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A young boy attending a MLB game on Friday, September 5, between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Miami Marlins broken his heart after a woman took a home ball away from him. Thankfully, one player made right.
Conflict exploded in the stands at Loandepot Park after the Phillies Center fastener Harrison Bader Hitting a home run into the stands. Initially, a woman sitting near the ball landing the ball tried to grab the ball, but a father ran over, grabbed the ball and put her proudly.
The woman soon faced the father and son, eventually taking the ball.
The moment immediately went viral, with people leaning on -le about who was in the wrong. Thankfully, Bader made the boy by inviting him and his family members to meet and greet, where he the child’s talented with a signed baseball bat.
According to a video obtained by several outlets, the Marlins staff also gave the boy a host of shallow -related gifts.
While both organizations worked to rectify the viral situation, the internet was not so fast to forget – or forgive.
“This is crazy. That dude got that ball fair and square,” founder Barstool Sports Dave Portnoy wrote through X on Friday. “Put a pin in that moment in the life of those children. Its future may be unrecoverable by this event.”
A man’s business Marcus LemonisFounder of Camping World and Star of Proceeds, The Elit, also chimed.
Harrison Bader
Megan Briggs/Getty Images“I will send this young man and his family to the @mlb world series on me. Oh and you won an rv too,” he wrote on x.
The exchange reminded someone of an event that occurred at the US Open on August 29. In a shared video on -lein on August 31, CEO of Polish Piotr Szczerek HOLD TAKE A HET THAT TENIS TENNIS PRO Kamil Majchrzak Trying to give a young boy when signing signatures.
Szczerek was seen grabbing the hat out of Majchrzak’s hands before he could finish giving her to the boy. The child tried to get the hat back from Szczerek, who looked over before moving it inside a friend bag.
Szczrek later apologized for his actions in a message posted on his company’s social media accounts on September 1.
“Today, I know I did something that looked like I deliberately took a souvenir from a child,” wrote Szczerk at the time. “That wasn’t my intention, but that doesn’t change the fact that I’ve hurt the boy and disappointed the fans.”
He also acknowledged that he was not the proposed recipient of the hat.
“The cap was given to the boy, and there is an apology because of the family,” continued Szczerk. “Hopefully I have partially repaired the harm.”
“This situation has shown me that one moment of attention can undo years of work and support,” he added. “This is a painful but necessary lesson in humility to me. Therefore, I will even be more active in initiatives that support children and young people and in actions against violence and hatred. I think that I can only rebuild lost trust.”