not during the anthem for athletes to raise awareness of social issues.

"We don't really enjoy doing this," Jenkins said. "We'd love to have a different platform and we think that's something we could work collaboratively with the NFL to create, to actually draw awareness to the issues we're doing, to use the NFL as a vehicle to make real change."

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The Houston Texans players showed a unified front during the national anthem after a difficult week off the pitch for the franchise.

Colin Kaepernick, who began kneeling during the national anthem before the 2016 season and currently is out of the NFL, did not attend the meeting last week.

Jenkins said the players want Kaepernick "to be a part of the conversation" and contrary to a report on Slate.com that said he had been iced out of discussions, Jenkins said Kaepernick was invited.

Kaepernick has filed a grievance against the NFL, alleging that he was not signed because of collusion by owners who wanted him out of the league because of the protests.

His former team-mate with the San Francisco 49ers, safety Eric Reid, who continues to take a knee during the national anthem, said Kaepernick told him he would attend if invited.

Image: Colin Kaepernick #7 and Eric Reid #35 pictured in protest during the national anthem last year

"I know Colin has been fighting to get in the room to speak to the appropriate people in the NFL," Reid said. "He told me that he was explicitly told he had no place being there.

"The NFL wants the protests to end. It's bad for their business. But it's ridiculous that they don't want Colin to be there being that he was the first one to start protesting. If we have to force him into the room, that's what we'll do."

Los Angeles Chargers linebacker Russell Okung, who has been raising his fist during the national anthem, said the league has "amazing political and economic power" and hoped it would walk with the players "to will that power in a way that changes the dynamic of our country."

Jenkins said he did not know when another meeting with NFL owners will be arranged, but added that he was proud of the response by players so far as the story has unfolded.

Image: Green Bay Packers players link arms as sign of unity during the national anthem

"I feel like we've done everything that we needed to do to really try to work in a collaborative effort with the league," Jenkins said. "We've showed up at meetings that they've requested. We've had the conversations they wanted to between us."

"What am I proud of is, I feel like the voice of the players has been pretty concise and consistent. Even when you've had responses the president, responses from different owners that have not been in the good spirit of solidarity, the players have remained pretty level-headed.

"We're more concerned about getting actual work done and change and going about the right steps to do that."

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