Nationals pitcher forced to apologize for perceived racism after opponent threw his helmet at him
Trevor Bauer opens up on why he believes he is being blackballed by MLB.
Sports are so soft now. Basketball is full of crybabies flopping around like fish out of water, quarterbacks can’t get touched without a 15-yard penalty and a threat of jail time, and baseball is, I guess, filled with players that see classic trash talk as a racist microaggression. I’m talking about the benches-clearing incident between Washington Nationals pitcher Cade Cavalli and Red Sox catcher Willson Contreras.
On Wednesday, Cavalli struck out Contreras looking in the fourth inning. As Contreras walked away, Cavalli yelled, "Sit down, boy," prompting Contreras to turn back toward the mound. The exchange escalated quickly, with both benches and bullpens emptying. Contreras then threw his helmet in Cavalli’s direction before teammates and coaches separated everyone. Although Cavalli remained in the game, Contreras, Miles Mikolas, Nate Eaton, and Boston interim manager Chad Tracy were ejected. Contreras was in the wrong. He lost his cool. But, Cavalli has been painted as the bad guy in this scenario simply because he used the word, "boy."
Liberal sports media and bad actors jumped on this story stating that "boy" has a history of being used as a racial slur toward Black men. Contreras is Venezuelan, though, and this kind of nomenclature has been used by players for decades, regardless of race. If you played sports, and you’re reading this, you’re thinking the same thing: "What’s the big deal?"
MLB DROPS HAMMER ON BOSTON'S WILLSON CONTRERAS WITH HEFTY SUSPENSION AFTER HELMET-THROWING INCIDENT
Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox is held back after an altercation against the Washington Nationals during the fourth inning at Fenway Park on


