Nick Bosa continued his celebrations of Donald Trump’s resounding election victory by imitating the president-elect to celebrate a send-off on Sunday.
San Francisco 49ers star fined by the NFL 24 hours earlier for wearing a ‘Make America Great Again’ hat during a postgame television interview last month.
But Bosa did not stop sharing his joy after the Republican candidate’s comfortable victory over Kamala Harris in this week’s elections.
The defensive end managed to sack Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield in the 49ers’ win on Sunday.
But when he got back to his feet, Bosa pulled out a dance routine that seemed to mimic Trump’s famous moves during the election campaign.
Nick Bosa appeared to imitate Donald Trump’s dance moves after being fired on Sunday.
Trump dancing to the Village People hit ‘YMCA’ was a feature of his rallies during the election campaign.
Trump dancing to the Village People hit ‘YMCA’ became a feature of his rallies throughout the campaign.
The president-elect, 78, often used the song to stir up his crowd, showing off a bit of hip movement and raising his arms up and down in time with the beat.
Bosa couldn’t turn down his last chance to pay tribute to Trump, despite being fined $11,255 for his MAGA hat stunt.
He crashed a television interview that included quarterback Brock Purdy during NBC’s postgame coverage of the Niners’ victory over the Dallas Cowboys on October 27.
He pointed to a message on his white hat that read “Make America Great Again” in support of Trump’s candidacy for president.
NFL rules state that “during the period of game day when a player is visible to the stadium and television audience (including pregame warmups, in the bench area, and during postgame interviews in locker room or on the field), Players are prohibited from using, displaying or transmitting personal messages, whether written or illustrated, unless such message has been previously approved by the League office.
Bosa, who agreed to a five-year, $170 million contract extension in September 2023, said earlier this week that he was aware that his actions could be subject to a fine.
“It was worth it,” he said.