Shohei Ohtani’s 50th home run ball bounced tantalizingly close to a fan in the left-field stands at loanDepot Park, but it was just out of reach. (AP Photo/Marta Lavandier)
The lucky fan who ended up with Shohei Ohtani's 50th home run ball — which made the Los Angeles Dodgers superstar the first MLB player ever to hit 50 homers and steal 50 bases in the same season — faced a potential $200,000 payday for that piece of history.
While the spectator who ended up with the historic ball walked out of Miami's LoanDepot Park without being identified or giving the ball to the Dodgers, according to the Miami Herald's Craig Mish, one unlucky spectator did not get his hands on the ball, and that happened in plain view of Bally Sports Florida cameras.
SO CLOSE ?
This fan ALMOST caught Ohtani's 50/50 ball …
(via @BallySportsFL)pic.twitter.com/p42xUTxXX2
— Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports) September 19, 2024
Ohtani's second home run of the game flew into the "Recess Sports Lounge" section in left field. The ball initially landed out of reach of a fan wearing a teal tank top. Then it bounced toward him for another opportunity at history and potential prosperity.
But the carom barely eluded his left hand as he reached for the ball.
From this camera angle, it's uncertain just how close the fan was to getting the ball. On TV, the ball appeared to be inches away from his fingers.
Should he have stretched out a bit more or even attempted to dive for the ball, as Tommy Hutton joked on the Bally Sports Florida telecast? Or would he have risked falling over the railing and getting injured? (Presumably, the fan would not have wanted that potential $200,000 to go toward medical bills.)
Nevertheless, baseball history and a six-figure reward — presuming the fan wouldn't have generously given the ball back to the Dodgers and Ohtani — appeared to be tantalizingly close, yet painfully out of reach. The moment will surely always be memorable, but not for the reasons this fan would have preferred.