Buster Posey mysteriously yanked from radio interview as Pride Night controversy drags on, CEO makes it worse

MLB slammed over ‘hypocrisy’ targeting Christian players
Kayleigh McEnany blasts Major League Baseball for alleged hypocrisy, singling out Christian players while allowing other expressions. She cites the San Francisco Giants’ players being warned for Bible verses on hats, contrasted with drag queens on the Dodgers’ field and “BLM” logos on pitcher’s mounds. Former MLB catcher Raffy Lopez joins to discuss his support for players expressing faith.
The San Francisco Giants continue to lead the way in being, perhaps, the wokest team in all of professional sports.
That’s a big title to hold, but this organization may just be the leader in the clubhouse at the moment. Bravo!
Nearly two weeks after the Pride night controversy erupted after four pitchers wrote Bible verses on their rainbow hats, the team is still grappling with the fallout. Everyone is mad. Everyone is playing the blame game.
Rob Manfred and Major League Baseball are blaming the Giants for not properly communicating to the team that the Pride hats were optional.
A special logo for Pride Night is displayed at Oracle Park in San Francisco on June 12, 2026. (Andy Kuno/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images)
Sen. Josh Hawley is mad at Manfred. So much so that the Missouri senator penned a letter to Manfred over religious discrimination, and the DOJ has since launched an investigation.
The left is mad. The right is mad. MLB is mad. The Giants are mad.
Meanwhile, Buster Posey — the longtime catcher and current president of baseball operations — has remained silent.
He spoke to reporters earlier this week from the dugout, and refused to answer any non-baseball questions after opening up the session with a prepared statement. The optics weren’t great. It was odd.
Apparently, it went so poorly in the eyes of the Giants, that they yanked Posey from a scheduled radio interview on Thursday, and instead had CEO Larry Baer fill in.
Naturally, the longtime San Fran exec spent nearly three minutes virtue-signaling his tail off and catering to a fanbase he claims is outraged by the events of that night:
The hypocrisy is off the charts here
How about THAT for some serious word-salad? Kamala Harris would be proud.
“This ownership group has been really involved in supporting the LGBTQ community. It’s strong and unwavering for over 30 years now,” he said before launching into a history lesson about how human rights have been a “North Star” in the organization for three decades.
Seems odd to make inclusivity a north star over … winning baseball games … but whatever. Semantics!

Larry Baer, CEO of the San Francisco Giants, looks on before the game against the Athletics at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on May 16, 2025. (Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images)
“I know we’ve heard from many fans and I know their deep feelings about the events of Pride Night this year. We know it. We’ve heard. We’re listening,” Baer continued. “Our park should be a place where everyone feels welcome, respected and valued. I just want to make that really clear. We take pride in being industry leaders in that effort with the LGBTQ community.”
Goodness gracious. This story just won’t die! Here’s the thing …
The team offered no explanation as to why Posey was pulled from the appearance. None. It certainly seemed odd, mainly because Baer filled in with a very clearly prepared statement.
Could Posey not have made that same statement? Or did he perhaps not want to make it? Perhaps the ex-big leaguer is tired of all the fake outrage over players simply writing Bible verses on a Pride hat that nobody else in the league wears.

Buster Posey, president of operations for the San Francisco Giants, makes a statement at Oracle Park in San Francisco ahead of an MLB game against the Athletics on June 23, 2026. (Santiago Mejia/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)
Don’t forget, the Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers are the only two teams in Major League Baseball authorized to wear Pride emblems on their uniforms because they were “grandfathered in” when the new uniform policy was implemented in 2023.
Why? I have no clue. But here we are.
Anyway, it’s all a mess. The virtue-signaling. The fake outrage. The shouting about “baseball being for everyone” but then telling Christian players they can’t write scripture on their rainbow hat.
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It’s all insane. It’s all exhausting.
It’s also all so predictable.