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“Phillies Karen” is still the conference of the world of sport.
In case you have missed it, a ball at home by the Philadelphia Phillies voltiseur, Harrison Bader, made the headlines of the national newspapers due to a fan repressing a father and a son to put the ball after reaching the stands.
Drew Feltwell, his son Lincoln, and his daughter Avery appeared on “America Reports” by PK Press Club to talk about the viral moment, when Drew Fellwell thought he was making a basic memory for his son after finding the middle of the field among several spectators. But a fan of phillies was captured by walking towards the Feltwells, demanding that they give it the ball.
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Robert Griffin III, former NFL quarter-arre and television analyst for ESPN, examines before the match between the Jacksonville jaguars and the Bengals of Cincinnati on December 4, 2023 at the Stadium EveryBank in Jacksonville, fl. (David Rosenblum / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
The moment quickly became viral, and at the end of the day, the Feltwells won by obtaining a meeting with Bader.
The former quarter of the NFL, Robert Griffin III, gave his reaction to what has since been nicknamed the “Karen Phillies”.
“She dropped the ball. You dropped him, he picked it up and gave it to the child. At that time, it’s no longer your ball.

Philadelphia Phillies, Harrison Bader (2), reacts after having removed the fifth round from a baseball match against the Miami Marlins on Friday September 5, 2025 in Miami. (Photo / marta Lavandier)
The Dodgers emergency launcher, Blake Treinen, pays tribute to Charlie Kirk on Mound with a personalized hat
Fans who fight for any type of memories are hardly rare, but a specific memory has remained in Griffin much more than a decade later. Griffin was in New York for the Heisman Trophy ceremony, when he signed an autograph for someone who, he thought, was paralyzed with the waist.
“So I signed the autograph, I went to the ceremony, to win the Heisman, to come back, and the guy walks in the streets of New York, looks at me, made clinks and laughter, then continues to like to try to get autographs of other people who were there,” said Griffin.

The quarter-Arrière Robert Griffin III of the University of Baylor speaks during a press conference after winning the Heisman trophy at the Marriott Marquis in New York. (Mark Makela / Corbis via Getty Images)
“It was quite wild, but there is no duration that people are not willing to go to get an autograph.”