Womp womp.
Hours after a report Tuesday morning that President Donald Trump was "in talks" to throw out the first pitch at a Washington Nationals game on TayuanMajor League Baseball's Opening Day, that dream was dashed.
Now we're left with so many questions.
SEE ALSO: How Derek Jeter's once-mocked startup became a sports media powerhousePoliticoreported Tuesday morning that Trump was "in talks" to throw out the first pitch at Nationals Park on April 3. What exactly "in talks" meant was not clear (more on that in a minute). But by midday Tuesday, the White House cited a "scheduling conflict" to say it would not happen.
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The last time a sitting president threw out a first pitch, per CBS Sports, was when Barack Obama did so at a Nationals game on Opening Day in 2010.
Trump, meanwhile ... well ...
He's thrown out first pitches before.
And awkward-looking photos from those ceremonial tosses have become go-to fodder for internet people looking to make fun of him.
Reviewing the images, it's not terribly hard to see why.
This next one's not quite as bad, but still -- pretty awkward.
Meanwhile, it will probably come as no surprise that Trump once boasted on Twitter about being the "best bball player in N.Y." back in his day.
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So was it, in fact, a "scheduling conflict" that stopped Trump from throwing out the first pitch at next week's Nationals game?
Or is that simply one of so many "alternative facts" to emerge from the White House since Trump took up residency there two months ago?
Perhaps his handlers were worried about another meme-worthy photo opp. Or more tangibly, there's another possibility.
Washington, D.C., voted 90 percent for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election. Nationally, Trump's approval rating just hit a new low. So it's not hard to imagine him being pelted with boos while taking the mound at Nationals Park, a scene White House handlers would surely love to avoid.
Baseball writer Molly Knight reports that every single U.S. president has thrown a ceremonial first pitch at a Major League Baseball game while in office since William Taft started the tradition in 1910. We'll see if Trump gets another invite -- and if he accepts.
Topics Donald Trump
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