Summer’s here, and the time is right for doffing in the seats.

A cavalcade of young, sweaty youths have overtaken Major League Baseball stadiums from coast to coast, extending a trend that has its roots in the bleachers of college football stadium.

“Tarps Off,” as the kids call it, first gained traction in October 2025, when a harmless bet resulted in an Oklahoma State fan removing his shirt and twirling it amid a section of lifeless fans at a football game, according to crowd behavior anthropologists.

Soon, the act spread to Wisconsin and UCLA and North Carolina and Virginia Tech, young men channeling a sentiment originally expressed in Petey Pablo’s first single from his 2001 debut album:

North Carolina, raise up. Take your shirt off, twist it ’round your handSpin it like a helicopter

Stephen F. Austin club baseball player Bryce Bradford, who helped extend the Tarps Off shirtless fan trend to Busch Stadium throws out a ceremonial first pitch before a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Pittsburgh Pirates.

How ‘Tarps Off’ came to MLB

Naturally, “Tarps Off” went into hibernation during the winter, yet emerged in the most unlikely of places: Denver’s Coors Field.

Barely two months after Punxsutawney Phil allegedly cursed us with a few more weeks of winter, fans of the sad-sack Colorado Rockies brought the tradition to the big leagues on April 8, with a singular fan in Section 329 going guns out as the club aimed to complete a sweep of the Houston Astros.

Soon, a group of young men huddled around the iconic purple row that marks one mile above sea level at the ballpark. The crowd swelled. The Rockies won.

And “Tarps Off” was a thing.

‘Tarps Off’ goes mainstream

The trend soon accelerated thanks in part to the superstitious culture surrounding baseball. When members of the Stephen F. Austin club baseball team populated a section in the 200 level of Busch Stadium at a May 15 game and the Cardinals rallied for a 5-4, 11-inning walk-off win over the Kansas City Royals, manager Oliver Marmol couldn’t help but notice.

And correlate the shirtless bros with a team W.

“Whoever started that in right field, I’ll do whatever I need to do to make sure they come every game,” Marmol said after the game, in something of a preamble to the Tarps Off Constitution. “Because that was awesome. Not only them, but everybody that showed up today. That was a fun environment.”

Marmol didn’t stop there, inviting the pectoral preeners into the Cardinals clubhouse and offering to buy tickets to any fan wanting to “sit in the right field loge and bring the energy.”

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Ballpark vibes, big plays and wild celebrations during 2026 MLB season

The Athletics Lawrence Butler is tagged out by Chicago White Sox third baseman Miguel Vargas as he tires to extend his double into a triple during the eighth inning at Sutter Health Park on April 18, 2026.

(Scott Marshall, Imagn Images)

‘Tarps Off’: What’s next?

That created a wave of “Tarps Off” movements. In Anaheim, where “Sell the team!” and “Arte sucks!” chants became de rigueur as owner Arte Moreno pilots the franchise to its 11th consecutive losing season, the chant gained extra spice when paired with the shirtless crowd.

Now, it’s been seen in virtually every ballpark, with various between-innings dance cams honing in on men of all ages pumping their fists and waving their shirts and ramping up their Vitamin D intake. It is sure to be a summertime staple, particularly as temperatures reach triple digits and a day at the ballpark becomes not unlike a good schvitz in the sauna.

At some point – and perhaps that point has arrived – it will be viewed as a little too tired, too contrived, too 2025. At the same time, in an era when sports leagues and franchises are shaking down municipalities for new stadiums that expand luxury areas while squeezing out the cheap seats and creating scarcity that drives up ticket prices, “Tarps Off” truly belongs to the people.

The lords of the loge. The vamps of the view section. Even if the practice, rooted in spontaneity, is now remarkably mainstream.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: How ‘Tarps Off’ has gone from college football gag to MLB movement

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