Inside The Rangers

American Socks, Caps All Over MLB on Fourth of July

Special USA-themed socks and caps are being work across MLB on the Fourth of July.
© Eric Canha-USA TODAY Sports

In this story:


The socks being worn across baseball on the Fourth of July, including by several of the Texas Rangers and Boston Red Sox, are fit for the Independence Day holiday.

Stars, stripes and “USA” adorn the stockings that many players are showcasing up to the knees with their pants hiked up. They also go with the special caps that feature an American flag design in the team logo with team name on the side with “USA” underneath. 

Among the Rangers wearing the USA socks were All-Star right fielder Adolis García, All-Star third baseman Josh Jung and left fielder Robbie Grossman.

MLB celebrates holidays and other special occasions throughout the season with special uniforms. The military is acknowledged with camo gear, pink makes an appearance on Mothers’ Day and so on.

The Rangers also debuted their City Connect uniforms this year to commemorate the history of baseball in the Dallas-Arlington-Fort Worth area.

As for the Fourth of July, the socks can be your for a mere $23.99 (discount coupon applied) on mlbshop.com. The caps come in several styles and prices at the same site..

More From SI’s Inside The Rangers:

  1. Texas Rangers New Nike City Connect Jersey Pay Homage to Dallas-Fort Worth
  2. No Pride in Texas, Rangers Lone Team Without Pride Night
  3. Watch: Eva Longoria Wins Over Texas Rangers Fans With First Pitch
  4. Texas Rangers in Play to Sing Shohei Ohtani
  5. Arlington Mayor Says Rougned Odor ‘Punch’ Mural to Stay
  6. Texas Rangers Clubhouse ‘Insane’ Says Reliever
  7. MLB, Texas Rangers Win Bally Sports Broadcast Suit
  8. AL West is ‘Ours,’ Not Astros Says Texas Rangers First Baseman
  9. Former Texas Rangers Favorite Derek Holland Comeback Ends
  10. Bally Sports Southwest to Televise Nearly All Rangers Games

You can follow Art Garcia on Twitter @ArtGarcia92.

Catch up with Inside the Rangers on Facebook, Twitter, TikTok and Instagram.


Published
Art Garcia
ART GARCIA

Art Garcia (@ArtGarcia92) has watched, wondered and written about those fortunate few to play games since the 1990s. Award-winning stops at NBA.com, Fort Worth Star-Telegram and San Antonio Express-News dot a career that includes extensive writing for such outlets as ESPN.com, FOXSports.com, CBSSports.com, The Sporting News, among others. He is a former professor of sports reporting at UT Arlington and continues to work in the communications field. Garcia began covering the Dallas Mavericks right around Mark Cuban purchasing the club in 2000. The Texas A&M grad has also covered the Cowboys, Rangers, TCU, Big 12, Final Fours, countless bowl games, including the National Championship, and just about everything involving a ball in Texas.

Share on XFollow ArtGarcia92