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: Father Loses Life to Catch a Memento for Son


hypediss
07-08-2011, 08:46 AM
Saw this happened on TV when I was at the gym yesterday, really did not expect the father to lose his life. Perhaps I was naive - RIP to what I think was a great firefighter and even better father. :okay:

Fan's pursuit of gift for son ends in tragedy - MLB - Yahoo! Sports (http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_ylt=AnvSluR1iyz1ZDHxx1j1YYY5nYcB?slug=jp-passan_texas_hamilton_tragedy_fan_death_070811)

The closest I came to catching a baseball at a major league stadium was the year SkyDome opened. I was 9. Mauro “Goose” Gozzo, a rookie pitcher for Toronto, was trolling around the outfield during batting practice when a man standing next to me shouted for him to throw him a ball for his son. Goose obliged and fired a strike. Emboldened, I asked Goose for a souvenir, too. His next throw didn’t quite reach the stands, even with my lean over the rail. My mom extracted me before Goose could try again.

There is something magical about a baseball, a 5¼-ounce orb made of rubber, cork, yarn and leather, that excites grown men as much as it does children. People catch balls while holding babies, sacrifice $10 beers in pursuit of them, fight and claw for their possession. Everyone in the stands who catches a ball thrusts it into the air. It’s a trophy. Sometimes the applause is polite. Other times the whole crowd cheers. The pursuit of a ball inside a stadium is noble.

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Police officers and fans look over the railing where a Texas Rangers fan fell while trying to catch a ball tossed in the stands.
(AP)
It’s especially so when a father tries to fetch a ball for his child, like the man next to me at SkyDome did, and like a man at Rangers Ballpark did Thursday night. His name was Shannon Stone. He was a firefighter from Brownwood, nearly a three-hour drive from the stadium in Arlington. He wore a white T-shirt and a blue Texas Rangers hat. His young son wore a red T-shirt and a red Rangers hat. They sat in the left-field bleachers together.

In the second inning, Oakland A’s outfielder Conor Jackson(notes) hit a screaming foul ball down the left-field line. It caromed toward Josh Hamilton(notes), the Rangers’ left fielder. Hamilton picked it up and threw the ball toward the stands. Players do this hundreds of times in a season. It’s part of baseball’s charm. Show up to a stadium, take home a piece of the game.

Hamilton’s toss came in short. It didn’t stop Shannon Stone from stretching to grab it. I’m almost certain, in fact, that the moment before Shannon Stone fell 20 feet and suffered injuries that would kill him, he was indescribably happy. He was going to grab a baseball from Josh Hamilton, a man who hauled himself from the depths of drug addiction to not only return to baseball but win the American League MVP award last season. Once Stone had that baseball, he was going to hand it to his son. And for the rest of his life, his son would have a story to tell about the time his daddy reached over a railing and snagged a bad throw from Josh Hamilton, one of the most talented players ever to wear a baseball uniform.

[Related blog: Man dies after falling out of stands at Rangers game)]

Instead, he watched his dad die. He saw Shannon Stone secure the ball in both hands but lose his balance in the process. The man next to Stone reached, in vain, to grab his leg. Stone fell head first 20 feet. When paramedics arrived to stabilize Stone and take him to a hospital, the relief pitchers in the A’s bullpen overheard the conversation.

“Please check on my son,” Stone said.

This is unfair. It’s so very unfair. It’s unfair to Josh Hamilton, a decent man and a father to three daughters. He tried to do a good deed. That’s all he tried to do. It’s unfair to Shannon Stone, a firefighter for 18 years who just wanted to make his kid’s night. It’s most unfair to that son. He will grow up without a father.

I have a son. He is 3. I’ve taken him to a few ballgames. He likes the hot dogs and fireworks. He wants to know the players’ names. He asks who is nice and who is mean. And when I’m going down the scorecard, answering his questions, he interrupts me and asks to get ice cream.

One night on the walk back from the ice cream shop at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., my son asked to sit in a seat down the right-field line. We moved to the front row. A foul ball ricocheted toward us. My son loves foul balls. When one goes into the upper deck, he’ll crane his neck behind him in case it falls. He always asks me to get one for him, and I tell him I’ll try, and here was my chance. Someone closer beat me to it. That always happens.

The next time we go to a stadium, I’ll try again. Maybe for the first time in 30 years I’ll get lucky and a ball will come toward me or a player will toss it in my direction. If I have to lean a little to grab it, so be it. When I pass it to my son, and he lifts his prize, and the crowd around us applauds, his smile will light up the stadium.

He’ll know it was a gift from a dad who loves him more than anything, a gift fathers hand to their sons at ballparks every day. A gift Shannon Stone, a dad who caught a foul ball for his son, never got to give.

RESN
07-08-2011, 08:54 AM
and here is the video
YouTube - ‪Fan Dies at Ranger Game; Announcers Ignorantly Laugh‬‏

RIP :(

Riddle
07-08-2011, 09:06 AM
Such a sad turn of events. RIP.

