Obama Won't Replace Old White Sox Hat

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  |   November 12, 2008 10:05 AM



Almost every day since the election President-elect Barack Obama has been seen wearing a White Sox hat. He's worn it to take his daughter's to school and on the way to the gym. And despite the best efforts of White Sox executives, it's been the same, worn-in hat for years, the Tribune reports.


"If you remember, in the middle of the campaign they had a day off and he took the family bike-riding along the lake," said Scott Reifert, Sox vice president of communications. "The media was all over it. And he was wearing this hat.

"The next day, Jerry [Reinsdorf, Sox chairman] called me or sent me an e-mail, 'You gotta get him a new hat.' Because his old hat was just so battered and worn. So we picked out a couple hats, different styles, and we took them to his people.

"Their response was, 'We don't think there's any way he's going to take the old one off.' It was pretty apparent it was his hat and he wasn't going to put on a new hat. And I've never seen the two new hats. I don't think he ever wore them."


Obama's White Sox bonafides are well established. In an August interview with ESPN, Obama proclaimed the Sox real baseball and knocked the party vibe at the Cubs' home base:


"You go to Wrigley Field, you have a beer, beautiful people up there," Obama said, according to transcripts released by ESPN. "People aren't watching the game. It's not serious. White Sox, that's baseball."

Obama has become a good friend of Sox General Manager Kenny Williams, who has invited him to throw out the coming season's Opening Day first pitch.

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And after the White Sox' World Series win in 2005, Obama issued a Senate floor statement notable for its detail about specific players and their performances.

Read it below:



I rise today as a U.S. Senator, as an Illinoisan, and as a proud resident of the Southside of Chicago, to congratulate the Chicago White Sox for winning the 2005 World Series. As my fellow Southsiders know, it has been a long time coming.

Founded in 1900 as the Chicago White Stockings, this year's team reached the World Series for the first time since 1959. Over a century of White Sox fans have cheered for superstars such as Luke Appling, Nellie Fox, Carlton Fisk, Luis Aparicio, Harold Baines, and of course Big Frank Thomas. But we haven't savored the sweet taste of a World Series championship since 1917 - until now.

Back then, Woodrow Wilson was President, and the Great War was raging in Europe. The White Sox were a bright spot in tough times.

The Sox won last night the way they have won all season--by playing aggressively, scrapping for every base and every run. When Juan Uribe threw to Paul Konerko for the final out, it was fitting that the ball beat the runner by only half a step. The four games against the Astros were decided by a total of six runs. Win by the skin of your teeth. Win or die trying, that's our motto this year.

Jermaine Dye is the World Series MVP, and I congratulate him for that, but I'm sure he'll be the first to say that everyone on this year's team deserves a part of that award. This is a team with so many great players, but no undisputed leader on the field. I don't claim to be a baseball expert - or particularly unbiased on this matter - but this is one of the most selfless, balanced teams I've ever seen. A team of unlikely heroes.

Scott Podsednik, who hadn't hit a home run all season, stepped up and hit two in the playoffs, including the walk-off winner in Game 2 on Sunday. Willie Harris, who barely played in the playoffs, got a pinch hit to get on base and bring home the only run last night. Geoff Blum, a former Astro, who got a pinch hit homer in the 14th inning to give us the margin of victory in Game 3. And the pitching--four complete games to close out the American League Championship Series. An 11 and 1 record in the playoffs. 15 scoreless innings to finish the World Series.

Before the season started, the Sox were a consensus .500 team. Even as we built and maintained the best record in the American League all season, there were many doubters. Towards the end of the season, we hit a rough patch, and the doubters got louder. They said Cleveland had more playoff experience. They said even if we held on to make the playoffs, we would get embarrassed in the first round. But during the stretch run, manager Ozzie Guillen and his "kids," as he calls them, were calm and relaxed. Even as Cleveland came on strong and our lead in the Central Division dwindled, Ozzie's kids continued to play pranks on each other in the clubhouse, and continued to run hard on the basepaths.

Once the playoffs started, there was no looking back. That difficult September was gone in an instant. We silenced the doubters by sweeping the World Champion Boston Red Sox. We silenced the Angels during the ALCS in five games. And we swept the Astros in four games.

I had the privilege of attending game one of the World Series on Saturday, and the fans in and around the park were a cross-section of the city. There were plenty of folks old enough to remember the '59 team. Almost everyone remembered the 2000 team that made the playoffs. A few were even alive in 1917. A staffer of mine, a Southside Irishman and a Sox fan all his life, mentioned a 92-year-old woman at Saturday's game. She was jumping and cheering so much with every hit and every run that my staffer worried for her health!

I would like to congratulate the entire White Sox organization, in particular Jerry Reinsdorf, Kenny Williams, and Ozzie Guillen. We will be celebrating this victory for a long time on the Southside, around the city of Chicago, and around the entire state of Illinois.

Later today, Senator Durbin and I will be introducing a resolution honoring the White Sox, and we will be asking for its immediate consideration and adoption. Thank you, and I yield the floor.

