Zack Hample
American sportswriter

Zack Hample

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American sportswriter
Gender:
Male
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Birth:
14 September 1977
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Introduction Baseball collection Writing Charity work Helicopter stunt Fort Bragg controversy Video games Rubber band ball
The details
Biography

Introduction

Zachary Ben Hample (born September 14, 1977) is a Major League baseball collector. He is known for his claim that he has collected more than 9,000 baseballs from major league stadiums in North America, including Alex Rodriguez's 3,000th career hit. His father was writer Stoo Hample.

Baseball collection

Hample has collected more than 9,576 baseballs which include 49 game home runs from 53 different Major League stadiums as of the beginning of the 2017 Season

  • He acquired his first ball from a Mets pitcher at Shea Stadium on June 20, 1990
  • He caught Barry Bonds' 724th career home run at Petco Park on August 16, 2006;
  • The first home run of the 2007 Home Run Derby, hit by Justin Morneau at AT&T Park.
  • During the final week ever at the old Yankee Stadium, Hample gained worldwide recognition by catching home run balls on consecutive nights. On September 16, 2008, he made a leaping catch on a Jason Giambi home run and immediately celebrated with a goofy dance that was captured on TV. The following night, in nearly exactly the same spot in the right field bleachers, Hample reached far over a railing to make a backhanded catch on a Johnny Damon home run and celebrated with the same dance. The Yankees' announcers recognized him from the previous game, and within the next 24 hours the story was covered by ESPN, CBS, NBC, FOX, CNN International, Japanese TV, and many other media outlets. Yahoo! Sports initially acknowledged Hample's baseball-snagging skills, but did not know that it was he who had made the catches.
  • Less than two weeks later, on September 28, 2008, Hample caught the last home run ever hit by a Mets player at Shea Stadium, this one off the bat of Carlos Beltrán.
  • On October 8, 2008, Hample appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and followed that nearly one year later with an appearance on The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien. Prior to Hample's three notable home run catches of 2008, he had been featured on The Rosie O'Donnell Show, the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, and on an episode of the John O'Hurley version of the game show To Tell The Truth, during which he managed to trick the audience and two of the four celebrity panelists.
  • He set a self-proclaimed and personal one-game record of 36 baseballs at Great American Ball Park on September 14, 2011, breaking his previous record of 32 baseballs set on June 18, 2009 at Kauffman Stadium.
  • Mike Nickeas' first career home run on April 21, 2011.
  • Mike Trout's first major league home run on July 24, 2011 at Camden Yards;
  • On May 12, 2011, he caught three foul balls during a single game at Camden Yards.
  • In March 2012, Hample attended MLB's Opening Series at the Tokyo Dome in Japan, snagging a total of 23 balls in two games.
  • On April 18, 2013, he snagged two home run balls in a single game at Yankee Stadium, including the first career homer of Arizona Diamondbacks shortstop Didi Gregorius.
  • Alex Rodriguez's 3,000th hit, a home run, on June 19, 2015;
  • On September 14, 2015, he caught an Anthony Rendon home run on the first pitch of the game at Citizens Bank Park.
  • On September 16, 2015, he snagged two home runs during the 4th inning at Citizens Bank Park, first grabbing a Jayson Werth home run and later catching a homer by Darin Ruf.

    Writing

    Hample has written three books. The first, How to Snag Major League Baseballs, was published by Simon & Schuster in 1999 when he was a junior at Guilford College. The second, Watching Baseball Smarter, was published by Random House in 2007 and was the 8th best selling American sports book that year. His third book, The Baseball, also published by Random House, was released on March 8, 2011. Hample, a writer for minorleaguebaseball.com from 2005 to 2007, contributed the foreword to Major League Baseball: An Interactive Guide to the World of Sports in 2008 and wrote the introduction for Baseball Scorekeeper in 2011.

    Charity work

    Since 2009, Hample has been raising money for Pitch in for Baseball, a non-profit charity that provides baseball and softball equipment to underprivileged children all over the world. With help from his fans, who pledge money for every baseball that he snags at Major League stadiums, and from BIGS Sunflower Seeds, who sponsored him during the 2013 season, Hample raised more than $190,000 through the 2016 season. In July 2015, Hample gave Alex Rodriguez the ball from his 3,000th hit in exchange for the Yankees donating $150,000 to Pitch In For Baseball.

    Helicopter stunt

    On July 2, 2012, Hample attempted to break a world record by catching a baseball dropped from a helicopter 1,000 feet above LeLacheur Park in Lowell, Massachusetts. Wearing catcher's gear that was donated by Rawlings, Hample established a record by catching a softball dropped from a height of 312 feet. He then caught baseballs dropped from heights of 312 feet, 562 feet, and 822 feet before the Federal Aviation Administration called off the stunt due to strong winds. The 822-foot catch was initially thought to be 762 feet, but a discrepancy in the altimeter settings, which was captured on video and discovered months later, added 60 feet to the altitude. On July 13, 2013, Hample made another attempt at LeLacheur Park and succeeded in catching a baseball dropped from an altitude of 1,050 feet.

    Fort Bragg controversy

    On July 3, 2016, Hample was able to acquire a ticket to a baseball game at Fort Bragg Stadium that was meant for active duty military personal and their friends and families. Despite his pre-game announcement that he would donate money to a veterans charity, this led to a public outcry as Hample is a civilian. The following day, Hample donated $1,100 to AMVETS and posted an apology on Twitter, acknowledging his "lapse in judgment" and "idiotic behavior" and calling his decision to attend a "terrible mistake"; though denying he did anything illegal, he said that by attending, he "clearly violated the spirit of the game."

    Video games

    Hample, a competitive video game player, appeared briefly in the 2007 documentary The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters. According to Twin Galaxies, he holds official world records on half a dozen classic video games including Breakout (896 points) and Arkanoid (1,658,110 points).

    Rubber band ball

    Hample owns a large rubber band ball, which, according to the Daily Mail, he started building at the age of three. As stated on Reddit in 2013, the ball had reached a weight of 250 pounds and was still growing. In 2014 Hample appeared with the ball on the Daily Planet show on Discovery Channel Canada. The ball weighed 259 pounds and bounced more than halfway up when rolled off a forklift from a height of eight feet.