AP Photos/Sue Ogrocki

Pro Softball Players Quit After Team's "Disgusting" Anthem Tweet

Professional softball players have worked their butts off to elevate their sport over the last decade. The Women's College World Series garners millions of viewers every year. Players like Jennie Finch, Cat Osterman and Monica Abbott took it international at the Olympics in the 1990s and early 2000s.

Despite most professional players making less than MLB bat boys, these women dedicate their lives to the game they love. It would take a whole lot for these girls to quit the team they play for.

Yet as we're finding out, one "disgusting" tweet is all it takes.

Pro softball players across the country are in uproar over a national anthem tweet aimed at President Donald Trump sent out from the Scrap Yard Fast Pitch Twitter account. Not only did players voice their opposition, but they cleaned out their lockers.

What Is Scrap Yard Fast Pitch?

First, some background.

The Scrap Yard Fast Pitch are an independent women's professional softball team in Conroe, Texas, north of Houston.

They used to play in the National Pro Fastpitch league as the Scrap Yard Dawgs out of the Houston area but became independent after the 2017 season once the NPF terminated the franchise for violating league rules.

The team is well-known for signing Olympian Monica Abbott to a record six-year, $1 million contract in 2016.

The 2019 roster included numerous college softball standouts and Team USA Softball players such as former Oregon Ducks pitcher Cheridan Hawkins, former LSU Tigers outfield Bailey Landry, former Auburn standout Kasey Cooper and former Florida State pitcher Kylee Hanson.

The 2020 team includes softball legends in Osterman and Abott as well as former Florida Gators catcher Aubree Munro, former Alabama star Haylie McCleney, Oklahoma standout Keilani Ricketts.

What Did The Team Tweet?

Just before the Scrap Yard Fast Pitch began a seven-game series against the USSSA Pride on Monday in Florida, a tweet was sent out from the team's Twitter account @ScrapYardFP. It tagged Trump and acknowledged how every player was standing for the national anthem and "respecting the flag."

https://twitter.com/MichaelKyKit/status/1275220842767499264?s=20

"Hey @realDonaldTrump Pro Fastpitch being played live @usssaspacecoast @USSSAPride Everyone respecting the FLAG!"

The tweet was allegedly sent out by Scrapyard Dawgs general manager Connie May, and players were livid. Of course, this has everything to do with Trump's response to when Colin Kaepernick began kneeling during the anthem in 2016 to protest racial injustice and police brutality.

That has once again become a hot topic after George Floyd's death sparked protests across the United States during the coronavirus pandemic.

Response From Players: "Disgusted"

Scrap Yard players, as well as pro softball players around the country, were outraged over the politically-injected tweet because they had no say in the matter. A lot of them felt like they were misrepresented, blindsided and disappointed because protests were never about the flag.

The team has at least two Black players on the team — former Florida Gators infielder Kelsey Stewart and former Nebraska outfielder Kiki Stokes.

RELATED: Jennie Finch Was the Queen of Softball. Where Is She Now?

According to reports, Scrap Yard players cleaned out their lockers after the game and won't play the rest of the series' games. May deleted the tweet and attempted to address the team but players walked out.

On June 2, the team's account tweeted a message about Black Lives Matter. It read that "we believe black lives matter, as do all lives." Any sentiment in that seems empty now.

Who Is Connie May?

https://twitter.com/TheConnieMay/status/1262023081129914369?s=20

The tweet was allegedly sent out by Scrap Yard's general manager, Connie May.

May has served as the team's GM since 2015. Her daughter, Meagan May Whitley, was an All-American softball player at Texas A&M and played on the 2011 USA National Team.

According to May's LinkedIn, she attended Texas A&M University in the 1980s and worked for constructions and energy companies in IT and accounting prior to becoming a softball coach.

May hasn't tweeted anything else from her or the team's account. She also hasn't apologized yet, but one can expect that will be coming soon.

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