US Trends

why does brandon marsh wet his hair

Brandon Marsh keeps his hair soaking wet during games because he likes the slicked‑back look and says it keeps his hair from getting dry, bristly, and in his face while he plays.

The main reason

In an interview, Marsh explained that he literally dumps water over his head so his hair stays wet and slicked back “just how I like it,” and that when it dries it gets super bristly, which he hates. Keeping it wet makes it easier to push back under his cap and helmet and helps it stay out of his eyes while he is in the outfield and at the plate.

How the routine started

Marsh has said the habit really took off after he started worrying that his hair looked too dry in old photos from his Angels days. A teammate, pitcher Michael Lorenzen, suggested he go out with it damp and then add some product or oil so it would stay looking wet, and from there Marsh just started “pouring and pouring and pouring” water on it before and during games. It evolved from a small styling tip into a full-on between-innings ritual that fans now associate with him.

Style, superstition, and image

Over time, the constantly wet, “greasy” look has become part of Marsh’s on‑field persona and a kind of signature brand, much like some WWE wrestlers or long‑haired players who also keep their hair soaked for control and effect. Fans on forums joke about it, speculate about superstitions, and even compare him to a “marsh man” or “swamp monster,” but underneath the memes, the basic explanation he gives is practical: he likes how it looks and feels when it’s wet.

A few extra hair quirks

Marsh has also mentioned that he only shampoos about once a month, which contributes to the heavy, always‑damp appearance and makes the wet look even more noticeable on TV. He says he mostly relies on water (and occasionally some product suggested by teammates) rather than a complicated grooming routine, which fits the slightly wild, low‑maintenance image fans associate with him.

TL;DR: He keeps dumping water on his hair because he prefers the wet, slicked‑back style, it stops his hair from getting dry and bristly, and it’s become a trademark part of his on‑field identity.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.