El Nuevo Dia, a media outlet from Cora's native Puerto Rico, was the first to report the story, which came out just after 3 p.m. Sunday.
The outlet claims that Cora will not attend due to "the state of the recovery efforts in Puerto Rico after Hurricane María."
The Red Sox manager tells Puerto Rican media outlet @ElNuevoDia that he will NOT take part in the trip to the White House by the 2018 World Series Champions. https://t.co/zw4uFyOouz
— David Souza (@dsouza4717) May 5, 2019
Cora has been very outspoken about the need for hurricane relief on the island and has been unsure if he would attend or not leading up to the announcement Sunday.
The second-year Red Sox manager is a native of Caguas, Puerto Rico.
Back in November 2018, Cora brought the World Series trophy back to the island following the Red Sox World Series title.
He was joined by fellow Puerto Rico native Christian Vazgaz, Sandy Leon, Eduardo Rodriguez and Brock Holt, along with team chairman Tom Werner and team President and CEO Sam Kennedy.
Cora is the latest member of the Red Sox organization who will not be in attendance when the Red Sox visit the White House on May 9. The 2018 World Series champions were supposed to visit President Donald Trump at the White House back on Feb. 15, but the team postponed its trip due to the then-ongoing government shutdown.
May 9 is an off day following Boston’s impending three-game road series with the Baltimore Orioles.
Several players have already announced their plans to not attend the team’s trip to the White House, citing a number of different reasons. Vazquez, David Price, Mookie Betts, Jackie Bradley Jr., Rafael Devers and Hector Velazquez have said they will not be in attendance, according to El Nuevo Dia.
Manager @ac13alex has confirmed to @elnuevodia that he will skip the @RedSox visit to the White House due to the state of the recovery efforts in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria. “I don't feel comfortable celebrating in the White House”. Story in English https://t.co/XPWt2YCWHF pic.twitter.com/5cCFZpAtDN
— El Nuevo Día (@ElNuevoDia) May 5, 2019
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