Sounds like this negro was torturing his white teamates by forcing them to listen his crap music, but the media spins it to say he's making the clubhouse "fun". Cardinals fell for the PC 'black behavior is cool' mantra, but what they were really getting was a clubhouse cancer:
http://www.espn.com/blog/st-louis-c...rs-mission-change-tune-in-cardinals-clubhouse
Feb 26, 2017
JUPITER, Fla. -- Each morning, Kolten Wong slings his bat bag over his shoulder, grabs his glove and then picks up one last piece of essential equipment before he heads to the field for morning stretch at St. Louis Cardinals camp.
It’s a high-powered, portable speaker for players to plug their phones into. The team rotates who picks the music, and it’s all the brainchild of the team’s newest centerpiece player, Dexter Fowler.
One day last week, players were swaying to Kanye West’s “All Falls Down” between taking hacks in the cage. Fowler, a switch-hitter batting right-handed, launched a couple of towering shots to left-center field, which prompted third baseman Matt Carpenter to jokingly yell, “Stop it!” On Monday, Bob Marley was singing melodically through the speaker.
“You can tell it’s my day to pick,” Wong said.
Playing music during batting practice is hardly revolutionary. But it has generated headlines in Cardinals camp, where spring trainings have been run with an all-business precision.
“He brings immediate energy to any room or any table, and it’s infectious,” Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak said of Fowler.
Fowler isn’t downplaying his ability to loosen things up in his new clubhouse. In fact, he wants to make something perfectly clear: It really was as good of a time as it looked while the
Chicago Cubs were snapping a 108-year title drought last season.
“We had fun,” said Fowler, who played two seasons with the Cubs. “All the time. I’m not going to say we never were mad, but even when we lost, it was like, ‘We lost.’ Ten minutes later, put on some music, chill, do what you need to do. It’s over. I think the best baseball players have the shortest memories.”
In addition to acquiring Fowler, the Cardinals let go of one of their longtime team leaders,
Matt Holliday, whose quiet, grind-it-out mentality helped define a very good club for many years.
Holliday’s intimidating presence and old-school perspective made it sometimes uncomfortable for younger players, team sources indicated. The disconnect could simply have been generational, as not that long ago, young major league players were expected to remain quiet in the company of their veteran teammates. Holliday joined a clubhouse that had a reputation for old-school toughness under manager Tony La Russa and hard-nosed players such as Chris Carpenter and Skip Schumaker.
The Fowler love fest has already reached the top of the organization.
“He was just such a perfect signing for us. I really believe that,” team chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. said. “Not only did he fit the need we had on the field, but he’s such an enthusiastic, admired, popular, personable guy -- all those adjectives. It’s hard to remember someone who’s come from another team who instantaneously has buy-in from everybody.”
People who visit Cardinals camp don’t have to take anyone’s word that players are buying into Fowler’s influence. They just have to trust their ears.