Dodgers' Teoscar Hernandez avoids Milwaukee's allegedly haunted hotel at wife's insistence
Briefly

Dodgers' Teoscar Hernandez avoids Milwaukee's allegedly haunted hotel at wife's insistence
""I don't believe in ghosts. I have stayed there before. I never see anything or hear anything," Hernández said. "But my wife is on this trip, and she says she doesn't want to stay in there. So we have to find another hotel." Hernández added, however, that his wife told him that she has heard from other players and their wives that there had been "something happening" over at the team hotel. Asked to elaborate, Hernández said he had been told that in "some of the rooms, the lights, goes off and on, and the doors - there are noises, footsteps. ... I'm not the guy that I'm gonna be here saying, 'Oh yeah, I experienced that before,' because I'm not, and I don't think I'm gonna experience that.'""
""some of the rooms, the lights, goes off and on, and the doors - there are noises, footsteps. ... I'm not the guy that I'm gonna be here saying, 'Oh yeah, I experienced that before,' because I'm not, and I don't think I'm gonna experience that.'""
Teoscar Hernández does not believe in ghosts but chose not to stay at the 137-year-old Pfister Hotel in downtown Milwaukee during the first two NLCS games because his wife objected after hearing accounts from other players and spouses. The Pfister has a long history of reported spooky incidents, including flickering lights, mysterious footsteps and unexplained noises in rooms. Some MLB players and their partners have relayed such experiences. Several Dodgers, including Mookie Betts, have preferred Airbnbs rather than risk encounters at the team hotel. Hernández said he has stayed there before without incident but honored his wife's concerns.
Read at Los Angeles Times
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