11 June 15 - 21, 2023 dallasobserver.com DALLAS OBSERVER Classified | MusiC | dish | Culture | unfair Park | Contents er’s faith are typically given to defend their decision. In 2022 five Tampa Bay Rays players cited their Christian beliefs for not wear- ing a Pride-themed patch on their uni- forms. More recently, Dallas native, resident and surefire future Baseball Hall of Famer Clayton Kershaw put the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Pride night in the na- tional spotlight when he disagreed with the team’s inclusion of the Sisters of Per- petual Indulgence, a drag comedy troupe. The team uninvited, then reinvited the sa- tirical outfit, while also announcing a “Christian Faith and Family Day,” an event the pitcher pushed for. The Rangers lack of a Pride Night hasn’t gone unnoticed by those who are paid to watch the team. Levi Weaver of The Ath- letic spent several years as the Rangers beat writer for the all-sports outlet and began covering the entire league this season. He traveled to Florida last weekend to report on the Rangers’ series against the Tampa Bay Rays, a team that celebrated its own Pride Day on June 10. Prior to the game that day, Weaver tweeted out a thread that has since gone viral. “I have some thoughts on Pride Nights, as I sit in the press box and see this [a rainbow Rays logo next to a Rangers logo] in right field, and consider that one of these teams is the only one in the league that refuses to have one,” read the initial tweet of Weaver’s thread, which has been viewed more than 1.6 million times. Weaver goes on to say in further tweets: “One thing I think a lot of people (speaking to my fellow Christians here; the “I would never mean to cause hurt, but I’m opposed to Pride Night because of my personal be- liefs” crowd) get wrong is what having a Pride Night even means: Maybe it would help if you re-framed it. Instead of viewing it as a celebration of something you don’t be- lieve in, try thinking of it as a way to show people that they are welcome and included in the baseball world.” Being the only MLB team out of 30 to not specifically and intentionally welcome the LGBTQ community to a game means the Rangers are an outlier. With new head- lines on a nearly weekly basis being made around the country during Pride month from corporations coming under fire for expressing pro-LGBTQ views or selling rainbow-colored merchandise, it’s not a stretch to at least wonder if the Rangers are simply trying to avoid controversy. We asked the club why it has never hosted a Pride Night event at one of its games. We received a reply, via email, but we didn’t exactly get an answer. “Our commitment is to make everyone feel welcome and included in Rangers base- ball,” wrote John Blake, the Rangers’ execu- tive vice president for public affairs, in a statement similar to what’s been given to other inquiring media outlets. “That means in our ballpark, at every game, and in all we do – for both our fans and our employees. We deliver on that promise across our many programs to have a positive impact across our entire community.” So, no insight was provided as to why the Rangers continue to be the lone MLB holdout on hosting a Pride-themed event. Blake did add a few bullet points to his statement that he says are “steps taken by the Rangers to create a welcoming, inclu- sive and supportive environment for fans and employees. “The Rangers were a sponsor of the NAGAAA Gay Softball World Series, which took place in Dallas and Waxa- hachie in August 2022,” Blake noted in his statement to the Observer. “The club par- ticipated in the opening ceremonies in Dallas and worked with the local organiz- ers and NAGAAA officials on several ini- tiatives for the event. In 2023, the Rangers are working with local groups such as the Pegasus Slow-Pitch Softball Association on several initiatives. For the last several years, the Rangers have worked with the Resource Center in Dallas in several ways, including employee volunteering and sup- porting events such as the ‘Monster Mash’ Halloween party.” According to Blake, the franchise also has an “Inclusion and Community Impact Council” and assists with anti-bullying mes- saging through its Texas Rangers Founda- tion charitable efforts. Susie Hess, the president of the Stonewall Democrats of Dallas, said that supporting worthy causes behind the scenes has its merits, but the fact the Rangers are the only Pride Night hold- out still speaks volumes. “It’s shocking that 20 years after the first Pride Night, the Texas Rangers are the only ones to not honor the community with a simple evening,” she said. Hess also noted the Rangers host a night for Abilene Christian University, a school more than 180 miles away. “I’m going to throw a question back to you: What is the point of closeted support to just a couple of organi- zations?” Hess said the Rangers are missing out on the chance to embrace not only LGBTQ fans, but any LGBTQ family members of its own roster or employees. “Embracing Pride is simply embracing all people of the uni- verse, period, full-stop.” Pride Night events at MLB ballparks are commonplace, except in Arlington. Max Bohme/Unsplash