Imperial Valley Press

Watch your mouth A’s outfielder Matt Joyce suspended 2 games for gay slur.

- BY JANIE MCCAULEY AP Baseball Writer

Oakland outfielder Matt Joyce received a two-game suspension without pay Saturday for directing a gay slur toward a fan in Anaheim and he will take part in a public outreach initiative with PFLAG, a family and ally organizati­on supporting the LGBTQ community.

Major League Baseball made the announceme­nt, saying Joyce’s penalty was set to begin Saturday, when he also apologized through the team. Joyce said he is “beyond sorry,” and the Athletics also made a statement insisting his language was unacceptab­le and wouldn’t be tolerated.

The A’s are donating more than $54,000 of Joyce’s lost salary to PFLAG.

“First and foremost I’d like to start by apologizin­g to everyone, especially the fans, the Oakland A’s, the Bay Area — they’ve been awesome to me — MLB, and obviously, the LGBTQ community, whom I have a lot of respect for,” Joyce said before Saturday’s game. “I’m deeply ashamed and embarrasse­d at my actions and the language that I did use. It’s very uncharacte­ristic of me.”

The exchange occurred in the eighth inning of Los Angeles’ 8-6 win after Angels first baseman C.J. Cron made a diving stop of Joyce’s hard-hit grounder.

As Joyce returned to the dugout, he uttered several profanitie­s at the fan, called him a gay slur and challenged him to fight, according to Associated Press photograph­er Mark J. Terrill, who overheard the exchange. Terrill said he didn’t hear the first part of the exchange.

Joyce acknowledg­ed Saturday that at one point he did invite the fan to “meet me outside.”

“The incident that kind of unfolded last night, in the eighth inning I obviously hit the ball hard and Cron made a diving play. We’d lost the lead and have obviously been struggling,” Joyce said. “We haven’t had the kind of year that we wanted. And coming back to the dugout there was a fan who came up and yelled some vulgar and obscene words about me and my family. I let the emotions and frustratio­ns really get the better of me there. I obviously said some words that should never be said. There’s no excuse, there’s no good excuse for that kind of language to be said and ever used.

“I really hope the people out there can find it in their heart to forgive me and not to be too quick to judge me on one incident. It’s very unfortunat­e. It’s one of those things I’m obviously going to regret. I already do. It’s a tough lesson to be learned. I can’t apologize enough.”

Around baseball, any discrimina­tory behavior is being taken extremely seriously — and MLB has been firm about its stance.

The Boston Red Sox in May permanentl­y banned a male fan they said used a racial slur, a separate confrontat­ion from insults directed at Baltimore Orioles outfielder Adam Jones one night before.

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