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The Unofficial Opie & Anthony Message Board - man may file lawsuit over who really caught Bonds 73rd homer


Displaying 1-7 of 7 messages in this thread.
Posted ByDiscussion Topic: man may file lawsuit over who really caught Bonds 73rd homer
TeenWeek
what's a status?
posted on 10-09-2001 @ 9:52 PM      
O&A Board Regular
Registered: Oct. 00
SAN FRANCISCO -- Barry Bonds hit it and Alex Popov may have caught it, but Patrick Hayashi emerged from a scrum of Giants fans to become the happy owner of the ball the San Francisco slugger smacked Sunday for his 73rd homer.

Hayashi was grinning at the time, but he's tight-lipped now about what he'll do with the ball, valued at perhaps $1 million.

"I am just savoring the moment," Hayashi, 36, said in an e-mail that has served as his only public comment.

Instead, Popov's doing the talking.

"I was part of history because I caught Barry's No. 73," Popov told ESPN.com sports business writer Darren Rovell on Tuesday. "And without that video my story would forever go down in history as heresay."

KNTV footage shows that Popov, a health-food restaurateur from Berkeley, gloved the ball but was mobbed by a crush of clawing fans. Someone ripped the ball from his mitt and it ended up in Hayashi's hands.

"The tape clearly shows that Alex caught the ball," Ted Rowlands, the KNTV reporter who was in the middle of the pile, told ESPN.com. "The question is, are there any rules in the middle of a scrum? If there are rules of possession, what are they? If all bets are off until Major League Baseball comes along, then it's Hayashi's ball. If you can't steal from a scrum, it's Alex's.

"People are yelling, 'Get off! Get off!' And Popov is saying, 'I got it,' " said Rowlands, who told ESPN.com he's seen the videotape more than 20 times. "But in the middle of this all, Hayashi becomes obsessed with his pocket and his hand doesn't leave it, and after a while he shows the ball to the camera and says, 'Is this it?' "

Now Popov, the catcher on the fly, is brandishing a videotape and a lawyer, saying that if Hayashi doesn't give back the ball he will seek criminal charges.

Popov's lawyer, Rosemary McCarthy, told ESPN.com Tuesday afternoon that she left Hayashi a message that he hasn't returned.

Giants officials aren't swayed.

"Once Major League Baseball identifies the individual with possession of the ball, that's the end of that," said Jorge Costa, Giants senior vice president of ballpark operations.



JJ
G.O.O.F.B.A.H.G.S.
Soldier of Fortune Spec Ops Division
posted on 10-09-2001 @ 9:58 PM      
O&A Board Regular
Registered: Feb. 01
U gotta be fuckin kiddin me. The guy had to have dropped the ball when he was mobbed. But still, if he caught it and theres tape of it then he jus might have a case. ya never know with the retarded way the legal system in this country works.


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Cluster F
posted on 10-09-2001 @ 10:01 PM      
O&A Board Regular
Registered: Oct. 00
quote:

Barry Bonds hit it and Alex Popov may have caught it, but Patrick Hayashi emerged from a scrum of Giants fans to become the happy owner of the ball the San Francisco slugger smacked Sunday for his 73rd homer.



As we used to say back in the day in Little League baseball: 2 HANDS STAR!! Tough break Popov, next time be a man and take a firmer grip on the ball.

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Froy
King Shit
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posted on 10-09-2001 @ 10:02 PM      
O&A Board Veteran
Registered: Feb. 01
Everyone knows that it's open season when it comes to foul & home run balls. It's like losing a fumble at the bottom of the pile... it's not who touches the ball first, it's who walks away clutching it.


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Tequila
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posted on 10-09-2001 @ 10:17 PM      
O&A Board Veteran
Registered: Jan. 01
quote:

it's not who touches the ball first, it's who walks away clutching it

Thats the truth.

I have never heard of such a thing and the only reason its going down this path is because it was a record setting home run


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GonzoStyle
posted on 10-09-2001 @ 10:19 PM      
Hanger-On
Registered: Jan. 70
I agree it technically can still be viewed as property of the park because it is a ball that belongs to the park and was not hit out of the stadium.


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Froy
King Shit
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posted on 10-09-2001 @ 10:54 PM      
O&A Board Veteran
Registered: Feb. 01
quote:

the only reason its going down this path is because it was a record setting home run



Exactly, you don't see people suing over who walked away with a foul ball hit by Kevin Sefcik.


I believe in the Faith... that can save me.
I believe in the hope and I pray...
That someday it may raise me... above these badlands



Displaying 1-7 of 7 messages in this thread.