BREAKING!!! Alabama Player Just Made DISGUSTING ANNOUNCEMENT!

BREAKING!!! Alabama Player Just Made DISGUSTING ANNOUNCEMENT!

BREAKING!!! Alabama Player Just Made DISGUSTING ANNOUNCEMENT! Source and content: https://goo.gl/9Rn5FS s most everyone has already heard by now Alabama Ball Tosser Bo Scarbrough took it upon himself to attack our President as he was walking out of the locker room before the start of the 2018 NCAA football championship game. Now, if you listen to the video you can hear someone saying “F### Trump.” But Scarborough is now taking a step back after the huge uproar he is facing. Here is the kicker. This ball tosser is now saying he said “F### Georgia.” But if you listen to the video again you will notice whatever word he said after “F###” is a one-syllable word like the word “Trump,” not a two syllable word like “Georgia.” So I really don’t understand how this can all be just a misunderstanding. But now we are starting to understand why he is denying his comment. It has now been confirmed by multiple news outlets that Bo Scarbrough will enter the NFL draft this year. Today local sports media reported that the Alabama running back has indeed signed with a sports marketing company and he is “heading to the NFL draft.” This report comes just two days after Alabama beat Georgia in overtime in Atlanta to win the national championship. Scarbrough had an impressive 4 carries for 23 yards in that game although his season-high total this fall came when he had 79 yards on 11 carries in a victory against Vanderbilt in September. Scarbrough is 6-foot-2, 235 pounds, had 124 carries for 596 yards with 8 touchdowns this season. In three seasons at Alabama, the native of Northport, Ala., has totaled 1,512 yards rushing with 20 touchdowns. His best season with the Crimson Tide came when he had 812 yards rushing with 11 touchdowns in 2016. Via The Undefeated: We may have seen the last of Colin Kaepernick in the NFL If Seattle doesn’t want the quarterback, where can he turn? Colin Kaepernick may never play in the NFL again. Let that sink in. A mobile, 29-year-old quarterback who in the past five seasons started in two NFC championship games and one Super Bowl and amassed a touchdowns-to-interceptions ratio that ranks among the best in NFL history is out of the league without an apparent opening to get back in. The prospect that Kaepernick’s NFL career could be finished became real this week after the Seattle Seahawks passed on signing the politically active player as a backup and instead added Austin Davis to their roster. In picking Davis over Kaepernick, who has been seeking work since he opted out of his deal with the San Francisco 49ers ahead of free agency in March, Seattle chose a journeyman who has failed to establish himself as a viable NFL passer in stints with the Los Angeles Rams, Cleveland Browns and Denver Broncos. Davis didn’t even appear in a game last season. During a recent radio interview, head coach Pete Carroll said the Seahawks were considering Kaepernick to play behind starter Russell Wilson. The Seahawks and Kaepernick reportedly met in late May. Then Seattle signed Davis, even though Carroll said he believes that Kaepernick is a starter in the NFL. Seattle’s decision reportedly had nothing to do with money. There’s only one logical takeaway: The Seahawks were concerned about potential fan backlash for signing Kaepernick, who ignited a nationwide debate by choosing not to stand during the national anthem — first sitting, then kneeling — in an effort to draw attention to the oppression of black people and people of color. For some time, some African-American players have expressed anger that, in their opinion, Kaepernick is effectively being blackballed by owners because of his political stance. And there’s ample evidence to support that argument: Far less accomplished signal-callers have signed with new teams, Davis being the most recent. Owners have criticized Kaepernick’s form of protest and cautioned that a team that signed him could encounter major problems with its fan base. President Donald Trump has gone in on Kaepernick as well. But something changed Monday. It felt like a new line was crossed. The Seahawks’ decision sent a loud message that the NFL could be completely done with Kaepernick. If Kaepernick isn’t wanted by a playoff contender even though his skills are well-suited for its offense, where can he turn? Both Wilson and Kaepernick are dual-threat quarterbacks. By design, Wilson is on the move often. Kaepernick seemed to be an ideal fit for the Seahawks, especially considering their concerns at the position behind Wilson, who hasn’t missed a start in his five-year career but played through a variety of injuries last season.