So, I find myself driving in New York City earlier this month and listening to someone getting absolutely excoriated on sports talk radio.
A nice thing about sports is that there is never a shortage of bad guys.
You've got ex-ballplayers _ Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds spring rapidly to mind _ who used steroids and then lied about it.
You've got Tiger Woods and Kobe Bryant, who all but made cheating on their wives an Olympic sport.
And self-absorbed jocks Brett Favre and LeBron James, who care far more about themselves than about any team they ever played on.
But the sports-talk guys weren't ripping any of them. Nor, for that matter, did they speak ill of the 24 National Football League players who have been arrested for this or that in the past five months.
No, their disgust was leveled at Christian Lopez, a 23-year-old cellphone salesman who happened to be occupying Seat 19, Row 1, Section 236 in Yankee Stadium on July 9 when Derek Jeter hit a baseball near him.
Jeter plays shortstop for the New York Yankees, and is easily the most popular athlete in New York, and probably in America.
The baseball he hit was a home run. More importantly, it was the 3,000th hit of Jeter's career. That is a very big deal, in that only 27 other players in the history of the game had ever reached that milestone.
According to memorabilia experts, collectors would pay a minimum of $250,000 for that 3,000-hit ball.
So, as the crowd of 48,103 watched the high-arching parabola of a ball hit with such authority that it would have been out of any park _ including Yellowstone _ Lopez saw the ball descend and hit his father, Raul, right in the hands.
"I was taking a picture, and next thing you know I look in the air," Christian Lopez later told the media. "My dad dove and missed it, because he has awful hands. I saw it roll in front of me, so I jumped on it. It was just instinct. I thought 'Wow! This is it! This is my chance!'"
The husky former defensive tackle for St. Lawrence University recovered his father's fumble and found himself with a quarter-million bucks worth of baseball right in his hands.
The Yankees asked him what he wanted for the ball.
Amazingly, remarkably, astoundingly, Christian Lopez, a working man with more than $100,000 college loans, said he wanted ... nothing.
"Mr. Jeter deserved it. I'm not gonna take it away from him," Lopez said. "Money's cool and all, but I'm 23 years old, I've got a lot of time to make that. It was never about the money, it was about the milestone."
Wow.
Lopez's decency made me proud to be in the same species. But the sports-talk hosts and the vast majority of the folks who called in saw things much differently.
They called him an idiot ... and worse. They could not believe how Lopez could allow the Yankees to play him for such a chump.
No one would have blamed Lopez for selling the ball for what he could get from the wealthy Jeter or the Yankees or a collector. But for Lopez, the opportunity to meet Jeter was thrill enough.
"I was starstruck," Lopez said. "And I met (baseball Hall of Famer) Reggie Jackson and (rap star) Jay-Z. People that I'd never think of shaking their hand and saying 'Nice to meet you.'"
The Yankees gave him three autographed balls, bats, two Jeter-signed jerseys and four expensive Champions-suite season tickets to every home game for the rest of the season and through the playoffs.
Maybe it's true that good things happen to good people. Since that day, a couple of sporting goods and memorabilia CEOs impressed by Lopez's selflessness have given him $25,000 each. One of them also gave him a 2009 Yankees World Series ring valued at $40,000.
A beer company says it will pay any taxes Lopez incurs from the gifts, and Topps has announced that Lopez will have his own baseball card.
Fans ask Lopez for his autograph, and for the rest of his life he will not only be the answer to a trivia question about Jeter's 3,000th hit, he will be an admirable part of New York Yankees lore.
All because a nice young man did the right thing. The shortsighted radio guys _ so consumed with money and their conception of street smarts _ couldn't recognize class when it was right before their eyes.
Meanwhile, a 23-year-old cellphone salesman named Christian Lopez has four great seats for tonight's game and is having _ well _ a ball.
Sam Pollak is the editor of The Daily Star. He can be reached at spollak@thedailystar.com or at (607) 432-1000, ext. 208.
Columns
Critics caught way off base by decent act
- Big Chuck D'Imperio
- Cary Brunswick
-
-
Some wisdom is best passed down through books
I was visiting a friend out-of-town recently and the subject of providing a "reading list" to young people came up in conversation. He said years ago he had asked a respected acquaintance in Oneonta to compile such a list for his teenage daughter, to help her be better prepared for life, culture, education, politics and people.
