Enjoy the adventures of Baltimore left fielder Nate McLouth.
In the bottom of the sixth inning, McLouth chased down a fly ball towards the left-field foul line off the bat of Colby Rasmus. McLouth caught the ball, but his momentum carried him into the stands.
After disappearing into the (not-so filled) seats, an uninjured McLouth stood up and showed umpire Manny Gonzalez that the ball was still in his glove. Some Toronto fans claimed the nine-year veteran didn't hold onto the ball, but Gonzalez ruled it an out.
Then things turned ugly — and embarrassing to real baseball fans — as someone in the second deck of the Rogers Centre threw a beverage at McLouth. Fortunately for McLouth, and the idiot in the second deck, the drink missed.
<iframe src='http://mlb.mlb.com/shared/video/embed/embed.html?content_id=27379865&width=400&height=224&property=mlb' width='400' height='224' frameborder='0'>Your browser does not support iframes.</iframe>
In the bottom of the sixth inning, McLouth chased down a fly ball towards the left-field foul line off the bat of Colby Rasmus. McLouth caught the ball, but his momentum carried him into the stands.
After disappearing into the (not-so filled) seats, an uninjured McLouth stood up and showed umpire Manny Gonzalez that the ball was still in his glove. Some Toronto fans claimed the nine-year veteran didn't hold onto the ball, but Gonzalez ruled it an out.
Then things turned ugly — and embarrassing to real baseball fans — as someone in the second deck of the Rogers Centre threw a beverage at McLouth. Fortunately for McLouth, and the idiot in the second deck, the drink missed.
<iframe src='http://mlb.mlb.com/shared/video/embed/embed.html?content_id=27379865&width=400&height=224&property=mlb' width='400' height='224' frameborder='0'>Your browser does not support iframes.</iframe>