Dolphins owner Stephen Ross provided further clarity Friday on his team’s stance toward national anthem protesters.

A leaked policy from the Dolphins’ handbook Thursday stated the team would suspend players up to four games for protesting during the anthem, the Associated Press reported. Ross said in a statement released Friday that the Dolphins’ stance on the issue, in fact, has not been decided.

The NFL and NFLPA have since come to a “standstill agreement” on any new rules related to the anthem. The Dolphins are still determining theirs.

“We were asked to submit a form to the NFL on our overall discipline policy prior to the start of the rookie report date,” Ross said. “The one line sentence related to the national anthem was a placeholder as we haven’t made a decision on what we would do, if anything, at that point. I’m pleased that the NFL and NFLPA are taking a pause to figure out a resolution to this issue.”

President Trump, who has railed against players who kneel for the anthem, tweeted Friday night what he believes a player’s punishment should be.

“First time kneeling, out for game. Second time kneeling, out for season/no pay!” Trump said.

A report on the Dolphins’ “Proper Anthem Conduct” portion of their team policies revealed that the team had put put anthem protester under “conduct detrimental to the team.” A violation of the policy, the rule stated, could lead to a paid or unpaid suspension, a fine or a combination of both.

The NFL’s new anthem policy, which was ratified in May, gives players the option to stay in the locker room during the anthem, but those who are on the field must stand, or else their teams will be fined. The teams have the freedom of deciding how to punish players.

The Dolphins had a number of players protest in some form during the national anthem last season — wide receiver Kenny Stills, tight end Julius Thomas and safety Michael Thomas. Only Stills, of the three, is still with the team. Newly acquired defensive end Robert Quinn raised his fist while with the Rams.

Ross said he is “passionate about social justice.”

The NFL and NFLPA’s joint statement Thursday night also halted the players association’s grievance against the league’s policy.

“No new rules relating to the anthem will be issued or enforced for the next several weeks while these confidential discussions are ongoing,” the statement said.

Jets owner Christopher Johnson has said he will not punish his players for peaceful protest and pay any fines brought about by their actions. Giants co-owner Steve Tisch said on Friday that his players will also not be punished if they take a knee during the national anthem.