The Day

ATHLETICS’ KHRIS DAVIS LETS MAKE-A-WISH KID SIGN JERSEY, SLUGS LONG HOMER

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Khris Davis asked a young fan from the Make-A-Wish Foundation to sign his jersey, then slugged a mighty home run for the Oakland Athletics in a 9-0 win against the Texas Rangers on Monday night.

Davis let 10-year-old Oakland sixth-grader Anthony Slocumb print his name in blue ink on Davis' white jersey, then wore the uniform while hitting his 37th home run in the third inning. Slocumb, in remission from a rare cancer called Langerhans cell histiocyto­sis, was at the Coliseum with a group from the Make-A-Wish Foundation's Greater Bay Area chapter. His mother, Natalie Sanchez, was delighted by Davis' gesture.

"I thought about him around the bases. There's not a better feeling than hitting a home run, so hopefully he got some excitement and joy from watching that," Davis said. "They're really the stars . ... He was excited. I could tell that he was just happy to be here and wanted to have some fun. It was amazing, the look on his face."

Davis never considered switching uniform shirts, either.

"I wanted to rock that. I wanted him to know that I was thinking about him," Davis said. "He just told me I was his favorite and he was here to watch me play."

Davis gave Slocumb a highlight moment the boy will never forget.

"I was down there with the other kids and then two other players came down and then he came down," an overjoyed Slocumb said in an interview with The Associated Press outside the Coliseum. "So, I was like, 'You're my favorite player' and he was like, 'Cool.' I said, 'Can you sign my jersey?' and then he said, 'Sure, do you want to sign mine, too?' And I was like, 'Sure,' so we basically signed each other's jerseys. That's what happened."

It was well worth being out late on a school night for Slocumb. He is in his second week of sixth grade at Claremont Middle School. While he wouldn't mind if Davis gifted him the jersey, Davis thought it might be special to keep it or auction it off to help others in need.

"There was a lot of emotion with those kids' situations," Davis said. "It's the worst situation you can be in probably. I just wanted to put a smile on his face.”

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