Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Email Travel Subscribe SI About Us Baseball - MLB Fantasy All-Time Stats Minors College World Baseball

 

EVENTS
 Sportsman of the Year
 Heisman Trophy
 Swimsuit 2001

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Video Plus
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Message Boards
 Email Newsletters
 Golf Guide
 Cities
 

CNNSI.com GROUP
 Sports Illustrated
 Life of Reilly
 SI Women
 SI for Kids
 Press Room
 TBS/TNT Sports
 CNN Languages

COMMERCE
 SI Customer Service
 SI Media Kits
 Get into College
 Sports Memorabilia
 TeamStore

Nice grab

Fan gets hold of record-breaker, if only for a moment

Click here for more on this story
Posted: Saturday October 06, 2001 3:30 AM
  Jerry Rose Giants fan Jerry Rose caught No. 71 on the fly. AP

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Jerry Rose stabbed out his mitt and made the catch of a lifetime. Two innings later, the record-breaking ball he caught -- the 71st home run of the season for Barry Bonds -- had become old news.

Rose barely had time to cherish his haul when Bonds led off the third inning by launching his second homer off Dodgers starter Chan Ho Park. But stone-mitted fans in center field couldn't haul in that million-dollar gift from above, and it ricocheted back onto the field.

Bonds' 72nd home run ball, further distancing him from the record of 70 homers Mark McGwire set three seasons ago, made its way back to the Giants slugger in the dugout.

Rose, 49, a season-ticket holder and lifelong Giants fan, didn't seem to mind that his ball no longer was the record holder.

"We're just going to settle down, watch the game and hope for a Giants victory," Rose said after security guards whisked him to a secure room in Pacific Bell Park. He said he would keep the ball -- at least for now.

CNNSI.com's John Donovan

• A bittersweet end: The home runs were something, all right. After all, that was history flying out of a nippy Pac Bell Park on Friday, knocked into the San Francisco night by a couple of swings of Barry Bonds' bat.

Multimedia
Barry Bonds delivered an emotional postgame speech.
Dusty Baker regrets being bounced from playoff contention.
Barry Bonds and the Giants discuss Friday’s historic achievement.
Features 
• For the Record: Bonds vs. Mac
• Swing King: Relive all 72 homers
• SI Flashbacks: 1990 | 1993 | 2000
• Bonds' 2001 home run log
• SI's Sportsman of the Year finalist
More Stories 
• Bonds hits Nos. 71, 72 in loss
• Park allows two more big HRs
• Semi-lucky fan catches No. 71
• Bonds ties Mac with No. 70
• McGwire congratulates Bonds
 

He certainly earned it.

Bonds hit a shot to the deepest part of the park, well above the 421-foot sign, to the right of where Rose stood. The ball would have banged off a brick facade, but Rose plucked it from the air and squeezed it in his mitt. Fans pounded Rose in celebration. The scrum was so dense that major league baseball personnel couldn't reach him at first. A half-dozen San Francisco police officers had to force their way through and whisk away Rose and his wife.

One single-minded police officer, Maria Escobar, led the charge to extricate the night's luckiest fan from dozens of his newest friends.

"Major league baseball was trying to get him out and the crowd was surrounding him," Escobar said. "It was obvious they were not going to get him out without some assistance."

Two innings later, security guards watched in amazement as Bonds' second drive of the night plopped back onto the field toward Dodgers center fielder Marquis Grissom.

The home run barely cleared the wall where maybe a half-dozen fans elbowed, jostled and jumped for a chance to catch history.

"We had a big, mad rush for it," said San Francisco firefighter Steve Coffey, 47. "Probably all of us felt like we got a glove on it. It never hit the ground."

Until it landed on the warning track.

Those who watched the futile struggle heckled the group.

"Yeah, they all choked," taunted one security guard. "What you gonna tell your mother? 'I smelled the ball as it went by?' That's what you all get for being greedy."


 
Related information
Multimedia
Visit Video Plus for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day
Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV.

Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


CNNSI Copyright © 2001
CNN/Sports Illustrated
An AOL Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.