Tell 'em, Zeke. $21,000 is a hefty sum and unless one donates himself, he has no business criticizing someone else's charity. Even if he donates, he shouldn't judge others.
It's a good deal of money for anyone regardless of your salary. $21,000 would completely erase my debt (except for my house). Anyone who criticizes another person for donating $21,000 is a ****** bag. Period.Dude this makes me want to punch this guy right in the month. If you calculate Zeke's after tax bring home, and normally for the fact that he doesn't have an income outside of football season, this is a good deal of money for him.
I donated $21 yesterday. I usually like to do Christmas Tree Angel donations this time of year, but missed the deadline. Thanks, Zeke!
By Monday afternoon, the Salvation Army had taken in over $180,000 in donations since Zeke’s wildly popular kettle jump, according to ESPN’s Darren Rovell. Rovell spoke to the president of sponsorship evaluation firm Apex Marketing Group, Eric Smallwood, who projected that the advertising exposure equivalent of Elliott’s celebration would have cost the Salvation Army approximately $4 million.
Andrew Siciliano said:Salvation Army says it's received $850k in online donations since Ezekiel Elliott jumped in bucket. That buys 91k meals to those in need.
The end zone celebration that keeps on giving. I hope Zeke does it every year around Christmas time.
I hope they have one in Houston.
Did Beckham and Bell match the donation?