Papa Johns forced to apologise after CEO John Schnatter blames players' kneeling for poor pizza sales

The company is a major NFL sponsor, and Schnatter said on an earnings call on 1 November that 'NFL leadership has hurt Papa John's shareholders'

Wednesday 15 November 2017 06:25 EST
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Papa Johns CEO John Schnatter has landed his company in hot water
Papa Johns CEO John Schnatter has landed his company in hot water (Getty)

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Papa John's apologised on Tuesday night for comments made by CEO John Schnatter blaming sluggish pizza sales on NFL players kneeling during the national anthem.

The company is a major NFL sponsor and advertiser, and Schnatter said on an earnings call on 1 November that "NFL leadership has hurt Papa John's shareholders" and that the protests "should have been nipped in the bud a year and a half ago."

The company tweeted a statement offering to "work with the players and league to find a positive way forward."

"The statements made on our earnings call were describing the factors that impact our business and we sincerely apologize to anyone that thought they were divisive," it said. "That definitely was not our intention.

"We believe in the right to protest inequality and support the players' movement to create a new platform for change. We also believe, as Americans, we should honor our anthem. There is a way to do both."

The movement was started last year by former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who kneeled to protest what he said was police mistreatment of blacks. More players began kneeling after President Donald Trump said at an Alabama rally last month that team owners should get rid of players who protest during the anthem.

Papa John's added that it is "open to ideas from all. Except neo-nazis." It has previously tried to distance itself from white supremacists who praised Schnatter's comments, saying it does not want those groups to buy its pizza.

The company's stock has fallen by nearly 13 per cent since Schnatter's comments.

AP

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