An account that appears to belong to former Texas A&M linebacker Santino Marchiol features a video in which multiple A&M players are called "monkeys."

In a 17-minute clip of two people narrating A&M scrimmage footage from April, an unidentified voice on a Hudl account listed to Marchiol refers to an A&M running back and safety Keldrick Carper with the term. Carper is black. At around the 1:40 mark of the video, a woman asks who was wearing No. 26 and carrying the ball.

In response, the voice answered, "Uh, yeah, one of those monkeys," as Marchiol tackles a black player. Immediately after that exchange, the woman says, "Oh my God, you got him again," as another clip shows Marchiol making a tackle.

The male voice refers to another player as a "monkey" roughly 10 minutes later in the video. The woman asks who No. 14 is as the footage is stopped, to which the voice replies that is is Carper.

"They call him the 'monkey safety,'" the male voice says after he was asked if the defender plays safety.

The video has since been deleted. Attempts to reach Hudl to verify that it was Marchiol's account were unsuccessful. The account had clips from Marchiol's high school days in Colorado.

Thomas Mars, the Arkansas-based attorney who is representing Marchiol in his attempt to be eligible this season at Arizona, was made aware of the clip for the first time Friday afternoon. Mars said he plans on watching the footage and making inquiries to determine if it was indeed Marchiol who called the players "monkeys."

"I was completely unaware about any questions on the background of any of these videos," Mars said.

Hudl is a website used by teams across the country to distribute practice video. Players use it to publicize their highlights.

The clip was deleted from the Hudl account after its existence was first reported. The footage from the scrimmage was posted two days before Marchiol alleged in a USA Today story that A&M committed multiple NCAA violations and mistreated an injury. Marchiol told the publication an assistant coach gave him money to host a recruit on an unofficial visit, a potential NCAA violation, and that A&M possibly exceeded the allotted offseason time limit that coaches are allowed to work with players.

After the story was released, A&M released a statement saying the school was looking into the matter. During a news conference Thursday, A&M head coach Jimbo Fisher said he welcomed all inquiries into the allegations and felt confident in the way A&M has operated since he was hired in December.

Marchiol transferred to Arizona to play for former A&M coach Kevin Sumlin, who was fired in December after six seasons. Marchiol, according to USA Today, is seeking to play immediately instead of sitting out a year to fulfill the NCAA's transfer policy.

Twitter: @Ben_Baby

CORRECTION, 9:25 p.m.., Aug. 24, 2018: An earlier version of this story incorrectly said the running back wearing No. 26 was freshman Charles Strong Jr. It was a walk-on running back who was with the program in the spring, according to team spokesman.