He dismissed what he said as nothing more than 'locker room' banter

Trump came under fire for lewd comments recorded in a 2005 video

for saying 'you can do anything' to women

Denver Broncos cornerback Aqib Talib has claimed Donald Trump 'may fit in' with his team when it comes to locker room chat.

Talib was referencing the Republican presidential nominee's assertion that his lewd comments about women, aired in a 2005 recording, were nothing more than 'locker room' banter.

Trump came under fire for the comments made in a video published on Friday by the Washington Post, which shows him arriving to film a cameo on Days Of Our Lives. The footage includes his conversation with Billy Bush.

'You know I'm automatically attracted to beautiful — I just start kissing them. It's like a magnet. Just kiss. I don't even wait,' Trump said.

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Cornerback Aqib Talib said the way Trump talks about women could fit in with locker room chat

'And when you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything... Grab them by the p***y. You can do anything.'

Trump's wife Melania condemned the comments, calling them offensive and unacceptable.

This week Talib said in a locker room interview with 9News: 'Trump may fit in if he came in here, who knows?'

Meanwhile, the soap opera actress, Arianne Zucker, seen in the video that rocked the presidential campaign has said Trump's comments were offensive.

But Zucker said she wasn't shocked by it, given 'that type of personality.' She says that's 'probably why it doesn't mean a lot to me.'

Zucker spoke in an interview broadcast Thursday on NBC's 'Today.'

Zucker is the actress who meets Trump and TV personality Bush on the set and in the video, before greeting Zucker, Trump tells Bush he needs to use Tic Tacs in case he starts kissing her.

Talib's comment comes as a four-month investigation into a Denver shooting that injured him found that he shot himself in the leg.

The station WFAA-TV reported Wednesday that the Dallas Police Department will not file criminal charges against Talib in connection to the June 5 shooting.

The investigation reportedly concluded that Talib's initial claim that he was shot by someone while standing in a park was unfounded.

Self-inflicted wound: A four-month police investigation has reportedly concluded that Dallas Broncos cornerback Aqib Talib shot himself in the leg in June

The Denver Police Department would not confirm the report regarding the outcome of the investigation, and neither Talib nor the Denver Broncos organization would comment on it.

According to witness accounts, Talib was standing in a Dallas park in the early hours of June 5 when he suffered a gunshot wound to his lower right leg.

He was taken in his Rolls Royce to Medical City Dallas Hospital, where doctors concluded that he did not requires a surgery. The 30-year-old was treated and released home the following day.

When interviewed by police, Talib said he was in the park with a group of people when he heard a gunshot, then collapsed to the ground with a bullet in his leg.

He also reportedly told investigators he was 'too intoxicated' to recall what happened at the time.

That initial police report stated that Talib had been shot 'by an unknown suspect.'

'Too drunk to remember': Talib initially told police that someone shot him in the leg while he was standing in a park, but that he was 'too intoxicated' to recall exactly what happened

Out of the picture: Talib was forced to sit out a White House reception honoring the Broncos' Super Bowl 50 victory on June 6