Roger Goodell was just asked -- twice -- why he thinks Colin Kaepernick is not on an NFL roster ... and he pointed the finger at NFL teams who don't believe the QB can help them win games.
In other words, Goodell says it's about football -- not politics.
Goodell was addressing the media live from Super Bowl LIII in Atlanta -- in a crowd packed with reporters from all over the world and even a few NFL owners (ATL's Arthur Blank and NE's Robert Kraft).
When the subject of Kaepernick came up ... it was clear Roger had his answers ready -- hammering the same main talking point ... that roster decisions are made by individual teams looking to win games.
"Our clubs are the ones that make decisions on players that they wanna have on their roster," Goodell said.
"They make that individually. They make that in the best interests of their team."
He added, "They all want to win ... and they're all gonna do whatever they can to win."
When a second reporter pushed Goodell on the issue he reiterated his points.
"I think if a team decides that Colin Kaepernick or any other player can help their team win, that's what they'll do."
"They want to win and they make those decisions individually in the best interests of their club."
Goodell is clearly pushing the individuality of decision-making, because Colin is suing the NFL for collusion -- claiming NFL owners and key officials conspired to keep him out of the league because of his kneeling demonstration during the national anthem.
The thing that makes the least amount of sense ... is that guys like Nathan Peterman and other sub-par quarterbacks are getting multiple workouts and opportunities with NFL clubs while Colin is not.
Besides taking the 49ers to the Super Bowl back in 2013 -- Kaepernick has thrown for 72 TDs and only 30 INTs in his pro career.
In his final season with the 49ers in 2016, Kaepernick racked up 2,241 passing yards, 16 passing TDs and only 4 INTs.