Continued ... - Let pragmatism, not politics, determine birth control debate
- As Center Street Elementary goes, so goes Center City
- U.S. intervention in Syria's uprising would be a gamble
- Santorum, Obama both got it wrong on Honduras
-
Some wisdom is best passed down through books
- Chuck Pinkey
- Guest Column
-
-
If we don’t develop a sustainable system, who will?
In Otsego County’s local elections last fall, a number of candidates — most of them on the independent Sustainable Otsego line — ran on an anti-fracking, pro-sustainability platform. They recognized that our current way of life — dependent on increasingly scarce, costly and polluting fossil fuels — cannot continue.
Continued ... - Time to get off the bus and on the computer
- Cuomo's Machiavellian maneuvers are a danger
- Home rule laws aren't a radical idea
- Sustainable shouldn't be a dirty word
-
If we don’t develop a sustainable system, who will?
- Lisa Miller
-
-
Being a parent is a constant learning process
I am sitting cross-legged on the floor in the dressing room, waiting for Allie's dance number to be called. The cave girl costume has been donned, the jazz shoes double-tied, the hair pulled back, the requisite dab of lipstick applied.
Continued ... - Healthy doesn't have to mean expensive
- A family era ends with close of Potter series
- Independent stores make up for loss of Borders
- Untethered from the cable box
-
Being a parent is a constant learning process
- Mark Simonson
-
-
Perfect attendance by Saturday’s Bread for 20 years in Oneonta
Oneonta became a settlement and has been a place to do one's "trading," whether it was the 18th century, or 2012, because of the five valleys that converge here. Only the places of doing the "trading" have changed a bit over the last 100 years, and Oneonta remains a place that attracts visitors and has always been a decent place to live and work.
Continued ...
100 Years Ago - Recalling the Hindenburg, John D. Rockefeller in May 1937
- Oneonta residents had diversions aplenty in the spring of 1952
- Damaschke essential to ensuring Oneonta baseball in 1927
- Area tunes to WONT in November 1972
-
Perfect attendance by Saturday’s Bread for 20 years in Oneonta
- Rick Brockway
-
-
Climbing is one thing, but skydiving?
OUTDOORS COLUMN BY RICK BROCKWAY ... Last week, my friend George and I returned to the Gunks for another rock-climbing adventure. After last week's column, I asked about the rattlesnakes and was told not to worry. Rattlers are usually quite timid and will avoid people as much as possible. It's the copperheads that'll give you trouble. They're aggressive and will stand their ground to defend it. Oh great!!
- Rattlesnakes may be closer than you think, so pay attention
- Spring is here, so fishing should pick up soon
- Sneaky fox may be the next animal looking to horse around
- Pass down the rush of turkey hunting to your kids this weekend
-
Climbing is one thing, but skydiving?
- Sam Pollak
-
-
I'm happy with our kids to a certain degree
It was several years ago, and I was in the kitchen, telling my eldest daughter and my then-teenaged son about the person who was taking over as publisher at The Daily Star.
Continued ... - I get by with a little help from my 'friends'
- It’s not easy for a politics junkie to get off the stuff
- The Encyclopaedia Britannica in print, unmourned by me
- Angelo Dundee was always a good man to have in your corner
-
I'm happy with our kids to a certain degree
- William Masters
-
-
Time for lawmakers who put needs of society first
Richard Lugar, after six terms as a Republican senator -- known for his middle of the road rationality and his foreign policy finesse -- has been ousted by a Tea Party extremist backed by outside right-wing funding.
-
War not worth gambling with lives of soldiers
Are you not tired of our war in Afghanistan? It had a point, once, after 9/11. Bush couldn't distinguish his myopic personal agendas from the nation's needs and let Osama escape, dropping the ball entirely, causing many deaths.
-
Titanic was a microcosm of U.S. economic disparity
Haunting reminders of the Titanic tragedy have wafted over us with the centenary of its sinking. The maiden voyage of an impressive, state of the art vessel, was a little like that of the Challenger space shuttle, at the cutting edge of developing technology. But the shuttle carried our pride in science and space exploration, not hundreds and hundreds of people.
-
William Masters: Nation stands divided between 'us' and 'them'
In February, Trayvon Martin was shot dead as "suspicious" by a volunteer neighborhood watch man. The case has aroused community reaction in Sanford, Fla., and is still echoing across the country.
-
A quarterback can't win the game alone
What is the relationship between democracy and wealth? Democracy is a political system, while wealth relates to economics. We have equal political rights, but we don't all have money. Extreme differences destroy the continuity of community solidarity.
-
Time for lawmakers who put needs of society first

