An embarrassing oversight was forced to draw a new cap design for the Texas Rangers for the 5950 overlap 5950 collection, after mistakenly characterising Spanish slang for women's breasts in a new era.
The recently released collection belongs to all 30 MLB teams, with the club's logo superimposed on the text that appears in front of the Ballclub jersey.
Regarding Rangers caps, the “T” logo It was placed in the word “Texas.” Just above “X,” a vulgar word that happens to be written in Spanish.
It didn't seem like no one had caught this issue, and after all the caps were sold online over the weekend, fans of the Eagle Eyed Rangers quickly realized what the hat word meant.
As of Monday night, the hats were pulled from the collection, and the hat link now takes visitors to the homepage of the Rangers online shop.
Rangers officials were not aware of the design before the release. Dallas Morning News reported.
Other designs in the collection could cause some headaches, including the Angels design covering the “G” in the team's name on the cap, with the Houston cap having a star and logo, and the “H” covering the Astros' T and R.
Apart from the Ranger design, the rest of the collection was available.
It was not the first time that vulgarity had been slipped by people in the new era.
Just this September, the athletics hat, which was part of the 9fifty Snapback collection, quickly got a text. The front of the hat is pronounced “a'ss.”
The hat was pulled out of sale, but not before fans bought it.
MLB officials declined to comment on the Dallas Morning News about the Rangers Cap.





