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Red Sox manager Alex Cora to skip Red Sox's trip to the White House. Update : No black players went.

http://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/26679004/cora-skip-red-sox-trip-white-house

Cora to skip Red Sox's trip to White House

Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora announced Sunday that he will not accompany his team to celebrate its World Series title at the White House on Thursday.

In a statement in Spanish sent to El Nuevo Dia, Cora cited the fact that Puerto Rico still has not recovered from Hurricane Maria in 2017 for his decision.


Cora confirmed to reporters in Chicago after the Red Sox's 9-2 victory over the White Sox that he will not be accompanying his team to the White House.

"Like the report said, the government has done some things back home that are great, but we still have a long ways to go. That's our reality. It's pretty tough to go celebrate when we're where we are at. I'd rather not go and just be consistent with everything," he said.

In January, the Puerto Rico native was outspoken about the island's need for hurricane relief. He indicated then that he might skip the traditional champion's visit to Washington because of President Donald Trump's policies toward Puerto Rico.

Cora said Sunday that he isn't worried about backlash to his decision.

"No, because there was going to be a reaction anyway
," he said, adding that the Red Sox "understand" his decision.

Shortstop Xander Bogaerts also announced Sunday that he would not be attending the White House visit, joining Mookie Betts, Jackie Bradley Jr., Rafael Devers, David Price, Christian Vazquez and Hector Velazquez among the players who have said they will skip the trip.

The Red Sox will visit the White House on Thursday, an off day after a three-game series in Baltimore against the Orioles.

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I respect the hell out of Mr. Cora for standing up for what he believes in. Puerto Rico still needs a lot of assistance and most definitely should be respected
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/white-house-red-sox-spelling-error

White House Misspells Boston Baseball Team As ‘Red Socks’

Oops!

The White House announced on Thursday that President Donald Trump would meet with “The Boston Red Socks” to celebrate the team’s 2018 World Series victory.

CBS Boston noticed the typo on the White House’s website just hours before the famous baseball team was scheduled to meet with Trump.

The spelling has now been corrected.

The spelling error isn’t the only bit of controversy around the team’s visit to the White House. Red Sox manager Alex Cora won’t be attending the ceremony with the rest of his team due to Trump’s poor response to the hurricane crisis in Cora’s native Puerto Rico.

“It’s pretty tough to go celebrate when we’re where we’re at,” Cora told the Associated Press. “I’d rather not go and be consistent with everything.”
 
https://www.nydailynews.com/news/po...0190509-vgdkk3ki5zazvay2lln3nkifly-story.html

Boston 'White Sox’ players head to White House for Trump congrats — blacks and Latinos boycott

It’s bad enough that the Boston Red Sox somehow won the World Series again.

The hated guys from Beantown are showcasing the city’s infamous racial divide by failing to unite around a common decision to either attend a White House congrats session -- or boycott it.

Manager Alex Cora, ace pitcher David Price and all the black players on the team are skipping the presidential photo op while all the white guys are apparently going — along with Cuban-American slugger J.D. Martinez.


The White House inadvertently tossed fuel on the fire by putting up a post on its official site welcoming the ‘Red Socks’ to the Trump meeting. Some noted it wasn’t the first typo for the most spellcheck-challenged administration in recent memory.

There was no mention of the controversy as Trump praised the BoSox for their season and remarkable playoff run.

“Frankly they were unstoppable. I watched 'em,” Trump said outside the White House.

The president even showed a rare contrite moment when he gave the boys from Fenway credit for beating his hometown New York Yankees: “I think I’ll stay neutral on that one,” Trump said with a smile.

Ace pitcher Chris Sale presented Trump with a No. 18 Red Sox jersey and thanked him for his hospitality.

“We know celebrating the Red Sox is tough for you as a Yankees fan,” Sale said.

Jokes aside, the racial divide was a black eye for a team and a city that has struggled to change its image as a redoubt of racism in the liberal northeast.

The Red Sox were the last team to sign a black player and the Boston Celtics were long known as one of the whitest teams in the National Basketball Association. Off the field, Boston has battled to end its image of intolerance forged during anti-busing campaign of the 1970s.


Cora called his boycott a protest at Trump’s shameless treatment of his native Puerto Rico in the aftermath of the devastation of Hurricane Maria.

“I learned conviction from my dad and mom,” Cora told the Washington Post.

Red Sox legend David (Big Papi) Ortiz, a Dominican immigrant, sided with the boycott citing Trump’s xenophobic rhetoric.

“You don’t want to go and shake hands with a guy who is treating immigrants like [expletive] because I’m an immigrant,” Ortiz said.

The manager and black players, including Price, insisted there was no split in the locker room over the boycott. But plenty of people were keeping track of who’s going and who’s not.

The hardball split is just the latest example of how Trump’s divisiveness has led to once-apolitical events becoming highly controversial.

Athletes, especially African Americans, have bristled as Trump uses his presidential bully pulpit to slam superstars who take political stands like Colin Kaepernick, who took a knee during the national anthem to protest police brutality.

Members of the NBA champion Golden State Warriors refused his invitation to the White House -- prompting Trump to say they were no longer invited anyway. The Philadelphia Eagles did the same thing
and many members of the New England Patriots stayed away from the White House after their latest Super Bowl win.

Trump also controversially avoided congratulating the No. 1 pick in this year’s NFL Draft, while strangely heaping Twitter praise on the runner up. His qualification? He once expressed support for Trump.

The president also earned pot shots for serving up spreads of cold fast food at congrats sessions for college football champions Clemson and again to FCS grid champs North Dakota State.



