Started By
Message

Baseball fans that give historic "Home Run Balls" to the players that hit them are morons.

Posted on 10/25/25 at 9:25 am
Posted by Long and Tall
Member since Oct 2025
104 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 9:25 am
How do people allow themselves to be gaslit into thinking they are being greedy for keeping a historic home run ball that they caught ?

Some guy making 40k a year will catch a historic home run that he could auction off for hundreds of thousands of dollars, and he just gifts it to the player making $30 Million a year.
It would be life changing money for the average Joe.
Buy a house, invest it and watch it grow into millions.
But nah, don't want to be greedy.

F that.
If the ball is that important to the player than he can bid on it at auction.
And a player worth $100 Million is an a-hole for accepting such a home run ball for a handshake and autographed bat from some poor shlep punching a clock at the factory.
This post was edited on 10/25/25 at 9:28 am
Posted by Honest Tune
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2011
19284 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 9:28 am to
Not everyone puts a price tag on an experience. That said, you ain’t wrong.
Posted by Pelican fan99
Lafayette, Louisiana
Member since Jun 2013
38781 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 9:40 am to
Not everyone is as miserable with their life as you bro
Posted by danilo
Member since Nov 2008
24652 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 9:47 am to
Agree. Fans pay for tickets, parking, concessions, the cost of media rights is pushed on to consumers (even non fans pay for it). Fans are the reason these guys can make lots of money. There is a reason people don’t get rich playing shuffle board. Baseballs belong to the fans….. but can do whatever you want with it
This post was edited on 10/25/25 at 10:56 am
Posted by ReauxlTide222
St. Petersburg
Member since Nov 2010
88413 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 10:41 am to
quote:

Not everyone puts a price tag on an experience
What experience are you referring to?
Posted by Honest Tune
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2011
19284 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 10:54 am to
Catching a home run ball.

Some people are content to catch it, give a ball to the player, play catch with Mike Trout, and move on with life. Not everyone is out to try to auction it off online.

I can see both sides, for sure though… sometimes the sun shines on a dog’s arse and when it does, the shine (money) will fill a life gap (your kid’s college tuition perhaps. Or momma’s new fake tits you get to touch). Nothing wrong with getting a payday when it falls in your lap.

The memory of throwing a baseball on a field after the game with Mike Trout is pretty damn cool too.

This post was edited on 10/25/25 at 10:57 am
Posted by McCaigBro69
TigerDroppings Premium Member
Member since Oct 2014
45272 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 10:58 am to
Hahaha I’m sure a few neeedle dicks have done this but it can’t be a common occurrence, surely?

I feel like every story I see is the person trading the baseball to the player for like a signed bat, signed jerseys, season tickets, etc….kind of remember someone asking for a charity donation as well.
Posted by ReauxlTide222
St. Petersburg
Member since Nov 2010
88413 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 11:01 am to
quote:

Catching a home run ball.
You get that experience with either option.
quote:

The memory of throwing a baseball on a field after the game with Mike Trout is pretty damn cool too.
You could do this without giving the ball back.

“Hey I’d like to play catch and maybe go to dinner and explain my family situation and what this moment has meant to me. I know it’s a huge accomplishment for you as well, and I’d love to talk to you about it.”


If Trout killed someone with a foul ball would he be liable? Or a splintered bat to the neck? If not, then why would anyone want to give the ball back to them? They’ve already declared what goes into the stands has nothing to do with them.
Posted by Honest Tune
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2011
19284 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 11:03 am to
Man… you’re really putting a lot of thought into it… sounds good.
Posted by ReauxlTide222
St. Petersburg
Member since Nov 2010
88413 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 11:08 am to
Thinking isn’t all that taxing
Posted by Honest Tune
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2011
19284 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 11:17 am to
Well, you’re not wrong. But I just had a rainy day J on the front porch and you caught me at a very “thinking is taxing sometimes” frame of mind. I’ll see if I can match your energy in an hour or so.
Posted by Saint Alfonzo
Member since Jan 2019
27802 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 11:25 am to
I would have to put it on the auction block. Don't need season tickets, jerseys, or any of the other stuff they typically offer in trade. Just pay me.
Posted by Underwood
Member since Dec 2022
1052 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 11:26 am to
Who was it earlier this year that the security wouldnt let the guy leave the stadium without handing over the ball? That was insane.
Posted by ReauxlTide222
St. Petersburg
Member since Nov 2010
88413 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 11:35 am to
The bowl I smoked put me in the opposite mind frame
Posted by Honest Tune
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2011
19284 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 11:37 am to
I hang out with people like that. Enhancement smokers. My inability to function balances out the friendships.
Posted by SmackoverHawg
Member since Oct 2011
30879 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 11:46 am to
quote:

Long and Tall

We may disagree about Tesla, but I 100% agree with this. Some of these people are handing over a life changing financial asset. They should look at it more as handing over a winning lotto ticket to multi-multi millionaires that won't remember their names 5 minutes later, than a heroic gesture of ultimate fandom that will cement them in the fan hall of fame.

They assault them with attention and trinkets immediately and overwhelm them in the moment. Keep that shite and let it go to the highest bidder!!!

I would also like to see congress make the proceeds of the sale tax free as many of these people don't understand the tax implications of the sale. It's so few and far between that it wouldn't make a shits difference in tax revenue, but would benefit both sides by making the transaction cost more transparent.
Posted by Undertow
Member since Sep 2016
8785 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 12:22 pm to
Depending on how valuable it is, I’d trade it for a signed bat and meeting the player. Really not many of these home run balls are worth very much money. Also, it’s very difficult to get these balls authenticated which would be required to attract a major buyer. Even if there’s video of you catching the ball, you would have to prove that the particular ball you’re trying to sell is the same ball.
This post was edited on 10/25/25 at 1:43 pm
Posted by Tiger Prawn
Member since Dec 2016
24952 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 2:12 pm to
quote:

Even if there’s video of you catching the ball, you would have to prove that the particular ball you’re trying to sell is the same ball.
Does MLB use marked balls when there’s a potential milestone at-bat?
Posted by Fgiord
America
Member since Nov 2006
4753 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 2:29 pm to
I’d think you’d start by getting it certified by a league/team official before leaving the park. From there, assuming that ball is going to sell for tens of thousands of dollars, whichever medium or person you sell the ball to wouldn’t purchase it without getting it appraised to confirm that’s the ball.
Posted by SECCaptain
Member since Jun 2025
1202 posts
Posted on 10/25/25 at 3:40 pm to
Fan gives ball to player with 9 figure net worth
Player goes broke 15 years later
Player auctions ball

Sounds about right
This post was edited on 10/25/25 at 5:03 pm
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 2Next pagelast page

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on X, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookXInstagram