Steve Bartman

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Cui servire est regnare
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Man, I know about Hewitt Associates where this clown works too. I bet people in the office were wanting to kick his ass LOL

Man in stands described as diehard fan

October 15, 2003

BY ANNIE SWEENEY, FRANK MAIN AND CHRIS FUSCO



The man some fans blame for Tuesday night's Cubs loss because he reached out and touched a foul ball that Moises Alou was trying to catch is a diehard Cubs fan who coaches youth baseball in the north suburbs.


Steve Bartman, 26, works at Hewitt Associates, an international consulting firm in Lincolnshire.

"He is an associate at Hewitt, and he is not coming to work today because of the incident," Suzanne Zagata-Meraz, a spokeswoman for Hewitt, said this morning. "That was a decision that Steve and [Human Resources] made together. We have been in contact with Steve."


A man who answered the door at the Northbrook home where friends and a neighbor said Bartman grew up defended him, saying he only did what came naturally when a foul ball came his way.


"He's a huge Cubs fan," said the man, who responded to "Mr. Bartman." "I'm sure I taught him well. I taught him to catch foul balls when they come near him."


He declined to say any more and would not confirm what relation he is to Steve Bartman.


A neighbor, Ron Cohen, said he has known the Bartman family for 20 years. He and others said Bartman was a graduate of the University of Notre Dame who played for and is now a coach for the Renegades, an elite youth baseball club in Niles.


Cohen said he saw Bartman on Sunday and that Bartman told him then that he had tickets to Tuesday's game.


"He felt great he got tickets to the game," said Cohen, 63.


Cohen was watching the game on TV with his son, who grew up with "Stevie," when they recognized the man in the Renegades shirt.


"I really was just surprised," said Cohen, who called Bartman's mother. "I think it's just a natural tendency. Everybody reaches. I'm not trying to defend him, but I think it's just a natural tendency. He may not have seen Alou coming."


He described Bartman as a baseball fanatic.


"He's a good kid, a wonderful son, never in any trouble," Cohen told a Sun-Times reporter. "I don't think he should be blamed at all. People reach for balls. This just happened to be a little more critical. If Florida didn't score all the runs, you wouldn't be standing here."


A parent whose son played baseball for the Renegades last year echoed Cohen's description of Bartman.


"He was a fine guy. He was a good baseball coach to my son," said Roger Shimanovsky, 41. "Believe me, I'm sure nobody feels worse about this than him."


Bartman is listed as a coach of the Renegades' 13-year-old team this year, according to the organization's Web site.


He also was a player on a 1992 Renegades team that finished with 47 wins and 10 losses. The team was the Palatine League champion and the Pekin Fourth of July tournament champion.


The home where Bartman grew up backs up to a baseball field where his dad would hit pop-ups for him and his friends to catch, said Ron Cohen's son, Gary Cohen, 34. He said Bartman's favorite player growing up was Cubs second baseman Ryne Sandberg.
 

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http://www.suntimes.com/sports/base...me-after-steve-bartman-snagged-foul-ball.html

Moises Alou booked flight home after Steve Bartman snagged foul ball
By TONI GINNETTI tginnetti@suntimes.com August 22, 2011 11:52PM

One of the Cubs’ worst episodes — the eighth-inning collapse in Game 6 of the 2003 National League Championship Series against the Florida Marlins — is being relived in an ESPN documentary called ‘‘Catching Hell.’’ And a comment in the film from former Cubs outfielder Moises Alou might again spark talk of players conceding there’s a ‘‘curse.’’

The documentary, scheduled to be screened in Chicago this week, includes an interview with Alou, who was trying to catch the infamous foul ball that fan Steve Bartman tried to grab. Alou told interviewer/director Alex Gibney that he and Aramis Ramirez booked a flight home to the Dominican Republic before Game 7 the next day, even though the series was tied and a victory would have given the Cubs the National League pennant and a trip to the World Series.

Asked about Alou’s comments Monday, Ramirez half-smiled and rolled his eyes.

‘‘It wasn’t like that, but I don’t want to say anything about it,’’ he said.

In the film, Alou says: ‘‘I remember myself and Aramis booking a flight home. Even before Game 7. Just in case. But you know, that’s the thing we would have done if we felt positive about the outcome of our next game. Because of all the things that happened before.’’

Gibney asks: ‘‘Oh, I see, so you actually figured after losing the sixth game, you figured there was a sense that it was not going to happen for you guys.

Alou responds: ‘‘It was a — we had a bad feeling about it.’’

