An amazing story from the Ballpark in Arlington.
ARLINGTON, Texas – With 50,000 fans on their feet, many with tears in their eyes, 6-year-old Cooper Stone stood on the pitcher’s mound and tossed the ceremonial first pitch of the playoffs to his favorite player, Josh Hamilton.
Cooper is the boy who saw his firefighter father fall to his death while trying to catch a ball thrown to him by Hamilton during a Texas game on July 7. This was his first trip back to Rangers Ballpark, and it came at the center of a huge stage, with his widowed mother, Jenny, and Rangers president Nolan Ryan by his side.
Wearing a Rangers jersey featuring Hamilton’s No. 32, and “Cooper” between the shoulders, the boy threw the ball on a line to Hamilton, who was crouched like a catcher about halfway to home plate. The outfielder — who has been through his share of personal struggles — stood to catch it, then pumped his fist, smiling wide the whole time.
Then he went to the front of the mound to meet Cooper and Jenny for the first time.
Hamilton embraced the boy, then his mother. He held her for a while, speaking words that made it tough for her to control her emotions.
“I just asked her if they were believers in Christ and she said they were. I said, ‘Well, we know where your husband is right now. Make sure that the little one knows who his daddy was and what he stood for,’” Hamilton said.
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Shannon Stone was reaching for the ball thrown by Hamilton when he fell headfirst about 20 feet, landing on concrete behind the outfield wall. Cooper was his only child, and the two were extremely close, with the nearly three-hour drive from their home in Brownwood to Rangers games among their favorite activities together.
The Rangers recently announced plans to build a statue of Shannon and Cooper Stone outside the home-plate entrance as a tribute to them, and to all fans. The team hopes to unveil it by opening day next season. The club also is planning to raise the railing throughout the stadium.
A memorial fund started by the team on the family’s behalf recently received more than $150,000 from an auction sponsored by Fox Sports Southwest, the team’s main broadcaster.
If there’s a better example of class, heart and faith in sports that this, I haven’t seen it.






“Nothing could be more exciting for a boy than throwing out the first pitch to his favorite player.”
Unless you throw like a girl:
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No offense meant, but this is a story that doesn’t have a political angle, and doesn’t need one grafted on to it.
At its heart, it’s just a story about a young fan, a player, and the game they both love, even in the aftermath of a tragedy.
Let’s just leave it at that, k?
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And the father, Shannon Stone, clearly loved it as well.
I was glad to donate to the fund for the family. The Rangers sent a very nice letter in response.
The Boys of Summer, Texas style.
Maybe there’s hope for the National Game. I’m pretty sure Texas will always be a place where it is played with the same joy that we always look for in baseball. Little Cooper and the Rangers have the heart for it, clearly.
The more I hear about Texas, and the folks who live there, the more I like them and their state.
To me, it seemed kind of creepy that they got the kid to do this.
The whole thing is creepy. This guy deprives his son of a father and his wife of a husband and his family of a wage earner over a freakin’ baseball. And he’s going to get a STATUE as though he was some kind of hero. Do sports just prevent thinking?