StylinRed
07-08-2011, 09:06 AM
yeah saw it this morning, so sad



the reporter said it was the 2nd time someone died this season and there have been others who have fallen; CNN talked about a guy who fell 30ft and split his skull open but lived

why don't they put netting or something up? not to prevent people from catching the ball since that's a "favourite pastime" but a net to catch debris or ppl who fall :/

krazynuck
07-08-2011, 09:07 AM
ya thats sad


after reading the article on tsn I did not realize that there were that many accidents with fans trying to catch foul balls

they said that on july 6 2010 a fan (firefighter as well) fell and broke his skull trying to catch a foul ball....the odd part is the dates are like a year apart

The accident was eerily similar to one almost exactly a year earlier. Another firefighter fell about nine metres from the second-deck of seats down the right-field line while trying to catch a foul ball on July 6, 2010. Tyler Morris, a firefighter from the Lake Cities Fire Department near Dallas, fractured his skull and sprained an ankle last year when he dropped onto seats where other fans were sitting.

Santofu
07-08-2011, 09:09 AM
Shit, that's brutal for the son to see his dad fall in front of his eyes...

RIP

Prolowtone
07-08-2011, 09:27 AM
Seen this on the news as i was going to bed early this-morning. R.I.P

CP.AR
07-08-2011, 10:03 AM
RIP :(

InvisibleSoul
07-08-2011, 10:06 AM
Wow, so weird... I was at Fenway Park watching the Red Sox against the Blue Jays on Tuesday, and I was wondering this exact thing... how often someone falls over railings trying to catch foul balls. It's one of those things you act first before thinking about the danger... and you're over before you know it.

RIP

hotjoint
07-08-2011, 10:55 AM
saw this on the news last night, so sad rip

411ken
07-08-2011, 11:01 AM
R.I.P

Hope they change up the stadium safety and stuff..

dlo
07-08-2011, 11:11 AM
RIP, hate how the announcer still poked fun at the fact someone fell over, FAIL.

Greenstoner
07-08-2011, 11:27 AM
real sad story, hope the kid grow up fine

rsx
07-08-2011, 12:37 PM
easily avoidable.. jesus christ

spideyv2
07-08-2011, 01:59 PM
and here is the video
YouTube - ‪Fan Dies at Ranger Game; Announcers Ignorantly Laugh‬‏ (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W0nA-X-5MKA&feature=channel_video_title)

RIP :(

Fuck those announcers. RIP

FerrariEnzo
07-08-2011, 05:42 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAQRSdGOMmY

JD35
07-08-2011, 05:54 PM
wow.... :( RIP

nlo
07-08-2011, 06:09 PM
damn... RIP

Narayan
07-08-2011, 06:14 PM
image how Hamilton must feel... Obviously not his fault but he under threw the ball which lead to the guy falling...

HonestTea
07-08-2011, 09:46 PM
Fuck...this is so sad :(

RIP :(

Ronin
07-09-2011, 01:30 AM
Fucking sucks man. The kid's favorite player was Josh Hamilton too. Imagine how awesome that would be...your dad grabs a ball from your favorite player for you...but instead he falls over the railing.

Total accident. No one's fault, really. Just one of those things.

Mr.Money
07-09-2011, 03:03 AM
reports say when people tried to help him and see what happened to him he was more worried about his son then himself..

"Is my son okay???,he's All alone by himself,make sure he's Okay"

xilley
07-09-2011, 03:05 AM
this kinda shit sucks..
hope the kids going to be ok
RIP..

Vansterdam
07-09-2011, 03:36 AM
RIP

XplicitLuder
07-09-2011, 08:59 AM
Shared this in other forum :( so sad RIP

Grandmaster TSE
07-09-2011, 09:18 AM
so sad to see that happen

RIP

Stealthy
07-09-2011, 12:13 PM
Wow, that's so sad… hope the son recovers from this. RIP
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Anjew
07-09-2011, 10:17 PM
2nd time someone died in 1 season? thats ridiculous. put signs or nets or whatever you gotta do... 1 death can be caulked up to lesson learned... 2nd death is unacceptable.

FeistyBearH22a
07-09-2011, 10:23 PM
Yeah. Apparently, the ball was thrown to them by a staff member of the stadium/team. I smell a lawsuit coming their way.

Ronin
07-09-2011, 10:24 PM
To be honest, the rails there aren't dangerous looking. If they were high to the point that someone CAN'T fall off, then they would just block the view.

It comes down to personal responsibility, really. Don't lean so far that you could fall or even take the chance. This guy wasn't doing anything dangerous. It was just an accident.

insomniac
07-12-2011, 08:29 AM
http://26.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lo7zopZzey1qengdjo1_500.jpg

similar thing happened to this dude
A short time after firefighter Shannon Stone, the 39-year-old who fell 20 feet to his death at Rangers Ballpark, was laid to rest in Texas, Keith Carmickle of Kingman, Arizona, nearly met his maker in the exact same fashion at Chase Field while going after a Prince Fielder homer during last night’s Home Run Derby.

Luckily, Carmickle’s brother and a friend managed to grab his legs and arms, saving him from a 20-foot drop to the pool deck below. “I thought: I’ve lived a good life,” Carmickle is quoted as saying.

Yankees second baseman Robinson Canó won the derby.

full article here:
Fan nearly falls from stands during Home Run Derby - MLB News | FOX Sports on MSN (http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/Fan-nearly-falls-from-stands-during-Home-Run-Derby-071111)

124Y
07-12-2011, 12:03 PM
R.I.P.

:(

maxxxboost
07-12-2011, 11:39 PM
RIP
...

SupraMan604
07-12-2011, 11:49 PM
RIP...