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Jerry Jones Shows Support For Papa John: "When He Speaks, I Listen"

DALLAS (105.3 The Fan/AP) — Cowboys owner Jerry Jones defended Papa John's CEO John Schnatter on Friday, a day after the company head blamed their lack of sales growth on the NFL's National Anthem controversy.

The company, which is a sponsor and advertiser of the NFL, said customers have a negative view of the chain's association with the NFL. The company also cut its earnings growth expectations for the year and Papa John's stock fell about 10 percent Wednesday.

"NFL leadership has hurt Papa John's shareholders," said the chain's CEO John Schnatter, in a call with analysts Wednesday. "This should have been nipped in the bud a year and a half ago."

During his weekly appearance with the G-BAG Nation on 105.3 The Fan, Jones addressed Schnatter's comments and confirmed that he is part owner of 120 Papa John's stores in Texas.

"John Schnatter is one of the great Americans," Jones said on the G-BAG Nation on 105.3 The Fan. "He's the story of America. He started off in his dad's bar just doing pizza with a little oven or microwave, and he's built that thing into one of the great businesses.

"Papa John's was named by all of the people that look at the NFL, Papa John's was named as the product most associated with the NFL, and it was named that a year ago by a survey of our viewers. So he is quite an American story. He was not cavalier about showing he's got data. ... So when he speaks, I listen."

The kneeling movement was started last year by former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who kneeled to protest what he said was police mistreatment of black males. 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.

Schnatter, echoing what Trump has said on Twitter, said the controversy is hurting NFL ratings. He said Papa John's has hired a new creative agency that will help it create more digital ads.

"The controversy is polarizing the customer, polarizing the country," he said.

A representative for the NFL did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday. Commissioner Roger Goodell and several owners said at the league's fall meetings last month that they did not discuss altering the anthem policy language from "should stand" to "must stand."

Other companies don't see the NFL as a problem. Executives at chicken wing chain Buffalo Wild Wings Inc. said last week that the company didn't expect declining NFL viewership to hurt a key sales figure. And Kohl's, the department store operator, said it is working with the NFL on a holiday ad campaign.

"What we see is a lot of our shoppers and prospective shoppers are watching NFL so that is what is behind the decision," said Greg Revelle, the chief marketing officer at Kohl's. "We are very confident."

As for Papa John's, it reported late Tuesday that third-quarter sales rose 1 percent at established locations in North America, which it said was below what the company had expected. In the same period a year ago, sales rose 5.5 percent at established locations.

Shares of Papa John's International Inc., based in Louisville, Kentucky, fell $6.60 to $61.45 on Wednesday.

(© Copyright 2017 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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