Tim Tebow
http://www.christianpost.com/news/baseball-team-apologizes-after-mocking-tim-tebow-for-hisexpressions-of-faith-on-the-field-189584/#.WW6Z1QfGVp0.email
Baseball Team Apologizes After Mocking
Tim Tebow for His Expressions of Faith on the Field
By JAY GOTERA , CHRISTIAN POST CONTRIBUTOR
Jul 5, 2017 | 4:57 PM
A baseball team has learned a lesson that attacking a person for his Christian beliefs, even in the guise of
a joke, is bound to boomerang on the attacker.
(PHOTO: REUTERS/JASEN VINLOVE-USA TODAY SPORTS)
New York Mets outfielder Tim Tebow looks on during his workout at the Mets Minor League Complex in Port St.
Lucie, Florida, on Sept. 19, 2016.
The Charleston RiverDogs were swamped with criticism after they systematically mocked former NFL
star and current minor league baseball player Tim Tebow for his well-known expressions of his Christian
faith, The Post and Courier reported.
The RiverDogs played Tebow's team, the Columbia Fireflies, the New York Mets' Class A affiliate, on June
16 as part of a three-game series. Tebow's celebrity status drew the fans, filling up Charleston's Riley
Park in all three games of the series.
The mocking of Tebow started with the RiverDogs' mascot, Charlie, showing up with an eye black with
"John 3:16" scrawled in white, something that Tebow used to put on his face when he was still a football
player, according to Newsday.
The mascot also did the "Tebowing" act, which is bending on one knee and praying on the football field.
The team also played the "Hallelujah Chorus" every time Tebow came up to bat during the game.
Each time a player from Tebow's team came up to bat, a photo of Tebow would reportedly emerge
showing the Christian athlete crying—a reminder of what Tebow did when his college team lost the
2009 SEC Championship game.
When Tebow came up to bat, the announcer called for a strikeout and encouraged applause when a
strike was called against him. Tebow, 29, is hitting .224 in his first 60 games of full-season minor league
baseball.
The RiverDogs defended the antics, saying they were just having good fun.
But the public were not amused, voicing their criticism of the RiverDogs' antics on social media, ESPN,
and other media outlets.
"I guess classless things like mocking someone's religion is something that gets @MiLB teams publicity
nowadays, huh?" one person wrote on Twitter.
Another tweeted, "This is the most classless thing I've ever seen by a sports organization. Not a big
Tebow fan but this is ridiculous."
Dave Echols, president and general manager for the RiverDogs, subsequently issued an apology.
"While we believe that our promotions were poking fun at Mr. Tebow's celebrity status rather than his
religion or baseball career, our intent was not to offend anyone, and for the fact that we did offend, we
are sorry," he wrote in a statement to The Post and Courier.