Freedom for Baseball Players
Finally, an opportunity to unburden yourself.
For the first time, college baseball players across the country are being invited into a conversation that has been ignored for far too long. You are not alone. If you have ever worried about hitting someone with a foul ball—on your campus, inside the ballpark, or even outside its boundaries—this is the place where that concern is finally acknowledged.
Foul Ball Safety Now (FBSN) is a national advocacy effort dedicated to protecting players, students, and fans from the preventable danger of baseball injuries. But just as importantly, we are here to protect the psychological and moral burden young athletes have been forced to carry in silence.
For years, players have been told to “shake it off,” “don’t look,” or “move on.”
Yet the fear is real. So is the responsibility. And so is the conscience behind it.
You Are Part of a Hidden Majority
Many college baseball players—at every level—have quietly struggled with the same thought:
“What if one of my hit balls seriously injures someone?”
One player from Queens College reached out and admitted this fear openly. His honesty revealed something powerful: a moral compass still intact, still active, still human. It exposed the pressure young athletes face to ignore what their instincts tell them is wrong.
Baseball culture has tampered with the moral compass of players.
You are expected to stay silent, to detach, to pretend you don’t see the danger.
But you do see it.
And you are not imagining it.
You are confronted by an unsafe environment—and you were never given the tools or permission to speak up.
This Is 2025. Silence Is Over.
The world has changed, and the sport must change with it.
This long-overdue conversation is now happening because you and your peers are ready for it.
The truth is:
There are solutions to this problem.
You were simply never told they exist.
You are not burdened alone.
You have a right to be heard.
Your instincts are correct—ignoring this issue only creates psychological compromise.
Big companies, institutions, and public safety experts will be asked to step in. The door is finally open for authentic reform.
And it starts with you.
A Movement of 50,000 College Baseball Players
We are launching a nationwide effort—reaching out to 50,000 college players—to finally bring this issue into the light.
Whether through Instagram messages, email, or direct outreach, players will be invited to visit this page and the Queens College investigation.
You no longer have to wonder if you’re the only one feeling this.
You’re not. Thousands of your peers will no longer feel isolated.
This is your moment to stand together—united for safety, honesty, and change.
Why This Matters
You have been playing in environments that place both you and the public at risk. The emotional weight of “just hoping nobody gets hurt” is real. You should not carry that feeling alone, and you certainly should not carry it in silence.
This initiative exists so you can:
Relieve yourself.
Acknowledge what you’ve been feeling.
Know that others experience it too.
See that the issue has been addressed—and you can address it as well.
Understand that solutions do exist.
Recognize that staying silent only harms you.
This is your chance to realign your moral compass with what you already know: Safety and responsibility matter.
You Have a Voice. Use It.
Baseball has a long history of silence around this issue. Our generation has the power to change that.
This is your place to speak up, be heard, and help build the solutions you were never told were possible.
This is the moment baseball players unite for safety.
This is where the burden ends.
Ways to Take Action
1. Talk to Jordan Directly, Confidentially or Not
If you want to share your experience, your fear, or your perspective, you may contact Jordan. No judgment. No pressure. Just a conversation.
Call Jordan at 718-627-6767
2. Sign this Document
This is a personal acknowledgement that you recognize the problem, understand the risks, and believe players should have the right to speak up about safety. Signing shows that you stand with other athletes who refuse to carry this burden alone. Your signature helps build the collective voice needed to create real change.