Puerto Rico breaks world record as baseball fans go blonde

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PUERTO RICO (AP) – The blondes are back.

Puerto Rico last Friday broke the Guinness World record for the most hair dyed, with 192 men going blonde to support the United States (US) territory’s team that is vying to win the World Baseball Classic after finishing twice as runner-up.

The team’s players first dyed their hair blonde ahead of the 2017 World Baseball Classic as a joke, unexpectedly unleashing a dyeing craze in Puerto Rico that left pharmacies and beauty supply stores bereft of hair dye.

The tournament is usually held every four years, but the pandemic delayed it by two years, so after six years of no dye jobs and no “Team Rubio!” cheers, many Puerto Ricans were eager to see if the trend would continue.

The players obliged and repeated the tradition this year, and people in the island of overwhelmingly dark hair once again responded via platinum blonde, dirty blonde and even burnt orange locks and beards to show their support.

“The more blonde hair, the more united we’ll be as a people,” photographer Miguel Rodríguez Camilo said while waiting for his dark hair to change colour.

Puerto Rico tries to break the Guinness record for the most hair dyed in eight hours. PHOTO: AP

He was one of more than 200 men who showed up for the mass bleaching event last Friday. Some were disqualified for various reasons, including that they didn’t take the obligatory “before” picture.

Guinness World record adjudicator Natalia Ramírez noted that a handful were disqualified because they already had white or graying hair.

“If you can’t really see a change, it doesn’t count,” she said.

Participants sat in an outdoor area for up to 45 minutes wearing plastic shower caps as they laughed at each other, took selfies and observed themselves in their smartphones as colourists came by and peeked under the shower caps.

“I wasn’t going to do it, but my colleagues pressured me into it,” said William Davidowski, a 51-year-old with naturally dark brown hair who works at the insurance company that helped organise the event.

The World Baseball Classic just started, but Davidowski wasn’t sure how long he will stay a blonde.

“It depends on how it looks,” he said with a laugh.He walked out nearly an hour later with a baseball cap on.

Organisers of the event had eight hours to beat the previous record, set in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in March 2013 when 160 people dyed their hair. More than five hours after the event began, participant number 161, the man responsible for breaking the record, walked in to the applause and yells of those gathered.

“Let’s always support our guys,” Tomás Nieves, a 22-year-old air conditioning technician, said in a low whisper, explaining that he was nervous about all the attention.

Team Rubio, as Puerto Rico’s team is known, almost adopted another hair colour this year.

There was talk about players dyeing their hair blue, “but some boys got a little shy”, New York Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor said at a recent news conference.

Then Detroit Tigers shortstop Javier Báez posted a picture on Instagram with newly dyed blonde hair and, “that was that”, Lindor said.