Fans are ejected after racism banner unfurled
Four fans were ejected from Fenway Park after they unveiled an anti-racism banner over the Green Monster on Wednesday night.
“Racism is as American as baseball,” the sign said.
The banner was unfurled in the fourth inning of an American League baseball game between the Boston Red Sox and the Oakland Athletics just above an advertisement for Foxwoods Casino. Umpire Joe West consulted with police and security about the sign, because it was in fair territory.
It was taken down, and the fans were removed peacefully within minutes. No arrests were made in the incident.
The Red Sox said in a statement: “During the fourth inning of tonight’s game, four fans unfurled a banner over the left field wall in violation of the club’s policy prohibiting signs of any kind to be hung or affixed to the ballpark. The individuals involved were escorted out of Fenway Park.”
Red Sox president Sam Kennedy told The Boston Globe that the fans “felt connected to the Black Lives Matter movement.”
One of the protesters emailed a statement to several news organizations that said in part: “We are a group of white anti-racist protesters. We want to remind everyone that just as baseball is fundamental to American culture and history, so too is racism.”
A protester who spoke anonymously to CSN New England said the group was inspired in part by an incident in May when Baltimore Orioles outfielder Adam Jones was racially taunted by some fans at Fenway. (Jones received an extended ovation the next night.)
The protester also said that his group had no connection to the antifa movement of militant antifascists.
The Red Sox this year said they were eager to change the name of Yawkey Way, a street by the park.
It is named for Thomas Yawkey, a former owner of the team when it was the last to integrate, 12 years after Jackie Robinson.