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‘Would have caught ball bare-handed’: School district pokes fun at Phillies snatched home run ball drama

After a video of a woman demanding a Philadelphia Phillies home run ball from a father who grabbed it for his son went viral online, rumors began circulating that she had been fired from a New Jersey school district.

But that wasn’t the case, according to the school district in the state’s Atlantic County.

In the video, a group of fans race to retrieve a home run ball hit by Philly’s player Harrison Bader in the fourth inning. Multiple fans scurry for the ball, but a man snags it up and quickly brings it back to his young son.

A woman follows hot on his heels and grabs his arm, startling him. She begins a heated discussion with the man, clearly demanding the home run ball for herself.

“That was mine. You took it from me,” she says, according to a video recorded near the interaction. “It was in my hands.”

Based on the footage, it does not appear that she ever had possession of the ball.

The father ultimately gives the ball up to de-escalate the situation and waves the woman off.

Social media judgment was swift; the woman faced widespread condemnation online, and, as expected, people way too invested in the drama sought to identify and shame her.

That’s when rumors began circulating that she had been fired from the Hammonton Public School District.

According to the district, that’s not true. If it had been one of their teachers, the district said, she never would have lost the ball in the first place.

“Anyone who works for our school district, attended as a student or lives in our community would obviously have caught the ball bare-handed in the first place, avoiding this entire situation,” the district said in a statement, according to Breaking Atlantic County.

The statement confirmed that the woman “is not, and has never been an employee of the Hammonton Public Schools” district in New Jersey.

“Social media and news reports indicating that she is, are incorrect,” the statement says.

Wannabe social media sleuths also thought they’d found her when they accused a woman named Cheryl Richardson-Wagner of being the Phillies fan, but she also denied being the woman in the video.

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  • Source of information and images “independent”

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