NEW YORK â Chicago White Sox star shortstop Tim Anderson accused Yankees slugger Josh Donaldson of making a racist remark by calling him Jackie Robinson during Saturday's game against New York.
âHe just made a, you know, disrespectful comment,â said Anderson, who is Black. âBasically, it was trying to call me Jackie Robinson. Like, âWhatâs up, Jackie?'â
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âI don't think it was called for,â Anderson added after New Yorkâs 7-5 win at Yankee Stadium.
Major League Baseball is investigating the incident and speaking to those involved.
White Sox manager Tony La Russa called Donaldsonâs comment âracist,â adding, âThatâs as strong as it gets.â
Asked how he heard it, Anderson agreed with La Russa's charge, saying: âSame, along that same line, yeah.â
Anderson, an All-Star who is among the leading Black voices in baseball, told Sports Illustrated in 2019: âI kind of feel like todayâs Jackie Robinson ... because he changed the game, and I feel like I'm getting to a point to where I need to change the game.â
Donaldson said that early in the game, âI called him Jackie.â The white ballplayer also said he has âjoked aroundâ with Anderson in the past using the same reference and mentioned that Sports Illustrated interview.
Robinson broke the MLB color barrier in 1947. Every team in the big leagues has retired his No. 42 to honor the struggle, sacrifice and social impact he had on the game and beyond.
âMy meaning of that is not any term trying to be racist by any fact of the matter,â Donaldson said. âObviously, he deemed it disrespectful,â he said. âAnd look, if he did, I apologize. Thatâs not what I was trying to do by any manner and thatâs what happened.â
Donaldson scrapped with Anderson on May 13 in Chicago after making a hard tag, and Anderson responded with a shove, resulting in the benches and bullpens clearing. Donaldson said Saturday that he was âtrying to defuseâ any lingering tension when the players crossed paths early in the game.
Anderson said Donaldson made a âJackieâ reference in an early inning: âI spared him that time, and then it happened again."
Later, in the third inning, Donaldson rounded second base after the final out and began jawing with Anderson as the teams came off the field. Donaldson was escorted to the dugout by Yankees manager Aaron Boone and Anderson was led off by third base coach Joe McEwing.
In the fifth, White Sox catcher Yasmani Grandal stood up from his crouch and confronted Donaldson as he approached the plate.
âBelieve me, you donât want me to tell you guys what I told him,â Grandal said to reporters.
The barking continued as relievers ran in from the bullpens and the benches emptied, with La Russa â a member of baseball's Hall of Fame â also yelling at Donaldson.
Anderson continued to shout at Donaldson while being restrained by White Sox slugger JosĂŠ Abreu and infielder Gavin Sheets. After a few minutes, umpires issued warnings to both sides and Donaldson struck out.
âThis game went through a period in time where a lot of those comments were meant, and I think weâre way past that," Grandal said. âAnd itâs just unacceptable. I just thought it was a low blow and I want to make sure Iâve got my teamâs back. Thereâs no way that youâre allowed to say something like that."
Boone said of the incident: âI know ... some talk of that. Iâve got to get to the bottom of it.â
Last season with Minnesota, Donaldson got into a spat with the White Sox when he appeared to yell ânot sticky anymoreâ â a reference to substances pitchers use to control the ball â after hitting a homer against Chicago ace Lucas Giolito.
The White Sox and Yankees were scheduled to play for the final time in the regular season in a doubleheader Sunday.
DJ LeMahieu capped a five-run second inning for the Yankees by hitting his second career grand slam, connecting off Dallas Keuchel (2-4).
Isiah Kiner-Falefa singled home a run, Donaldson had an RBI groundout and Anthony Rizzo lifted a sacrifice fly as the Yankees improved to 29-10. It is their best 39-game start since the 1998 team opened 30-9 and matched the third-best start in team history.
Abreu hit a three-run homer off Nestor Cortes. The White Sox lost to the Yankees for the 10th time in 12 games. Anderson singled twice and reached three times.
Cortes, who entered with an MLB-best 1.35 ERA among qualified pitchers, allowed three runs and six hits in five innings. It was the 17th straight start he permitted three runs or fewer â the second-longest streak in team history.
Clay Holmes got four outs for his fourth save.
TRAINERâS ROOM
White Sox: 3B YoĂĄn Moncada (right leg soreness) was scratched from the lineup and struck out as a pinch-hitter in the eighth. ⌠Abreu (upper respiratory infection) made his eight start this year at DH. ⌠RHP Lance Lynn (right knee) threw a simulated game Friday and is expected to throw another one next week. ⌠RHP Aaron Bummer (right knee) threw a simulated game Friday and could be activated for Sundayâs doubleheader.
Yankees: RHP Chad Green (strained right elbow) was placed on the injured list and could be headed towards surgery. ⌠RHP Luis Gil (elbow) will undergo Tommy John surgery Tuesday. ⌠OF Tim LoCastro (left lat strain) took swings in the cage for the second straight day.
UP NEXT
The teams play a single-admission doubleheader Sunday. RHP Johnny Cueto (0-0, 0.00 ERA) will start the opener for Chicago and RHP Michael Kopech (0-1, 1.54) starts the nightcap. RHP Jameson Taillon (4-1, 3.28) and RHP Luis Severino (3-0, 3.63) will pitch for the Yankees.
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