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Guess teams won't haze their rookies

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BBCgalaxee

Well-known member
Sep 9, 2011
6,475
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Often times, these rituals include having rookies and sometimes even second-year players dress up in themed costumes. The Los Angeles Dodgers, for example, had their young players dressed up as legendary professional wrestlers.*

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It's an often unusual rite of passion into the major leagues. It's seemingly done with no ill-intent other than to perhaps embarrass the players. However, TMZ Sports is reporting that one*powerful LGBT advocacy group known as Athlete Ally believes the ritual goes too far when it forces rookies to*cross-dress, citing that it sends a dangerous message to kids.

Here's what Athlete Ally head Hudson Taylor told TMZ.

"Requiring rookies to dress in feminine presenting clothing like wigs, dresses, and bikinis sends a strong and dangerous message that being a girl, woman, or feminine is somehow less than, and something to be mocked."
"Regardless of intent, as long as professional athletes participate in hazing of this kind, they will be continuing to perpetuate a culture that isolates, excludes, and marginalizes the experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and female athletes."

This season, several teams dressed their rookies up in women's clothing, snapped photos and had them travel to the next city in their outfits. Among those teams were the*Oakland A's,*Miami Marlins*and*Chicago Cubs (pictured above). **

In none of those cases did it appear the players felt they were insulted or lowering themselves by participating or dressing as a woman. The Cubs players were dressed as characters, such as Little Red Riding Hood and Princess Elsa from the Disney movie "Frozen." Perhaps where the big problem comes in is how people from the outside react mockingly and turn it into a bigger deal than it probably is.*

Either way, Athlete Ally is not happy. As TMZ also notes, they have many notable backers in professional sports, including*Andy Roddick, Abby Wambach and Martina Navratilova. Now that they've spoken, it will be interesting to see what type of response might come from the league.*

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AmishDave

Featured Contributor, Collector Showcase, Senior M
Sep 19, 2009
12,383
37
Ely, MN
From now on, nobody can do anything or wear anything because somebody, somewhere, MAY get upset about something.
 

CatdaddysCards

Trade Moderator
Mar 12, 2010
6,895
1
Cherryvale, KS
Maybe it comes from people being too sensitive to it? I hardly think that having Kris Bryant dress as Else, is mocking women, regardless of how you look at it. It's the issue with our country. Everyone is uber sensitive to anything and everything.
 

BBCgalaxee

Well-known member
Sep 9, 2011
6,475
59
Interesting this made news

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Last edited:

WaxPax

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