Montreal Gazette

Tweets expose ‘toxic’ culture in baseball

Users explain why they dug up old posts by MLB stars

- ERRIN HAINES WHACK

A pair of Twitter users whose posts exposing offensive tweets by baseball players went viral over the weekend say their aim was not malicious but to give fans a fuller picture of who they ’re cheering for, and to expose the sport’s “toxic” culture. Both Twitter users said they weren’t looking for the years-old tweets from Milwaukee Brewers reliever Josh Hader or Atlanta Braves pitcher Sean Newcomb, but when the posts came across their timelines, they felt obligated to share them. Kevin Jenkins wasn’t looking through Hader’s Twitter feed as he watched the MLB All-Star Game earlier this month. But then they began popping up on his Twitter feed. After seeing the pitcher’s racist, sexist and homophobic remarks, it was hard for Jenkins to remain a fan. “Before the tweets, I thought he was a cool guy,” Jenkins said via direct message on Twitter. “An amazing pitcher and an even better person ... After the tweets, I mean ... It’s hard to defend the guy. My opinion has definitely changed.” Jenkins compiled screenshot­s of a handful of Hader’s offensive tweets and created a post. That tweet has garnered nearly 6,000 likes. He said his intent wasn’t to dig up Hader’s past to bring him down. “I still feel that he’s an amazing pitcher, but the things he said were inexcusabl­e,” Jenkins said. After Hader’s tweets came to light, the reliever was swift to apologize, saying the posts were a youthful mistake, written in 2011 and 2012, when he was a 17-yearold and long before he was a majorleagu­er. For Jenkins, who is 16 and white, the explanatio­n didn’t fly. Over the weekend, old, offensive tweets from Newcomb and Washington Nationals shortstop Trea Turner also resurfaced. Twitter user @NatsSquid posted about Newcomb after seeing one of the tweets on his timeline and did a search to see if there were others. “Baseball culture is toxic and I want players to be held accountabl­e for what they say,” said @ NatsSquid, who spoke to The Associated Press via direct message on Twitter and declined to give a reporter his name, identifyin­g himself only as “a DC-area male.” @NatsSquid said he was aware of the Hader controvers­y when he tweeted about Newcomb. When asked if he thought this weekend’s posts were the work of copycats, Jenkins said he hadn’t considered it, but doesn’t encourage it. “I’m hoping people don’t continue to do this to athletes as a way to get attention, because that wasn’t my intention at all,” Jenkins said. The act of exposing tweets is recognitio­n that racism is everybody ’s problem, said University of Hartford sociologis­t Woody Doane. “Going to a racist insult is something that white Americans have in their tool kit,” Doane said. “As much as we like to say otherwise, I don’t think that’s something we’ve gotten rid of. If racism is going to end, white people need to call each other out on it. One of the elements of white privilege is not having to care about racism.”

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