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Ball From the Final Out of the World Series
Can a dollar figure be placed on the ball from the last out of the 2016 World Series this year? Kris Bryant fielded it....and threw to Rizzo at first....who immediately put it in his back pocket. I believe that the ball technically belongs to Rizzo now (?). Yes or no? What do you think this ball is worth? Or will Rizzo just donate it to the HOF? Thoughts?
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he who ends up with the ball...owns the ball imo! i'm sure the ball will be given to the cubs organization or the hof...time will tell. as far as value...it's a $10 ball...that some people would pay a lot of money for!
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The last out ball from the Red Sox curse-breaking 2004 win turned out to be a big headache for first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz. Interesting read....
Story on the saga of the 2004 last out ball |
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25 years from now some auction house will claim they have it, together with a letter of authenticity from the son of the fan to whom a drunk Rizzo gave it that night.
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Remember how much money Mark Mcgwire's HR ball sold for which was either number 72 or 73 when he and Sosa were battling. I would guess the value in that ball has been cut in half.
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I would believe the ball and all equipment the players wear and use including significant baseballs are property of the team and therefore the ball would have to be given to the Cubs organization. I am sure a first hit or first homerun the ball is collected for the player, with permission from the team the ball is given to the player. I wouldn't doubt that as soon as Rizzo entered the dugout or the locker room a Cubs Rep was their asking for the ball. The players are entitled to keep some equipment with the teams permission each year, this has been true for many years. The baseball's only place is in the Hall of Fame 108 years of waiting for a World Series win is historic.
Mike |
Players used to buy their own uniforms but I don't know if that is still a thing. Equipment tends to come from a sponsorship deal, so I don't think equipment belongs to the team either. If the baseballs are provided by MLB and if someone were to claim ownership of a physical baseball I would think it would be MLB and not the individual team. Unless the team purchases the baseballs.
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Maybe Rizzo will return the ball to the Cubs organization or MLB. Or return "a ball" (not necessarily that ball). How would anyone really know?
As the first baseman, he has access to lots of identical balls. There must have been dozens of balls (all with identical stampings/markings) used in that game alone. :eek: |
Wasn't it Jack Clark that sold two versions of one of his homers?
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Apparently the ball was already added to the Heritage auction. Should be interesting
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http://www.auctionreport.com/heritag...tage-auctions/
So Jennings got it from Chance, but the ball says from Charlie Schmidt (the batter)? |
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I am sure many women in Chicago would be interested in Rizzo's boner. LMAO |
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Insert your own punch line here... :D |
Rizzo handed the ball over to the owner today at the parade, so wonder no more.
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As if he wasn't loved enough by Cubs fans, now he's loved 8 billion times more!!
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http://www.lookstein.org/links/homerun.htm |
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I don't know the answer but by the looks of that document it wasn't a cheap legal case(s)....The more writing the more billable hours, right? :)
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charities and (2) it must be publicly displayed into perpetuity. That's a sponsorship I could approve. |
Talk about an idle sidebar to a good topic, but I can't help but wonder who pays for the baseballs in a WS game? Does the home team provide and then vice versa when the teams switch? Does each respective league share the cost? Or does MLB pick up the whole ticket? These are the issues that keep me awake at night.
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Drew |
If the ball is in the stadium, but it is in the persons pocket who owns it? I can go to a store, put something in my pocket but not leave the store with it. That does not mean it is mine and I own it.
It has not left the stadium, but I would think that technically one could argue that it was stolen. It was never that person's ball to put in their pocket and leave with, regardless of the sense of ownership. |
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But what about all the foul balls that fans take home? Lawyers could have a lot of fun arguing this question. |
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They could simply make a stadium rule stating that foul balls may be subject to retrieval. I believe that if they wanted to pursue a stolen ball, they could, but they chose not to. That would not be to say that they had to post a generic rule to make a case for a single ball. |
What if a player throws a ball into the stands during batting practice or during the game? It belongs to the person catching/retrieving in, right? Would it be the same if this ball was handed off to his wife?
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I'm pretty sure you guys are all overthinking this matter. A team like the Indians, even if they could say the last WS ball was their ball, wouldn't do something like that, regardless of possible value. It's an unwritten rule in baseball, and something they never even discuss. The home team pays for the baseballs, but they don't claim ownership over any baseball for any reason.
Once a fan has a baseball, it belongs to them. That should be obvious to anyone who has heard about negotiations for a significant ball. A team wouldn't negotiate with a fan and fail in some cases if they had the right to take the ball back. |
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Drew |
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Right. Practice and good relations versus what is legal are two very different things. I don't claim to be a lawyer, but here is my take on this: They may be told that they CAN throw a ball into the stands, or they may have not been told they can or can't at all. Regardless of what they are told, does not change who the technical owner of the ball is. The person tossing or hitting the ball into the stands or catching the ball was potentially not involved in the negotiation of what can and can't be done with the ball(in one case a player which is technilcally an employee and in another a fan nor person which the previous owner has no imposing power over). They are simply the catcher/potential new owner of the ball and may be subject to different rules and guidelines since MLB or the team can impose rules upon its employees. Even if a player were given explicit permission to throw a ball, or multiple balls that doesn't mean they can throw all balls. Even if you threw all balls into the stands that still wouldn't necessarily constitute an ownership change. I think the distinction is that just because you hold it doesn't mean it is yours, but I may be very wrong about this. |
Pretty sure in NFL games when a field goal evades the netting there is no option. Three or four burly guys come up to you and say lets have it. Unless things have changed since I last attended a pro football game about 15 years ago.
(Why anyone goes to a pro football live for any reason other than to get drunk and act stupid in public is beyond me. . . . but clearly a subject for another board.) |
At baseball games I've been to, it seems like they always take back bats that are inadvertently thrown. Legal issues aside (I'm a lawyer but not on a clock so won't think of those for now), it's nice to see a ball that is special for more than just an individual end up in a place where more people can hopefully enjoy it--assuming the owner will display it for fans, etc.
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Teams try to get back baseballs all the time from fans for various milestones and if they can't work out a reasonable deal, then the fan keeps the ball. Fairly simple, no legal detective work needed, it doesn't happen. |
Also not a lawyer, but I don't see how a baseball team could claim ownership of a ball that goes into the stands, and at the same time say that they aren't liable for any injuries causes by a ball that is hit into the stands. :confused:
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Here's a screen capture from the Fox broadcast of Rizzo putting the ball in his pocket...
https://c2.staticflickr.com/6/5668/3...97e86af2_b.jpg ...and here's another one showing the Cubs celebrating. You can clearly see where the ball creates a large, uh, bulge, in Rizzo's back pocket. https://c2.staticflickr.com/6/5632/3...375c25f6_b.jpg |
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If he is, that is not the knob end of a dong-a-long from what I heard about the side affects.
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I'm trying to laugh on the inside, but it's tough. :D:D:D |
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