Sentinel & Enterprise

A foul ball at Fenway and the true meaning of baseball

- By Joe Dwinell

‘You’ve got to live every second. I also realized it takes a pretty special person to react the way Jim Rice did that day.’

– Jonathan Keane, who was carried from Fenway Park in 1982 by the Hall-of-Famer after being struck by a foul ball

Opening Day always takes Jonathan Keane back to when he was beaned by a foul ball at Fenway Park.

It was all captured by thenHerald photograph­er Ted Gartland, who photograph­ed Red Sox slugger Jim Rice scooping the 4-year-old Keane up and rushing him to a waiting ambulance.

Keane, now 43 and living in North Carolina with his wife and three kids, said what that day taught him is to cherish every moment. Opening Day just brings it all back.

“You’ve got to live every second,” he said Friday as the Sox were losing the opener to the Orioles, 3- 0. “I also realized it takes a pretty special person to react the way Jim Rice did that day.”

It was a game in early August of 1982 when Keane was sitting with his brother and dad along the first-base line when a foul ball hit by Dave Stapleton smacked him right in the head. Rice, a Hall of Famer, moved quickly to lift Keane to safety.

Keane recovered, adding he doesn’t remember much from that day.

What he does recall is the pure joy of seeing a game at Fenway Park and cheering for a lovable team that just couldn’t seem to win a World Series in those days. (Stapleton, a surehanded first baseman, wasn’t

put in late during the sixth game of the 1986 World Series.

That’s when Bill Bucker let one roll through his legs. But that’s a story for another day.)

Keane said what matters to him are the smells of the park — from the hot dogs to fried onions for the sausages — and the field that’s “green unlike any green in the world.”

This year, he added, baseball is needed more than ever.

“Playing baseball again in front of fans means life is going to be back,” he said.

“We can kind of get back to normal things. But we can’t take anything for granted.”

Sure, the Sox lost 3- 0. But it’s baseball season when hope springs eternal.

Keane is co-founder and CEO of CustomerHD.

He helps companies outsource telephone services and business is good.

His wife is a nurse and his young children — like so many others — have been mostly learning remotely during the pandemic.

But he remains optimistic. “Every moment matters,” he said.

That’s what the game, Jim Rice and Fenway instilled in him.

I guess it’s true, a picture is worth a thousand words.

 ?? TED GARTLAND / BOSTON HERALD FILE ?? Red Sox left fielder Jim Rice carries Jonathan Keane, then 4, to an ambulance after he was hit in the head by a foul ball at Fenway in August 1982. Keane says the incident taught him life lessons that come back each year on Opening Day.
TED GARTLAND / BOSTON HERALD FILE Red Sox left fielder Jim Rice carries Jonathan Keane, then 4, to an ambulance after he was hit in the head by a foul ball at Fenway in August 1982. Keane says the incident taught him life lessons that come back each year on Opening Day.

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