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You may have heard an Arizona Diamondbacks’ season ticket holder was ejected from Chase Field for fan interference during the ...
Steve Bartman was cemented into (unintentional) pop culture fame when he touched a foul ball during a crucial baseball game ...
An Arizona Diamondbacks fan interfered with a potential home run hit by San Francisco Giants infielder Christian Koss.
And Aaron shall bring the goat on which the Lord’s lot fell, and offer it as a sin offering. But the goat on which the lot ...
You know, some sporting events and what happened in them are so etched in our memory that we forget what happened next, as in ...
The asterisk is the cold sore on the mouths of the haters. It’s a way for the unhappy, the jealous, to diminish the success of another. And it accomplishes nothing.
Steve Bartman, the infamous Chicago Cubs fan, has no plans to attend his first game since 2003 because he fears for his safety and worries his presence would create a circus-like atmosphere, his ...
No. If the Cubs hadn’t fallen apart, we would never know the name Steve Bartman. Remember, when that moment happened, there was one out and a runner on second. The Cubs still led, 3-0.
The memory of Steve Bartman’s infamous moment in baseball history continues to live on nearly two decades later. A fan appeared to be impersonating Bartman at Coors Field during the Monday night ...
Then, Steve Bartman grabbed the remote control and watched replay after replay of a foul ball struck during the Chicago Cubs’ 8-3 loss to the Florida Marlins in Game 6 of the National League ...
The Chicago Cubs provided some closure for Steve Bartman, who has lived 14 years as a scapegoat. Bartman took the opportunity to express a message of humility and wisdom.
The way Steve Bartman was treated, you would have thought he was Mrs. O’Leary’s cow and had burned down a whole city. Now, 14 years after Bartman’s ridiculous vilification, the Chicago Cubs ...