Danny Vinik of Boston, left, catches a pop foul off the bat of Boston Red Sox's Manny Ramirez before Los Angeles Angels catcher Jeff Mathis, right, can reach in to catch it during the fifth inning in Game 2 of an American League Division Series playoff baseball game Friday, Oct. 5, 2007 at Fenway Park in Boston.
(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Fan helps Red Sox in win over Angels
Danny Vinik of Boston, left, catches a pop foul off the bat of Boston Red Sox's Manny Ramirez before Los Angeles Angels catcher Jeff Mathis, right, can reach in to catch it during the fifth inning in Game 2 of an American League Division Series playoff baseball game Friday, Oct. 5, 2007 at Fenway Park in Boston.
(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
BOSTON --As fan interference goes, Danny Vinik is more Jeffrey Maier than Steve Bartman.
Vinik reached over the temporary photographers' box in front of the stands and kept Los Angeles Angels catcher Jeff Mathis from catching Manny Ramirez's foul pop on Friday night. He did not reach into the field of play, making it a legal move.
Ramirez stayed at the plate and drew a walk to load the bases before Mike Lowell's sacrifice fly tied it at 3.
"Everybody was giving me high-fives," Vinik told a crowd of about 20 reporters who interviewed him under the stands near the entrance to the Red Sox clubhouse. One of the well-wishers was horror-meister Stephen King, sitting behind him and one seat over.
The 17-year-old fan said he got 15-20 calls on his cell phone, and while he was talking to reporters other fans congratulated him, saying, "That's the kid. Way to go. Nice play."
One man called him "The anti-Bartman" and gave him a high-five.
Bartman was cursed by Cubs fans in 2003 after deflecting a foul popup away from Moises Alou with Chicago just five outs away from the World Series. Maier was the 12-year-old New York Yankees fan who reached over the outfield wall in the 1996 playoffs and caught Derek Jeter's homer away from Tony Tarasco.
Vinik, who said he had heard of Bartman, is the son of part-owner Jeffrey Vinik, a hedge fund manager who once ran Fidelity's mammoth Magellan Fund.
"My dad has season tickets," Vinik said. "I come a lot."
Mathis, who punched the air in frustration, would have had a better play at the ball if not for the photographers' boxes added in front of the first row of seats down the first- and third-base lines for the playoffs.
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Associated Press photographer Elise Amendola and freelancer Ken Powtak contributed to this story.![]()
