Bills Owner Says Player Protest Is Bad For Business, Wants Compromise

When Donald Trumpmade his statement about NFL players being “sons of bitches” for utilizing their constitutional rights to protest societal inequities, Buffalo Bills owners Kim and Terry Pegula released a statement calling his comments “divisive and disrespectful.”

Athletes vs Trump

Speaking today on a panel at the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, Kim Pegula was asked whether social activism by players is good for the business of sports and she responded by saying that players looking to use the NFL as a platform for social change are unaware of the adverse impact it might have on the business side of the sport.

Exclusive one on one interview with Bills owner Kim Pegula

Exclusive one on one interview with Bills owner Kim Pegula

“My own experience, I think a lot of it is just communication,” she said. “I know that’s easy to say. But I know that several of our players, when I actually talked to them and actually gave them a different perspective — just like they were trying to give us a different perspective — on the impact of the business and what the impact is of what they do socially, off the game, at home and then how that affects the business side. They didn’t grow up in the sports business world. They came in on the players’ side.

“So a lot of [Bills players] just didn’t understand or know the impact that it had on the business, the organization and the community – good or bad. So I do think there’s definitely an impact. I wouldn’t shy away from it at all. I think there is a common ground. I think a lot of it is more about communicating and learning from each other on both sides and coming to some type of a compromise at some point. Sometimes you won’t be able to come to a compromise. But something usually gets done when that happens.”

A large group of Bills players knelt during the national anthem September 24th, and a smaller group of players continued to kneel the following week.

Asked Friday about what in sports business “keeps [her] up at night,” Pegula cited the impact of social and political issues.

“It’s the ability of one person who is unknown to be able to make a change or influence, or at least start something that we didn’t even know as ownership who that person was in this world,” Pegula said. “How they’re now influencing some of the decisions that we now have to worry about, and some of the things that we have to look at that doesn’t have to do with just sports – [that is] the product on the field, which is what we are working toward.”

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