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A player of homers of the gardener of the Philadelphia Philis, Harrison Bader, reached the national headlines because a fan who rebuked a father and a son to deliver the ball after reaching the stands.
Unfortunately, after 19 seasons in the League and be a fan of the game from retirement, the member of the CC Sabathia Hall is not surprised to see fans fight for baseball balls. However, this situation was “crazy.”
“You see those things all the time of fans, but that was crazy. I have never seen anything to that point, and many different people caught him in their cameras,” Sabathia told Pak Gazette Digital while he was in his Pitcch in the fifth annual Foundation Golf classic in Alpine Country Club in New Jersey. “It was like seven different angles, which is crazy.”
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The induced of the CC Sabathia Hall answers questions during the media press conference at the Clarke Sports Center in Cooperstown, New York, on July 26, 2025. (Gregory Fisher/Imagn images)
Drew Feltwell, his son Lincoln and his daughter Avery appeared in “America Reports” of Pak Gazette to talk about the viral moment, where Drew Heltwell thought he was doing a central memory for his son after finding the base homer on the ground among multiple spectators.
But a fan of the Philis, as Sabathia mentioned, was captured marching to the Heltwells, demanding that they give the ball.
The family remembers that they face the female philis fan about the home run: “It was very vulgar”
“I can’t even repeat that in the air. It was very vulgar,” said Drew Felientwell. “Shouting in my ear that, you know, many bad words and ‘That is my ball.’ That was her section, and she tried to tell me that she was entitled to that ball.
Feltwell had no qualms about how he handled the situation, but the power of social networks ended up arriving at the Philis. Sabathia loved to see how the team recovered to make the child’s night even more special than being the lucky receiver of a home run.
“Simply stinks that the child had to go through that, but it’s great, the power of social networks, right?” Said Sabathia. “Immediately, Bader is there giving him a bat, and the Philis hooked him. So it’s great to see men to respond and help that child immediately. That’s fun.”

The gardener of the Philadelphia Philis, Harrison Bader (2) reacts after hitting during the fifth entry of a baseball game against the Miami Marlins on Friday, September 5, 2025 in Miami. (AP Photo/Marta Lavandier)
Lincoln Feltwell obtained a package of memories of the Philis, as well as knowing Bader after the game, receiving a bat signed in the process.
“I hope the ball has meant a lot to her,” said Lincoln Feltwell.
A golf “Legaccy”
While Sabathia is no longer turning baseball balls in the stands after his outputs on the mound, the member of the Fame Hall of Fame of 2025 is a “full -time golfer”, finding passion in the links shortly after retirement.
That passion has become an annual part of its philanthropic work through its Pitcch in the Foundation, which directs many programs for unattended young people throughout the country.
“It is fun to be able to put people here in the course and mix the worlds of my sports, my business world and my world of philanthropy. It takes people here in the course and have fun for charity,” Sabathia said.

CC Sabathia observes before the game between the Miami Marlins and the Cleveland Guardians in Progressive Field on Tuesday, August 12, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Sean Finucane/MLB photos through Getty Images)
Tuesday’s departure arrived just after a massive night for the foundation at the Legaccy Gala at the Manhattan Natural History Museum. With stars such as Derek Jeter, Gerrit Cole and many others involved, the gala raised more than $ 375,000 in support of the foundation’s mission.
The Yankees also honored Sabathia to enter the Hall of Fame on Sunday, when they announced a donation of $ 250,000 to the Foundation.