Patrick Bailey did not expect to become the face of something so personal. Yet when TIME revealed its 2025 TIME100 Next list, the Giants catcher found himself among global innovators, activists and emerging cultural forces. His selection wasn’t driven by swing metrics, defensive framing grades or projections — although those were impressive. Instead, it came from something deeper: the work he began for children who can’t fully hear the game he loves.
Bailey’s journey traces back to his younger sister, who grew up with hearing difficulties. Family members recall a household where baseball games were often explained, described, or interpreted so she could experience them the way everyone else did. Bailey never forgot it. When he reached the majors, the idea of giving back wasn’t a branding plan. It was a promise.
TIME highlighted Bailey’s initiative to expand access to hearing assistance, scholarships, and recreational experiences for children with hearing disabilities, particularly in Northern California. According to those close to Bailey, the program began quietly — no press releases, no cameras. Families were invited to clinics where interpreters were provided, players learned basic sign language, and equipment was modified to help children stay engaged.

“I don’t want these kids to feel like baseball isn’t their world,” Bailey told TIME.
Giants teammates describe Bailey as someone who rarely seeks attention. “He was doing this long before anyone noticed,” one veteran said. Local community leaders agree. Bailey often attended events without uniform or spotlight — showing up, listening, learning.
What TIME captured is the moment when that small movement became something larger.
“He doesn’t want the award,” a close friend said. “He just wants the kids to feel seen.”
Bailey’s inclusion in TIME100 Next comes as baseball evolves into an era where influence is measured beyond performance. He may not own MVP trophies or headline national commercials, but the recognition frames him as part of a new generation of players shifting how athletes interact with community.
Online reaction mirrored that shift. Giants fans flooded forums with praise. One post read: “Patrick Bailey is the future — not just of our team but of what sports should be.”
Behind the scenes, those who know Bailey insist he hasn’t slowed down. Plans are underway to expand his program beyond the Bay Area. He is reportedly working with schools and hospitals to subsidize hearing aids for families who can’t afford them — a move shaped directly by his sister’s childhood experience.
“We learned what it means to feel excluded,” Bailey said in a past interview. “If I can help a kid feel included, that’s more important than anything.”
In a sport searching for new leaders, Bailey’s recognition doesn’t rewrite the record books. It rewrites expectations. Baseball has seen superstars, icons, and legends. Now, it may be witnessing something rarer — a player whose most meaningful legacy may never appear on a scoreboard.
As TIME framed it, Patrick Bailey isn’t simply an athlete to watch. He is a reminder that impact doesn’t require volume — only intent.
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