He also had just played a game without respected teammate Jason Heyward, who was staging a personal boycott over the episode.

So Rizzo let those feelings show for a moment.

He wondered how an officer could shoot someone seven times in the back and how Blake could think he could avoid arrest. “There’s a lot of common sense in this world that we don’t use,” he told reporters on his postgame Zoom call.

FAGAN: Consider listening for once instead of reacting 

He then made a reference to his high school alma mater, which was the site of a mass shooting two years ago, and followed that by ripping lawmakers.

From The Athletic’s Patrick Mooney:

A lone gunman on campus killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High in Parkland, Fla., in February 2018. Rizzo provided financial and emotional support to the community, which included him leaving the Cubs during spring training to speak at a vigil.

Heyward took himself out of the Cubs’ lineup Wednesday against the Tigers in Detroit to show solidarity with the NBA’s Bucks, whose boycott of a playoff game led to the league postponing all of Wednesday’s schedule. Teammates offered to sit out with him, but he said he encouraged them to play, adding that he didn’t believe the game should be canceled.

Three MLB games were postponed Wednesday as other teams decided together to boycott: Reds-Brewers in Milwaukee; Mariners-Padres in San Diego; and Dodgers-Giants in San Francisco. Those games will be made up parts of doubleheaders Thursday, MLB announced.