Ugly tweets from Brewers' Josh Hader surface during MLB All-Star Game Brewers pitcher Josh Hader delivers in the eighth inning of Tuesda...

Brewers pitcher Josh Hader delivers in the eighth inning of Tuesdayâs All-Star Game. (Patrick Smith/Getty Images) July 18 at 1:39 AM Email the author
Racist, homophobic and misogynistic tweets that Milwaukee Brewers reliever Josh Hader sent in 2011 and 2012 surfaced as he pitched in Tuesday nightâs All-Star Game at Nationals Park, turning his appearance into an embarrassing stain for Hader and a public-relations nightmare for Major League Baseball.
After Hader surrendered a three-run homer in the eighth inning, several Twitter users â" starting, it seems, with an account named MLB Insider Dinger â" found and retweeted messages Hader sent as a 17-year-old. The tweets included numerous uses of the n-word and an allusion to âwhite powerâ next to an emoji of a closed fist. One tweet read only, âI hate gay people.â Another referenced wanting women only for sex, cooking and cleaning.
âItâs just something that happened,â Hader, a former All-Met from Old Mill who grew up in Anne Arundel County, said after the game. âI was 17 years old. As a child, I was immature. I obviously said some things that were inexcusable. That doesnât reflect on who I am as a person today. Thatâs just what it is.â
[âD.C. did it rightâ: AL wins in 10 innings in All-Star Game slugfest]
Hader discovered that the tweets had surfaced after he exited the game. When he arrived in the locker room, âmy phone was blowing up,â he said. As the game came to a close, several of Haderâs family members and friends milled outside the clubhouse, all of them wearing all-star jerseys with âHaderâ across the back.
Hader, still in full uniform, motioned his wife inside to a lobby outside the locker room. As they talked, the rest of Haderâs party removed the jerseys and either changed out or reversed clothing with the playerâs name on it.
MLB Deputy Commissioner Dan Halem declined to comment and said the league was considering releasing a statement Wednesday.
When the National League clubhouse opened to media, Hader was standing alone at his locker, his blond hair pulled into a bun. Reporters surrounded him. A public-relations official asked reporters to wait. Another PR man said to the other: âGive it a second. We got a couple more [reporters] coming. We got a bunch more.â
Hader blamed the tweets on youth and immaturity and insisted they did not reflect his current beliefs.
âThereâs no excuse for what was said,â he said. âIâm deeply sorry for what Iâve said and whatâs been going on. That doesnât reflect any of my beliefs now.â
How could the tweets have lived online for so lo ng without Hader deleting them?
âNo deletes,â he said. âObviously, when youâre a kid, you just tweet whatâs on your mind.â
[âA monumental momentâ as All-Star Game finally returns to Washington]
Before the game ended, Hader had deleted his old tweets and locked his account. He said he would accept any suspension or punishment, with the caveat of his age at the time he sent the tweets.
âIâm ready for any consequences for what happened seven years ago,â he said.
âLike I said before, I was young, immature and stupid. Thereâs no excuses for what was said or what happened.â
Hader said he did not âvividlyâ recall sending any of the offensive messages. âThat was seven years ago,â he said. âI donât remember too far back then.â
Hader repeated his age and the time passed since the tweets. While he was nearly an adult when he sent them and not, as he called himself once, a âchildâ at the time, Hader i nsisted the tweets would not reflect on him.
âNot at all,â he said. âI was in high school. Weâre still learning who we are in high school. You live and you learn. This mistake wonât happen again.â
After he spoke with reporters, Hader huddled over his phone with a PR representative as Brewers teammate Jesus Aguilar packed up at the locker next to him. Brewers outfielder Lorenzo Cain sat a few stalls down.
Hader walked over to Cain, slung his arm around him and whispered into Cainâs ear. Cainâs son chattered nearby. They talked for a bit, and then Hader walked away.
âI was just trying to understand the situation,â said Cain, who is black. âHeâs young. We all say some crazy stuff when weâre young. Thatâs one reason why I donât have social media, because things like this. You always get in trouble for things you said when youâre younger. Weâll move on it. The situation is what it is. I know Hader. Heâs a great guy. I know h eâs a great teammate. Iâm fine. Everybody will be okay. Weâll move on from it.
âYeah, I was surprised. When anybody does something like that, youâre always surprised. At the end of the day, you got to give people a second chance. And I understand you got to forgive people and move on from it. For me, itâs over and done with. He said it. It got out there. Iâm moving on from it. Me, individually, anyway.â
When Hader finished speaking with Cain, Brewers outfielder Christian Yelich walked over to Hader and hugged him.
âI donât know what he did or what happened,â Yelich said. âBut the guy I know is a really great guy with a kind heart.â
Hader, a 24-year-old left-hander, has pitched to a 1.50 ERA in 48 innings this season, striking out 89 of the 177 batters he has faced.
Jorge Castillo and Chelsea Janes contributed.
More from the All-Star Game:
Boswell: If MLBâs problems are embodied by Max Scherzer, things wi ll be just fine
The masterful marketing campaign that made Jean Segura an all-star
Martinez says Strasburg, Zimmerman are set to return to Nationals on Friday
Source: Google News US Sports | Netizen 24 United States
No comments