Players often book multiple flights home for the end of a season when the exact last day isn’t known, especially international flights.
 

Defender of the Faith
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In his recent book Are We Winning? author Will Leitch (the guy who created Deadspin) writes a nice piece about Bartman from the perspective of an obsessive Cardinals fan. It is a great take, and quite sympathetic, on the whole situation.
 

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http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mlb-b...ed-trip-to-cubs-wild-card-game-064132584.html

<header id="yui_3_18_1_1_1443912265480_2178" class="header"> [h=1]Steve Bartman turns down proposed trip to Cubs wild-card game[/h] </header> <cite class="byline vcard top-line"> By Mark Townsend <abbr>6 hours ago</abbr> </cite> Big League Stew



<figure class="cover get-lbdata-from-dom go-to-slideshow-lightbox" data-orig-index="0">View photo
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78b64262-a8a8-4f0e-b426-f5c9d49c6ad3_mlb_bartman.jpg
</figure>(AP)

Steve Bartman will not be attending the Chicago Cubs wild-card play-in game next Wednesday. Despite a GoFundMe campaign designed to raise money so the maligned Cubs fan could travel to PNC Park in Pittsburgh or return to Wrigley Field for the do-or-die game, he declined the offer.
[Play a Daily Fantasy contest for cash today!]
Here's the official word from Bartman's longtime spokesman Frank Murtha.
"It's nice of these people to think of Steve but he won't be taking advantage of the offer," Frank Murtha said. "He's perfectly capable of attending the game on his own, though he has no intention of being at the wild-card game."
No surprise here. Though we're sure the gesture was well-intended, Bartman obviously has no interest in returning to the public eye.
We certainly can't blame him for that. Not after the way he was vilified following this incident during Game 6 of the 2003 NLCS.
Bartman hasn't spoken publicly since that moment. We've heard only from friends, neighbors and his spokesman in the dozen years that have passed, which is a sad result of the passionate anger his flub created.
Keque Escobedo, a self-proclaimed lifelong Cubs fan, was behind the GoFundMe hoping it would be a way for other Cubs fans to make amends. The page was more than halfway to its goal of $5,000 when Bartman's spokesman officially declined on his behalf. Per Escobedo's message, the money raised will now be donated to the Alzheimer's Association.
"Steve is glad the money will go to a good cause and will be cheering on the Cubs as always," Murtha said.
We'd all probably agree that seeing Bartman return for a Cubs playoff game would have been neat. We'd all better agree that money going to charity is the best possible outcome. Well done by Keque Escobedo.
 

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Hes handling in all wrong.
Enough time has passed.
The fans would love him if he went to the game and watch the cubs win the world series.
 

FreeRyanFerguson.com
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Hes handling in all wrong.
Enough time has passed.
The fans would love him if he went to the game and watch the cubs win the world series.
Not sure if I agree with that. I don't think he would be killed, as he most certainly would have been that night, had there not been security. But I don't think everyone or even most Cubs fans laugh about it now. And if the Cubs lose on Wed, they will be pissed again and someone could easily take a swing at him. Besides, he never wanted to be a celebrity, he only wanted to go on with his life.
 

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Not sure if I agree with that. I don't think he would be killed, as he most certainly would have been that night, had there not been security. But I don't think everyone or even most Cubs fans laugh about it now. And if the Cubs lose on Wed, they will be pissed again and someone could easily take a swing at him. Besides, he never wanted to be a celebrity, he only wanted to go on with his life.

Yeah, if he went and they lost....the same jackass fans would try to beat his ass for it. I still think Cubs fans blame him more than their shortstop in that game who booted a dp ball.
 

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Stupid people blame him for the loss. How many fans had their arms up to catch it? Pretty sure Bartman wasn't there for game 7 either.
 

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Stupid people blame him for the loss. How many fans had their arms up to catch it? Pretty sure Bartman wasn't there for game 7 either.

Agree....unfortunately that goof Alou acting like a child in left field riled up those idiot fans.
 

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I never understood why cub fans thought he cost them the game. He just did what every other fan in that section was doing. He didn't even reach over in the field of play. Sad he was just at the wrong place at the wrong time. Ruined his way of life. Cub fans are stupid if they think he cost them the game.
 

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I guess when you haven't won anything for 100+ years it comes to that. Boston I believe blamed trading Ruth or something until they won. I might be wrong on that one, can't remember.
 

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I'm hoping the Cubs win a World Series but it makes it tough after watching the Steve Bartman catching hell 30/30.

Those fans can be real assholes.
 

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