The Mercury News

White Sox minor leaguer Comas announces he's gay on Instagram

- By Benjamin Hoffman

Anderson Comas, a minor leaguer in the Chicago White Sox organizati­on, announced Sunday that he is gay, becoming only the second active player affiliated with a major league team to make such a public statement.

In an Instagram post, Comas warned “homophobic” readers that the message would not be for them and then said he is “proudly and happily part of the LGTBQ+ community.”

Comas, 23, signed with Chicago out of the Dominican Republic in 2016. He has spent most of his career as an outfielder but converted to a full-time relief pitcher in 2022. He had a 6.35 ERA in 11 1/3 innings with Chicago's rookie league team in Arizona last season, battling with some control issues but striking out more than a batter per inning.

After Comas' post was published, the White Sox showed support for the decision, saying on Twitter, “We are all so proud of you, Anderson!” The team also released a statement in support of the young player.

“Anderson first shared his news with us last year,” Chris Getz, Chicago's assistant general manager for player developmen­t, said in the statement. “And I was very pleased that he was comfortabl­e sharing with us in player developmen­t.

“I also was happy at the reaction across the organizati­on, which as you would expect was to support, help and congratula­te a teammate. With his social media post today, we all are so proud of Anderson and that he is comfortabl­e sharing such an important personal part of his life so openly.”

No major leaguers have revealed publicly, while they were active players, that they were gay. But Glenn Burke of Berkeley, a rising star with the Los Angeles Dodgers in the late 1970s, was known to be gay by many of his teammates. Burke was badly mistreated by multiple teams in the majors, including the Dodgers, and died of complicati­ons from AIDS in 1995. The Dodgers, acknowledg­ing that mistreatme­nt, celebrated Burke's life at their annual Pride Night last summer.

Billy Bean, an outfielder for multiple teams from 1987 to 1995, said he was gay after his career was over and in 2014 was named MLB's ambassador for inclusion.

In addition to Burke and Bean, David Denson, a minor league first baseman in the Milwaukee Brewers organizati­on, publicly announced he was gay in 2015. Denson retired after the 2016 season.

The rarity of Comas' announceme­nt is not limited to baseball. Only a small handful of players in the other major U.S. men's sports leagues have declared that they are gay.

Comas said in his Instagram post that he wanted to push back against the belief by some that being gay limits what a person can accomplish.

“I'm doing this cause I wanna be an inspiratio­n for those like me out there fighting for their dreams,” he wrote. “Please don't listen to those stupid things that people say about us, fight for your dreams, believe in yourself and go for it.”

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