President Trump said Friday that former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick should get a shot to play in the league again, before adding only “if he’s good enough” — and suggesting he wasn’t because no team had signed him.

“If he’s good enough, and I think if he was good enough, I know the owners and I know Bob Kraft and so many of the owners. If he’s good enough, they would sign him,” Trump told reporters at the White House before a weekend raising cash in the Hamptons and staying at his New Jersey golf club.

“So if he’s good enough, I know these people, they would sign him in a heartbeat. They will do anything to win games. So I would like to see it. Frankly, I would love to see Kaepernick come in if he’s good enough.”

Kaepernick, who has been out of a job after leading the movement of players taking a knee during the national anthem to protest social injustice, wants to play.

In a video posted to Twitter on Wednesday, the former 49ers quarterback referenced the 889 days he’s been out of the NFL while taking part in a series of workouts.

“Five a.m., five days a week, for three years… Still ready,” Kaepernick said in the video, which had more than 580,000 views and 32,000 “likes” on Twitter as of Wednesday afternoon.

In February, Kaepernick reached a confidential settlement with the NFL over a grievance he filed in 2017 alleging the owners blackballed him from the league.

Trump has repeatedly castigated the African American QB and other NFL players who protested during the anthem, calling them unpatriotic.