You should already know who the fans in Boston will side with...
 
http://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/26710709/red-sox-contingent-honored-white-house

Red Sox contingent honored at White House

WASHINGTON -- President Donald Trump honored the World Series champion Boston Red Sox -- well, some of them -- at the White House on Thursday, but made no mention of the controversy that shadowed the visit.

The team's manager, Alex Cora, did not attend the ceremony after citing his frustration with the administration's efforts to help his native Puerto Rico recover from a devastating hurricane. And nearly a dozen members of the team, all players of color, skipped the opportunity to shake Trump's hand. Meanwhile, every white player on the team
-- as well as outfielder J.D. Martinez, who is of Cuban descent -- attended.

The Red Sox repeatedly denied that there was any sort of racial divide caused by the White House visit, which has been transformed from moment of celebratory ritual to hyper-politicized event under Trump. And there was no sign of discord during the rained-upon ceremony on the White House South Lawn.

The U.S. Marine Corps band played versions of "Dirty Water" and "Sweet Caroline," two unofficial Red Sox anthems. A derogatory shout about the Red Sox's rival, the New York Yankees, was heard. Trump was presented with a Red Sox jersey with the number 18 on the back.

The day was not without mishaps: The White House first incorrectly labeled the team the "Red Socks" on its website and then later, in an email, dubbed the Red Sox the champions of something called the "World Cup Series." But Trump himself stuck to the correct script, honoring the team's dominant run to the title.

"Frankly, they were unstoppable. I watched," said Trump, who noted that the squad now has won more World Series titles than any other franchise this century. He laughed when Martinez teased him for being a Yankees fan.

The president was accompanied by two of the team's stars, Martinez and pitcher Chris Sale, from the Oval Office and joined the rest of the team assembled under the South Portico. The team's third-base coach, Carlos Febles, who is from the Dominican Republic, stood two rows behind the president. And dozens of administration officials and members of government, many of whom hail from the six New England states, stood on the lawn to cheer.

Tom Werner, the team's chairman, downplayed the no-shows, saying it was each player's personal decision whether to attend.

"We don't see it as a racial divide," he said after the team received a post-ceremony tour of the Lincoln Bedroom. "I think, to the extent that we can, baseball is apolitical."


A championship team's coach rarely, if ever, misses the White House visit, a tradition that began in earnest in 1924 when then-President Calvin Coolidge invited the Washington Senators. Cora had considered attending Thursday's White House event to call attention to the plight of those in Puerto Rico, where Hurricane Maria is estimated to have caused nearly 3,000 deaths. But in the end, he opted not to go.

"Unfortunately, we are still struggling, still fighting," Cora said in a statement. "Some people still lack basic necessities, others remain without electricity and many homes and schools are in pretty bad shape almost a year and a half after Hurricane Maria struck. I've used my voice on many occasions so that Puerto Ricans are not forgotten, and my absence is no different. As such, at this moment, I don't feel comfortable celebrating in the White House."

Before the visit, Trump defended his stance on Puerto Rico, falsely asserting once again that the territory received $91 billion in hurricane relief money, which he claimed was "the largest amount of money ever given to any state."

In fact, Congress has allocated Puerto Rico just a fraction of that figure. The White House has said Trump's $91 billion estimate includes about $50 billion in speculated future disaster disbursements that could span decades, along with $41 billion already approved. Actual aid to Puerto Rico has flowed more slowly from federal coffers, with about $11 billion given so far. Hurricane Katrina in 2005 cost the U.S government more than $120 billion -- the bulk of it going to Louisiana.

Trump nonetheless told reporters, "the people of Puerto Rico should really like President Trump."


Those around the Red Sox locker room stressed that a player's decision to attend was a personal choice and not, in many cases, political.

"Politically, it didn't matter who was in the White House. If I have an opportunity to go to the White House and meet the president, I'm going to go," relief pitcher Heath Hembree said Wednesday. "Nobody tried to persuade me. They have their reasons why not to go."

For some players, it might be their only chance for a White House invite. It also reflects a larger trend across baseball: A number of players hail from Trump-friendly states such as Texas and Florida, while the sport has also seen a surge in Latino players and a decline in African Americans.

Having also won World Series titles in 2004, 2007 and 2013, the Red Sox -- who also visited wounded veterans at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Thursday -- have been honored at the White House under both Republican and Democratic presidents. But the events have taken on sharp political overtones since Trump took office.

When the New England Patriotsvisited in 2017, Trump's first year in office, far fewer players attended than when the franchise won a title under President Barack Obama. After several players on the Philadelphia Eagles and Golden State Warriors publicly declared that they would skip White House ceremonies, Trump disinvited the teams. Trump has also instituted a new tradition for the ceremonies, scrapping gourmet meals in favor of offering plates of fast food to athletes. The Red Sox were not at the White House for a meal, Werner said.

Moreover, the optics of the Red Sox visit are certain to receive additional scrutiny due to the history of racially charged moments for both the team and the city it calls home.

The Red Sox infamously held a failed tryout for Jackie Robinson before he broke the sport's color barrier. They were the last team in the major leagues to integrate. And an Elks Club in the team's former spring training home of Winter Haven, Florida, invited only white players to events, a practice that stopped only in the 1980s, when black players complained.
 
Tom Werner, the team's chairman, downplayed the no-shows, saying it was each player's personal decision whether to attend.

"We don't see it as a racial divide," he said after the team received a post-ceremony tour of the Lincoln Bedroom. "I think, to the extent that we can, baseball is apolitical."

There’s nothing to see here everything is all white...
 
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