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Mets Hats: MLB Denies Right To Wear Special 9/11 Caps

Mets Hats

HOWIE RUMBERG   09/11/11 11:13 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — Major League Baseball denied the New York Mets' request to wear baseball caps Sunday night honoring New York emergency service departments for their game against the Chicago Cubs on the 10th anniversary of the 2001 terrorist attacks.

Joe Torre, MLB's executive vice president for baseball operations, told The Associated Press in a phone interview the decision was made to keep policy consistent throughout baseball.

"Certainly it's not a lack of respect," Torre said. "We just felt all the major leagues are honoring the same way with the American flag on the uniform and the cap. This is a unanimity thing."

The Mets wanted to wear caps honoring police, firefighters and other first responders like the ones they wore on Sept. 21, 2001, in the first professional sporting event in New York after the World Trade Center collapsed 10 days earlier. They spoke with Torre on several occasions over the course of the last month.

"They certainly understood and respected," baseball's decision, Torre said. "I certainly understood what they wanted to do in regards to wearing the hats. I used my history with the fact that we were in the World Series 10 years ago."

During the 2001 World Series, the Yankees wore caps with emergency service logos during a pregame ceremony, but wore their blue hats with a white interlocking "NY" for the games.

Torre also said there was recent precedence for the policy. The Washington Nationals wanted to wear caps honoring the Navy SEALs that were killed in Afghanistan in early August and the team was allowed to wear them before the game.

The Mets said in a statement Sunday they followed the guidelines set in a league-wide memo issued by MLB for games played on Sept 11.

Some Mets wore caps, such as "NYPD" and "FDNY," during batting practice. Player representative Josh Thole said he and his teammates were contemplating wearing those caps during the game.

"I think it will be a nice gesture," Thole said. "What are they going to do, fine us?"

Several minutes later he returned and said the caps were a "no-go" because he was told MLB was adamant.

"If we got a vote in, I think we'd want to wear the hats," David Wright said, "but at the end of the day Major League Baseball makes that call, and we're going to respect that."

Instead, the Mets wore their black caps with blue brims and a blue-and-orange interlocking "NY" when they took the field to face the Cubs.

Wright, though, was seen in the dugout early in the game wearing a first responder hat.

The Mets held a 24-minute ceremony of remembrance under dimmed stadium lights before the game. Fans held electronic candles as bagpipers and drummers stood on the infield and first responders lined the basepaths. Each of the Mets and Cubs escorted a member of "Tuesday's Children," a charity for families affected by the attacks, onto the field and they stood with the uniformed emergency-service workers.

A 100-by-300 foot flag was held by first responders and victims' family members.

Marc Anthony sang the national anthem, as he did on Sept. 21, 2001. Mike Piazza, who hit an uplifting homer in the eighth inning to help the Mets beat the Atlanta Braves that night, caught a ceremonial first pitch from New York native John Franco, a teammate on the 2001 squad.

The caps worn during the ceremony will be autographed and sold on Mets.com. Proceeds will be distributed to charities through the Mets' foundation.

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NEW YORK — Major League Baseball denied the New York Mets' request to wear baseball caps Sunday night honoring New York emergency service departments for their game against the Chicago Cubs on t...
NEW YORK — Major League Baseball denied the New York Mets' request to wear baseball caps Sunday night honoring New York emergency service departments for their game against the Chicago Cubs on t...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
05:31 PM on 10/01/2011
I liked to see Torre try to present his argument to Yankees fans. I bet the reception will be totally different.
01:55 PM on 09/13/2011
Bud Selig's decision on this is very wrong.

However, it is only one of the many-many dumb decisions he has made as Commissioner.

The man is a disgrace to baseball and himself.
10:34 AM on 09/14/2011
I think that more or less sums it up. F&F
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JustinP213
I dislike all political parties.
09:33 PM on 09/12/2011
Horrible decision. I would have worn the cap anyway.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WilliamL
09:28 PM on 09/12/2011
They sd have wore that hats anyway
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aldo Rodriguez
No Trumps need reply.
06:51 PM on 09/12/2011
Note to Bud Selig: Thanks to your lack of compassion and poor public relation skills, I am boycotting any new products by New Era or any company that MLB would stand to profit for the rest of this year and 2012. I know it won't mean much to a corporate tool like yourself but just the satisfaction that I won't be wasting my money on your sanctioned sponsors is good enough for me. Thanks for nothing. LET'S GO METS!
03:40 PM on 09/12/2011
A little OT, but anyone else tired of hearing how football and baseball helped "heal" America after 9.11?

I love those sports as much as anybody, but it was the rescue workers who did all the healing.
02:44 PM on 09/12/2011
This had absolutely EVERYTHING to do with money and absolutely nothing to do with uniformity or politics, or anything else. The baseball caps that ALL major league players were required to wear yesterday (9/11/11) are now available on every MLB team's website for $36.99. The description listed for the cap reads as follows:

"Special-edition cap with US Flag on left side to be worn on-field for games played on September 11, 2011."

