Baseball kills a woman in MLB’s first foul-ball death in almost 50 years

Linda Goldbloom spent August 25, 2018, as she had dozens of languid summer nights before, enjoying the warm breeze inside LA's Dodger Stadium and listening to the crack of the bat.

In the top of the ninth inning that night, according to ESPN, Dodgers closer Kenley Jansen unleashed a 150 k/hr heater. San Diego Padres outfielder Franmil Reyes turned on the pitch, slicing it nearly straight back into the stands.

Linda Goldbloom was hit by a foul ball at LA’s Dodger Stadium.Credit:Anthony Johnson

The ball lined just over the protective netting behind home plate and cracked straight into Goldbloom's head. The 79-year-old Los Angeles native was rushed to the hospital, where she died four days later. A coroner's report, obtained by ESPN, confirmed that Goldbloom had been killed by head trauma caused by the foul ball.

"It's heartbreaking for all of us," Jana Brody, Goldbloom's daughter, said. "It was pretty rough. This was definitely not a ball that could be dodged or caught."

Goldbloom's death raises new safety questions for Major League Baseball, which was rattled in 2017 when a two-year-old girl suffered critical injuries after a foul ball hit her in the face at Yankee Stadium; the next year, all 30 teams extended netting farther down the baselines.

Although Goldbloom's death is the first in nearly 50 years directly attributed to a foul ball, hundreds of fans are struck every season and many have been seriously hurt. Most injured fans are also unable to win damages from MLB teams due to a long-standing legal precedent that critics like Goldbloom's family say needs to be re-examined.

"We're just hoping that they'll double-think this. Why not make the nets higher?" Brody said. "And let's take another look at this antiquated law that protects teams."

MLB didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. The Dodgers said in a statement that the team was "deeply saddened by this tragic accident", adding that "the matter has been resolved between the Dodgers and the Goldbloom family". Brody declined to comment on whether a financial settlement had been reached with the baseball team.

A two-year-old girl almost died when she was hit by a ball at Yankee Stadium in New York in 2017.

Almost as long as fans have filed into ballparks, teams have had to contend with protecting the public from hard-hit baseballs and broken shards of bats. In 1879, the Providence Grays were the first team to erect a screen behind home plate to shield fans in a risky area previously called the "slaughter pen", according to a 2018 piece in the William & Mary Law Review.

But it wasn't until 1913 that courts had to decide whether fans deserved money when injured by a line drive or wayward bat. In that case, a man named S.J. Crane sued the minor league Kansas City Blues after getting nailed with a foul ball several years earlier. But the courts found he had no cause for action because his 50-cent ticket gave him the choice of sitting behind the home-plate screen, and he had decided to sit in an unprotected area instead, according to the William & Mary paper.

That reasoning, which scores of other courts later followed, has come to be known as the "Baseball Rule". As long as teams offer some protected areas, fans sitting outside that zone do so at their own risk – a warning still printed on the back of every MLB ticket today.

It's not an idle warning. A review by Bloomberg in 2014 found that 1,750 fans per year are injured by foul balls. Many of the injuries have been harrowing. In 2017, Sports Illustrated's Gabriel Baumgaertner recounted some recent cases: a woman in Dodger Stadium whose jaw was broken in two places by a flying bat in 2008; a fan at Fenway Park who spent a week in serious condition at a hospital in 2015 after a thrown bat hit his head; a screaming line drive at Wrigley Field that same year that left a fan carted out on a stretcher.

Per ESPN, only two fans before Goldbloom had ever died due to head trauma caused by a baseball at an MLB game: a 32-year-old named Clarence Stagemyer, who died in 1943 after being hit by an errant throw to first at Washington's Griffith Stadium; and Alan Fish, a 14-year-old who died in 1970 after a foul ball at Dodger Stadium hit him in the head.

But the biggest recent catalyst for change in MLB was the devastating near miss at Yankee Stadium on September 20, 2017, when a foul ball off the bat of Yankees third baseman Todd Frazier hit a toddler in the face. Players knelt in horror. Yankees outfielder Matt Holliday reportedly cried at second base as the bleeding child was rushed to the hospital.

The toddler, who was never named, survived her injures. "It is not lost on us how fortunate we are and how much worse this could have been," the girl's father, Geoffrey Jacobson, told the New York Post the next year. "We could have lost our baby girl. Maybe there are angels in the outfield."

Goldbloom was born and raised in Los Angeles and became a die-hard Dodgers fan after the team moved to Southern California from Brooklyn in 1958. Her husband, Erwin, coached wrestling at a local college, Brody said, and the couple raised their three children as avid Dodgers fans.

"We've all been going together since we were kids," she said. "She and my dad took the whole family. It was always a big to-do."

On August 25, the couple had special reason to celebrate: she had recently turned 79 and celebrated her 59th wedding anniversary with Erwin. They were joined at the game by her brother-in-law and sister-in-law. Brody says her mother had zero chance to avoid the ball that rocketed into the stands that night.

"It was such a strong ball, it bounced off her head and still hit my uncle in the stomach," she said.

Brody said the family isn't likely to return to a baseball stadium anytime soon. As the Dodgers fought their way to the World Series last year, she could only think of her mother's death watching the sport she loved.

"It was hard for us to watch the World Series," she said. "My dad did not renew his chunk of tickets for this season. He doesn't have anyone to go with now."

Washington Post

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