The White House misspelled Boston's 2018 World Series winning team as the 'Red Socks'
- The White House was widely mocked on Thursday for putting out a release announcing their plans to host the 2018 World Series champions "the Boston Red Socks" that afternoon, botching the team's actual name, the "Red Sox."
- The Red Sox were invited to the White House to celebrate their 2018 World Series Win, but the team's manager, Alex Cora, and at least nine other players are boycotting the event to protest the Trump administration.
- The Red Sox's name, which dates back to 1908, is short for "The Red Stockings." Both the Boston Red Sox and Chicago White Sox shortened their names to fit easily on newspapers.
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The White House was widely mocked on Thursday for putting out a release announcing their plans to host the 2018 World Series champions "the Boston Red Socks" that afternoon - butchering the team's actual name, the Red Sox.
The circumstances surrounding the team's visit to the White House were already tense, with team manager Alex Cora and at least nine other Latino and African-American Red Sox players announcing they planned to boycott the trip to the White House in protest of President Donald Trump's administration.
Cora hails from the American territory of Puerto Rico, and has openly slammed what he sees as the administration's insufficient response to the devastation caused by Hurricane Maria in 2017, and Trump's angry tweets blaming Puerto Ricans and their elected leaders.
"Unfortunately, we are still struggling, still fighting," Cora told the Puerto Rican newspaper El Nuevo Dia of the condition of the island.
"Even though the United States Government has helped, there's still a long road ahead...I've used my voice on many occasions so that Puerto Ricans are not forgotten and my absence (from the White House) is no different. As such, at this moment, I don't feel comfortable celebrating in the White House," he added.
Legendary Red Sox player and 10-time All-Star recipient David Ortiz, who originally grew up in the Dominican Republic and retired from the Red Sox in 2016, has also spoken out in support of Cora and other players boycotting the visit.
"When it comes down [to] the way immigrants have been treated, it's something that goes a long way..,you don't want to go and shake hands with a guy who is treating immigrants like [expletive] because I'm an immigrant," Ortiz explained to WEEI host Rob Bradford.
The Red Sox's name, which dates back to 1908, is short for "The Red Stockings." Both the Boston Red Sox and Chicago White Sox shortened their team names to fit easily in newspaper headlines. The team was initially known as the Boston Americans, but has been known as the Sox ever since