This was about profit. Nothing else. Selig and Torre needed all players wearing the same cap because it was a league-wide advertisement for the caps they planned on selling afterwards. Selig is no better then the people who put out "commemorative" 9/11 plates or gold coins. It's shameful. It saddens me that Torre would allow himself to be a shill for something so detestable having once been so close to this tragedy. For those of you who've rationalized MLB's decision in your comments below, here's the link for a Met's "special edition 9/11 cap". Wear it knowing that the Met's themselves didn't want to.

http://shop.mlb.com/product/index.jsp?productId=11784930&cp=1452359.1452831

OR, you could do something good and take that $36.99 and donate it to the Leary Firefighter Foundation or some other reputable organization that assists 9/11 first responders.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheSarge
Firearms Inst Environmental Activist
02:36 PM on 09/12/2011
Wear them anyway and pay the fine, you guys can afford it.
04:12 PM on 09/12/2011
It will only make them raise ticket prices.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JustinP213
I dislike all political parties.
09:32 PM on 09/12/2011
Nope
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HighDesertBob
Earth is the only planet with chocolate.
02:00 PM on 09/12/2011
Part of a uniform is to be uniform in presence. I realize there are circumstances where one would like to honor someone special however, if each team got to make their own caps, where does it end? Do they get to make special shirts, pants or whatever for their special circumstance?
If MLB allows one they would have to allow everything and that wouldn't necessarily be a good thing.
Certainly Joe Torre understands the feeling and emotion connected with the 9/11 events, but he has to uphold the standards of dress for all the teams.
04:14 PM on 09/12/2011
'Part of a uniform is to be uniform in presence." Remember when Jackie Robinson tried to mess that up?



I couldn't resist.
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01:07 PM on 09/13/2011
There really is NO "standard of dress" in MLB. If there was..... every player would wear their uniform trousers either "knickers" style...or down around the bottom of their shoes. They wear them..... both ways.. Kinsler, Granderson, Oswalt...... knickers...... Hamilton, Rodriguez, etc., dragging the ground. Not to mention the ear rings, and necklaces..... wouldn't Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig get a kick out of seeing guys in ear rings????? Forget about "the official" anything of MLB. Try to buy a Pepsi, in Houston or Atlanta. The "official" anything of MLB..... is whatever Selig decides..... and this one.... was a wrong decision.
Olbermann is right..... Selig was wrong.
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HighDesertBob
Earth is the only planet with chocolate.
01:52 PM on 09/13/2011
Players have options on which uniform to wear and how to wear it, all within the guidelines of Major League Baseball. Each team must submit their uniforms and variations for approval by MLB. If each team was allowed to make changes on a whim, there would be no uniformity in their appearance. These are the rules of MLB that each team subscribes to. If they don't agree with them then the owners should have MLB change them.
Olbermann was wrong on this, though I agree with him on most of his rants.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PARepublican
Advocate for personal responsiblity
01:41 PM on 09/12/2011
So many of you miss the point of this argument. What do you the next time they want to honor someone?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jeffp26
01:23 PM on 09/12/2011
Intercourse MLB.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
leyvadaniel
01:14 PM on 09/12/2011
While I understand Torre's position, I remember how much I actually cried of joy and hope when the Mets played again after 9/11... and I am a Yankee fan. Yes, I believe all teams are honoring the memory of the victims of 9/11, but the Mets played a very important role in bringing us back to business here in NY.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jingles32
09:40 PM on 09/12/2011
As a Yankees' fan (as you claim to be) how exactly did the Mets "play a very important role" in bringing "us" back to business here in NY?
01:44 PM on 09/13/2011
The Mets played in the first sporting event in NY after the Towers fell. No one, not even the players themselves, knew if playing a baseball game was the right thing to do. People came out to watch the game, and the Mets won in dramatic fashion. They gave New Yorkers something to celebrate (even if it was one game), gave them a little time away from the what had happened to the city just 10 days before. That's how the Mets helped us back to business in NY.
11:07 AM on 09/12/2011
another reason that that i stopped watching professional sports Screw the MLB !!!
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Lesann
The secret is negative reinforcement
10:35 AM on 09/12/2011
This is off the subject, but I haven't found another story on which to post this.

I thought Marc Anthony did an absolutely fabulous job with the national anthem. I am not familiar with his music and avoid all the stories about his marriage. However, I was very, very impressed with his rendition.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeffrey Miller
Fiscal Liberal, Social Libertarian
10:30 AM on 09/12/2011
I totally agree with this, even as a New Yorker who was personally affected by 9/11 -- and especially since this policy was in place during games RIGHT AFTER 9/11. Good call Joe.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jingles32
09:42 PM on 09/12/2011
Totally agree; as a native New Yorker, Yankees' fan, and as someone who lost a family
member on 9/11; WTC, South Tower, 102nd floor.