James McCann of the Detroit Tigers ruffled a few feathers Friday — literally — when he hit a foul ball that struck a bird perched atop the backstop behind home plate, knocking the animal into the lap of a fan sitting below. For baseball fans and bird watchers, the incident is a reminder of the time years ago when Hall of Fame left-hander Randy Johnson obliterated a bird mid-flight with a fastball at spring training.
 
James McCann hits bird with foul ball, lands in fans lap (Video)
 
Word from the ballpark, reports James Schmehl of MLive, was that the bird survived the trauma. Although, after seeing the video posted by WDIV Local 4 in Detroit, it's hard to imagine that the bird could live for long. (Also, note the creepy funeral home music at the video's onset.)
McCann was batting in the first inning against Mike Foltynewicz of the Atlanta Braves when he fouled off a pitch perhaps 40 feet in the air and just to the right of home plate at Champions Stadium at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. — the campus of Walt Disney World. It wasn't much of a feel-good Disney moment.
From MLive:
"I saw everyone making a big commotion, and obviously people were still yelling when I stepped back into the box," McCann said. "But I had no idea what happened." McCann said he didn't see his first-pitch foul ball strike the bird, and was later informed by umpire Joe West following his at-bat when he reached first base on a single. "(West) said he didn't know what was funnier," McCann said, "seeing the bird get hit or the woman's reaction when it landed in her lap."
McCann couldn't believe the bird's bad luck.
"It's never good to have something die that doesn't deserve to die," said McCann, who said he didn't want to make light of the incident. "But what are the chances?"
Yes, not to make light of it, but... it was an exhilarating moment for some fans in attendance. Karen Collins said it was "worth the price of admission":
And, when something traumatic happens, people often turn to gallows humor to get them through:
Again, word from the ballpark is that the bird (somehow) lived. Not all baseball birds have been as fortunate, remember Randy Johnson:
David Brown/CBS Sports  
 

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