National Post

‘CANADIAN BASEBALL’ REMARK HAUNTS VOTTO

TORONTO-BORN STAR ISSUES FRESH APOLOGY FOR 2018 ‘COULDN’T GIVE A RAT’S ASS’ COMMENT

- rob Longley rlongley@postmedia.com

It didn’t take long for Joey Votto to realize the error of his ways back in 2018 when he very publicly savaged his own hard-earned reputation in his homeland by rather shockingly suggesting he didn’t give “a rat’s ass” about Canadian baseball.

There were many apologies to follow, but contrition truly arrived when the Etobicoke native was admonished by his mother. It was a point Votto made passionate­ly with a post on X of a handwritte­n note in what appears to be a personal journal.

“Oof. Wow. I cringe and am ashamed as I rewrite my words,” Votto wrote in his post.

Those explosive words came when Votto was asked on a U.S. based podcast for reaction to the no-hitter pitched by Canadian James Paxton at the Rogers Centre. At the time, the comments seemed out of character for such an accomplish­ed player who twice had been named the country’s athlete of the year.

“As far as Toronto, and Canadian baseball, and the country of Canada, and (Paxton) being Canadian, I don’t care at all,” Votto said at the time. “(Paxton) or the Jays, or Canada, in general, may disagree with that, but I really couldn’t give a rat’s ass about that. I don’t care almost at all about Canadian baseball. I wasn’t raised inside of Canadian baseball really. I’m coming up on half of my life being in the United States working and being supported by American baseball.”

The fallout at the time was swift, prompting Votto to swing into immediate damage control, first via an interview with Sportsnet’s Jamie Campbell and later in a conference call with reporters. But as the 40-year-old veteran noted, his mother’s disapprova­l really hit home.

“I received and still receive occasional criticism for my comments, but it was my mother’s disappoint­ment that hurt me the most,” Votto wrote and shared on social media.

“A letter from her, while I was away working in the U.S. she admonished me for my words. She let me know that this is not how I was raised and that I should check my ego and perspectiv­e. At first I was dismissive of my mother’s scolding. I’m grown! I’m no kid! Don’t talk to me like I’m a child! However, with time, that letter kept whispering to me, ‘time to learn.’”

Perhaps recognizin­g that a fair number of baseball fans in the town he’s hoping to resume his career will remember the ill-timed and illspirite­d remarks, Votto continued his reflection­s by saying he sat with the letter and felt sad and ashamed and eventually acknowledg­ed he was wrong. Next, he wrote a letter back to his mother apologizin­g and promising to be better.

“Writing this letter hurt, but it was needed,” Votto wrote. “That part of me needed to be acknowledg­ed and corrected. I wrote that I was sorry and asked for her forgivenes­s.”

Seeing pictures of himself in a Jays uniform for his first game with the team on Sunday — in which he hit a home run in his first at-bat before hurting his ankle in the dugout — also hit home.

“Truthfully, I may or may not play for our (country’s) team this year,” Votto wrote.

“Either way, I just want those interested to know a meaningful lesson has been learned. Like my mother has, I hope you can forgive me.”

The Blue Jays officially handed the opening day starter assignment to righthande­r Jose Berrios on Tuesday. As for the rest of the pitching staff, there are health concerns in the final week of the pre-season.

As well as announcing the Berrios call for next Thursday when the Jays face the Tampa Bay Rays in St. Petersburg, manager John Schneider reported setbacks for closer Jordan Romano and fellow reliever Erik Swanson.

According to the team, Romano has been dealing with some right elbow inflammati­on and after an MRI revealed no serious damage, he’ll be treated with an anti-inflammato­ry injection. Schneider told reporters that Romano won’t be able to throw for three days and then will begin to ramp up. Barring a further setback, he could be ready for the season.

Swanson, meanwhile, has some right forearm tightness that will keep him out of action through much of this week.

The Romano and Swanson issues pile on to the shoulder woes that shut down starters Alek Manoah and Kevin Gausman, delaying their respective starts to the season.

It will be Berrios’ second opening day assignment in three seasons, obviously looking for a much better outing than in 2022 when he was rocked and didn’t make it out of the first inning.

 ?? STEVE NESIUS / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Joey Votto of the Toronto Blue Jays has apologized for comments he made about Canadian baseball on a podcast in 2018.
STEVE NESIUS / THE CANADIAN PRESS Joey Votto of the Toronto Blue Jays has apologized for comments he made about Canadian baseball on a podcast in 2018.

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