Brewers Pitcher Gets Rocky Road Reception After Hate-Filled Tweets

San Francisco Giants fans did not exactly welcome Josh Hader to the mound.

Josh Hader #71 of the Milwaukee Brewers and the National League pitches in the eighth inning against the American League during the 89th MLB All-Star Game, presented by Mastercard at Nationals Park on July 17, 2018 in Washington, DC.  (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)
Josh Hader #71 of the Milwaukee Brewers and the National League pitches in the eighth inning against the American League during the 89th MLB All-Star Game, presented by Mastercard at Nationals Park on July 17, 2018 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)
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When he pitched at home for the first time after his racist and homophobic tweets from years past surfaced during the All-Star break, Brewers pitcher Josh Hader got a standing ovation.

When he pitched for the first time outside of Milwaukee last night … not so much.

Fans in San Francisco welcomed the 24-year-old pitcher to the mound with a round of vigorous boos when he entered the game in the sixth inning to face the Giants.

Starting as soon as he left the bullpen, the boos continued to swell when Hader’s name was announced over the stadium PA system.

“Like I said before, I can’t control what they’re going to say to me. I’ve made mistakes in my earlier years,” Hader said after game. “I’ve just got to go out and focus on what I’ve got to do and that’s to get outs and help this team win. I can’t let my mistakes distract me from my job going now. Obviously I don’t like what I said back then and I obviously regret what came out, but we live and we learn as human beings. We’re not perfect. It’s how you learn from what you do and just become a better person from it.”

When Hader — who did apologize profusely after the tweets initially surfaced — spoke about the issue previously, his teammates made it clear they had his back.

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