Young Red Sox Fan Throws Foul Ball Back into Field
Emotions were running high for Red Sox fans on Father’s Day after a little boy threw a caught foul ball back into the field.
Emotions were running high for Red Sox fans on Father’s Day after a little boy threw a caught foul ball back into the field.
Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Vince Velasquez got into an argument with a fan outside of Fenway Park after a tough outing over the weekend.
Cancer survivor Jordan Leandre was invited to throw out the first pitch during Wednesday’s Red Sox-Cardinals game at Fenway Park. Though, his pitch turned into a below the belt surprise for an unsuspecting camera man.
All is fair in love and war. However, while passions similarly run deep in the turbulent world of college football, not all emotional expressions are fair or allowed.
Fox Sports 1 “Undisputed” co-host Shannon Sharpe praised the large banner that read “Racism is as American as Baseball” that was presented at Wednesday’s Boston Red Sox game, calling it a “beautiful banner.” “[T]hey could unfurled that at any other
We may or may not, but definitely are, fast approaching a point, where the vast majority of the world’s ills can be traced back to ESPN.
Banned in Boston soon claims another victim.
Boston’s famous Fenway Park will host a touching tribute to Vietnam veterans on Saturday. Prior to the Red Sox game against the Yankees, more than 1,300 Vietnam vets and their families will be honored. The ceremony will include Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker, U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Paul LaCamera and other military representatives.
The claim that fans in Boston called Adam Jones the N-word is similar to the unproven claims that tea party supporters similarly taunted Rep. Andre Carson back in 2010.
Baltimore Orioles center fielder Adam Jones set the sports world on fire Monday night when he told the media that fans at Fenway Park had called him the n-word “a handful of times,” and that one fan in particular had thrown a bag of peanuts at him.
The Massachusetts Inspector General blasts a sweetheart deal between the Boston Red Sox and the city of Boston as an abuse of taxpayers.
Red Sox fans may have spent decades of sleepless nights over their team, but one lucky fan and a friend may spend a surreal night in the Valhalla of their dreams: a sleepover at Fenway Park.
Nobody buys a ticket to a baseball game expecting, as the Boston Police Department characterized Carpenter’s trauma Friday night,“life threatening” injuries. But some risk, as the “Be Alert: Foul Balls and Bats Hurt” signs at the bottom of Fenway’s lower-box-seat aisles warn, looms.