Almost every day since the election President-elect Barack Obama has been seen wearing a White Sox hat. He's worn it to take his daughter's to school and on the way to the gym. And despite the best e...
Almost every day since the election President-elect Barack Obama has been seen wearing a White Sox hat. He's worn it to take his daughter's to school and on the way to the gym. And despite the best e...
 
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Sox rule! Cubs suck!

At least the Sox won a World Series! Come on Cubs, WTF?

George W. Bush...worse President ever...

Chicago Cubs...worst team ever....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 AM on 11/17/2008

That's my GUY!!!!! I can't tell you how proud this temporarily transplanted South Side Chicago White Sox obsessed soldier is to have a Sox fan in the White House for the first time! God bless you and your family, Mr. President Elect- It's been a long time coming... for a South Sider to occupy the WHITE HOUSE!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 AM on 11/15/2008

Sad - such an old NWO peep being a sox fan. Let's not forget LaRussa - 83 manager- VEGAN. Only 1 vegan candidate- Kuchinich. What a shame that sox connection did not work out. Please- do not believe the hype that Obama is progressive. They don't call it the windy city for nothing. Go vegan and go Sox!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 11/13/2008

Now there's a transition no one's talking about: From a bored former owner to a underdog's superfan.

That is change you can believe in.

Oh, and go go white sox.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 AM on 11/13/2008
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He really needs to keep a baseball cap off of his head.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:15 AM on 11/13/2008
- ccmd I'm a Fan of ccmd permalink


why.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 AM on 11/13/2008

Everything he touches and everything he does is instantly made perfect by his glorious touch. Merely by wearing the hat, the Sox will not only go all the way, they will win every single year thereafter, forevermore. All hail him!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 PM on 11/12/2008

Finally, a president that understands when to implement loyalty appropriately.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 PM on 11/12/2008
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It looks too small, Barack really isn't as cool as the suits he wears make him seem. He's smart and all, but the guy is a dork of epic proportions. I still love him though lol!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:55 PM on 11/12/2008

Nope, I disagree. He looks HOT! I love especially love the casual look on him...jeans, t-shirt and a baseball cap. NICE.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:38 PM on 11/12/2008

President Obama is definitely hot! Michelle is a very, very lucky woman!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 PM on 11/13/2008

What Obama says about the crowd at Wrigley not being there to watch the games is, unfortunately, so true. As a resident of Chicago's North Side (long ago transplanted to N. California), I grew up on Cubs baseball. I used to ride my bike to the park and buy a bleachers ticket for 75 cents. Back in those "good old days" when a .500 season was a moral victory for the Cubbies, you went to Wrigley to watch the games -- and you never had to worry about getting a seat because the place was often half-empty. In '03 (of this century) I was visiting my mom and we went to see the Cubs play the SF Giants (Zambrano was on the mound). The only tickets she could get for us were way down the right-field line, where it's hard to see where the ball's going and follow the game in any event. There was an aisle between us and home plate. At every half-inning break, people were leaving their seats to visit the refreshment stands and they were late returning, blocking our view of the plate and the action. It was clear that they patently were not there to follow the game. It was very frustrating. Maybe President Obama can appeal to Cubs fans' better natures next season and get them to sit down in front.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:32 PM on 11/12/2008
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I used to have a Sox beanie, but somebody stole it off my head when I was 15.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 11/12/2008
- PatA I'm a Fan of PatA permalink
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Hey, old hats rock! I have one that I got in Wyoming about 20 years ago and the only way anyone could get it from me is to steal it. I intend to die with it on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 11/12/2008

does he have to be so eloquent with EVERYTHING??? I half expected a "Yes We Can" somewhere in there! LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:20 PM on 11/12/2008

Hey , Myself , my son , my brothers and my Dad are Sox fans . Three of us did not vote for Barack . I can assure you if he does through out the first ball at a Sox game and we are there we will all cheer..He is OUR president . AND we SOX fans would appreciate if you don't turn the White Sox into the CUBS with all the pseudo fans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:55 AM on 11/12/2008

Throw not through

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 PM on 11/12/2008

Don't tell me you voted for McCain? You voted third party, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 11/12/2008

I have a Sox hat that I wear all the time and stinks to high heaven. LOL. But I cannot trade it for another. Don't ask why.

And yeah, you go to a Cubs game to get drunk. If that team were located anywhere else besides Wrigleyville no one would go. That's why no owner has dared move the team. Sox fans would travel far and wide for their team.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:20 AM on 11/12/2008

You can wash baseball caps - or don't you have a partner to tell you these things?

Perhaps it's the smell of the cap that is keeping them away? :-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 11/12/2008

I'll try harder 2 think of that next time I wash. lol

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 11/12/2008

Aye! Couldn't be more true! Have a Miller Lite on me!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 AM on 11/15/2008

lol i'm more than a little embarrassed that he got up there and gave a fairly lengthy "sermon" about the sox, i'd hope congress has more important things to do (though often it seems they don't). maybe one day he'll consider a new hat... but the old one is great too, & like the sox it's obviously very important to him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 AM on 11/12/2008

Actually, this is a common occurrence in Congress.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 11/12/2008
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