A fan waiting in line for beer and peanuts got something extra at the
concession stand: home run ball No. 715 by Barry Bonds.
Andrew Morbitzer was waiting his turn to stock up on a couple of beers Sunday
when the souvenir of a lifetime plopped into his hand.
 San Francisco Giants
fan Andrew Morbitzer, 38, from San Francisco smiles as he holds up the
Barry Bonds home run ball during an interview after catching the 715th as
he was buying a beer at AT&T Park during the game against the Colorado
Rockies in San Francisco, Sunday, May 28, 2006.[AP]
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"I got to be a small part of a big day," Morbitzer said after the game with
his wife, Megan, at his side. He already was wearing a "Bonds 715" T-shirt.
For several moments, Bonds' milestone ball appeared to be beyond anyone's
reach. It sat lodged on an elevated platform in center field, then trickled off
the roof.
Morbitzer, a 38-year-old San Francisco marketing director, caught the ball
and was quickly ushered away by security for a postgame news conference after
the Giants' 6-3 loss to Colorado.
A professed Giants and Barry Bonds fan, Morbitzer only recently relocated
from Colorado. He hasn't decided what he will do with the ball, and hadn't
received any offers by the end of the game.
"Yet to be determined," he said. "Hold it tightly in my hands for a little
while."
Morbitzer said he went to get a few more beers because he couldn't see who
would be up next in the bleachers.
"We both finished our beers and decided it was a good time to get a beer
refill," he said.
He then heard the crowd roar and saw people reaching in the air before
catching the ball with one hand.
"I snagged it," he said.
His wife said she wondered what was taking him so long.
"He was waiting in line for my peanuts," she said.
Even Bonds had heard of the once-in-a-lifetime catch.
"It dropped right at him ¡ª that's all I heard," he said.
Giants fans had been waiting for weeks for Bonds to hit his 715th homer and
pass Babe Ruth for second place on the career list. Overjoyed fans jumped from
their seats and streamers were shot from the stadium as Bonds made his way
around the bases and into the history books.
Fans waited for Bonds after the game and chanted "Barry! Barry!" as he headed
for interviews.
"I was psyched. I've been waiting for this to happen for a long time," said
Jesse Weber, who has been to every Giants home game this season. "When I walked
into the stadium I knew it was going to happen today."
Giants were frustrated that Bonds tied Ruth's mark across the Bay in Oakland
last weekend. But on the day before the Giants left for a road trip, Bonds
connected at home ¡ª leaving him behind only Hank Aaron's 755.
Weber said he didn't think the achievement was sullied by the steroid
accusations that have surrounded Bonds, but worried that "a lot of people think
they will need some kind of enhancer to be great player."
Frank Huysmans was watching the game with his 7-year-old son, Jeroem, who was
wearing a Bonds jersey and a cap. Both said they weren't surprised to see Bonds
hit the big home run.
"He's Barry Bonds and he's confident, and he's always going to do what he
needs to do," Huysmans said.
Season ticket holder Annie Reynolds said she knew Bonds' historic homer was
headed over the fence when she heard the crack of the bat. She only wished she'd
brought her camera.
"Of course, I left it on the table," she said.