DeAndre Hopkins said former Texans owner Bob McNair's 'inmates running the prison' comments made him feel 'like I'm a slave again'

Advertisement
DeAndre Hopkins said former Texans owner Bob McNair's 'inmates running the prison' comments made him feel 'like I'm a slave again'

DeAndre Hopkins

Quinn Harris / Getty Images

DeAndre Hopkins nearly protested the Houston Texans Week 8 game against the Seattle Seahawks after late owner Bob McNair's comment, but his teammates convinced him to play.

Advertisement
  • DeAndre Hopkins said he nearly sat out a game during the 2017 season when late owner Bob McNair compared players kneeling to "inmates running the prison."
  • McNair, who died in November 2018, made the comment in a meeting between NFL owners during which protesting in the league was discussed.
  • Hopkins told GQ, in an interview published Tuesday, it felt "like I'm a slave again."
  • While Hopkins missed practice, his teammates convinced him to play in the Texans Week 8 matchup against the Seattle Seahawks.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Houston Texans wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins said he nearly sat out a game during the 2017 season when late owner Bob McNair compared players kneeling to "inmates running the prison."

McNair made the comment during a meeting between NFL owners during a "special privileged session," in which the topic of protests was raised, according to ESPN.

"It feels like I'm a slave again," Hopkins told GQ in an interview published Tuesday. "Getting ran over. Listen to the master, go to work."

Hopkins said his initial reaction was to go home and miss practice. He almost sat out the Texans' Week 8 matchup against the Seattle Seahawks in protest.

Advertisement

"Hell yeah, I was about to sit out the game," Hopkins said. "[My teammates] tried calling me, but I wasn't going back. Hell no.

"It's hard for people to understand what that means when your family was slaves. You can't relate to something like that if your great-uncle's not telling you stories about their parents or their grandparents and what they went through. Not even too long ago, people couldn't even drink out of the same water faucet. Not even 100 years ago."

It was his teammates that convinced him to play in Seattle, and they continued to kneel during the National Anthem.

While he was upset with McNair's words, Hopkins told GQ that he "took into consideration that [McNair] was older."

McNair died in November 2018.

Advertisement

"He was a good man, but some people they don't really … When you grow up certain places, you talk a certain way," Hopkins said.

"I try to take into consideration that he's done a lot of good for black people, so s---, you can't take nothing away from that."

{{}}