
From court to pin: How a Little Leaguer's bat flip became baseball memorabilia
Marco Rocco is now a pin.
The 12-year-old from Haddonfield, New Jersey, was embroiled in a legal fight last month after he was ejected for flipping his bat as he celebrated a home run in the final of the Little League sectional tournament. He faced a suspension from his first state tournament game for the ejection and the bat flip until his father took Little League to court and won an emergency temporary restraining order that allowed Marco to play in the New Jersey state tournament.
The flip is set to become part of the pin-trading culture that happens each year in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, during the Little League World Series. The pin depicts Rocco flipping the bat on his home-run trot to first base with 'Batflip 2025' at the bottom and 'Haddonfield' inscribed on the left side.
The pin is not for sale and is jointly released by the Rocco family and by family friends and former major leaguers, Jeff and Todd Frazier. Only 75 pins were produced in honor of the 75th year of Haddonfield Little League and they will be traded only later this month at the Little League World Series.
'They said it was a significant event in Little League this year,' said Joe Rocco, Marco's father. 'There was a lot of national attention on it and they thought making a pin and keeping a pin at a limited number would be an interesting item at the Little League World Series.'
The Fraziers presented the pin idea to Rocco to depict the biggest Little League story to burst on the scene since Mo'ne Davis and he was instantly on board. Rocco said he was unfamiliar with pin-trading culture — which Little League says is widely believed to have started in the mid-1970s by a team from Taiwan — and was simply excited to attend the United States championship and Little League World Series final with his son.
Marco tossed his bat in the air on July 16 after his sixth-inning, two-run homer in the final of the sectional tournament. He was ejected and suspended for a game over what his family was told were actions deemed 'unsportsmanlike' and 'horseplay.'
Rocco said dozens of parents reached out to him to either offer support or ask for advice on how to handle similar disputes. Rocco said there was, of course, some blowback for his decision to take Little League to court over a disputed decision.
'It was chaotic, for a while, which is not what we wanted,' Rocco said.
The Roccos' day in court ended with the judge allowing Marco to play, and Little League did not appeal. Joe Rocco said he was told that Little League would not appeal the decision but would consider adding rules that would ban bat flipping.
'I think after this summer they absolutely need to put some sort of rule on it, whether it goes one way or the other so there's clarity on it,' Rocco said. 'They need to be clear in the rules so this doesn't happen again.'
Joe Rocco owns youth sports performance training facility Kresson Sports with Ken Goldin. Goldin is the owner of Goldin Auctions and star of the reality show 'King of Collectibles: The Goldin Touch,' and also had a son on the Haddonfield team.
Yes, Goldin already has Marco's flipped bat in his collection.
It will be auctioned.
Anyone want to trade a pin for the bat?
___
AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Toronto Star
14 minutes ago
- Toronto Star
Turang's leadoff homer lifts Brewers over Pirates for 10th straight win
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Brice Turang hit his first career leadoff home run, Jose Quintana allowed three hits over six solid innings and the MLB-best Milwaukee Brewers extended their winning streak to 10 games with a 7-1 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday night. Quintana (10-4) struck out three and walked one as the Brewers (74-44) improved to 25-4 over the last 29 games, including 13-1 in the last 14. The only real hiccup was Joey Bart's home run in the third.


Winnipeg Free Press
14 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Turang's leadoff homer lifts Brewers over Pirates for 10th straight win
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Brice Turang hit his first career leadoff home run, Jose Quintana allowed three hits over six solid innings and the MLB-best Milwaukee Brewers extended their winning streak to 10 games with a 7-1 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday night. Quintana (10-4) struck out three and walked one as the Brewers (74-44) improved to 25-4 over the last 29 games, including 13-1 in the last 14. The only real hiccup was Joey Bart's home run in the third. Turang sent a sinker from Pirates starter Andrew Heaney over the wall in left center. Christian Yelich opened the third with a solo home run, RBI singles from Sal Frelick and Brandon Lockridge and an unearned run on Bart's throwing error capped the third inning. Grant Anderson held the Pirates without a hit in the seventh and eighth. Shelby Miller pitched a 1-2-3 ninth. Heaney (5-10) allowed six runs — five earned — on nine hits in four innings. Quintana and Freddy Peralta switched spots for the Pirates series. The move gives Peralta another day of rest but also lines him up for the Cubs series next week in Chicago. Chase Shugart, activated from the 15-day injured list with left knee inflammation before the game, allowed one run on two hits over three innings. The Pirates optioned RHP Dauri Moreta to Triple-A Indianapolis. Key moment Yelich's 22nd home run of the season highlighted the Brewers' third. Key stat Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. Quintana, 36, made his 351st start since his rookie season with the Chicago White Sox in 2012, fifth most on the active list. Up next RHP Paul Skenes (7-8, 1.94 ERA) starts for the Pirates against Peralta (13-5, 3.03) and the Brewers. ___ AP MLB:


Winnipeg Free Press
44 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Evoaldi's impressive streak for Rangers ends by giving up 3 homers and 5 runs
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Nathan Eovaldi's impressive streak for the Texas Rangers ended with a dud. After going 6-0 with a 0.47 ERA in six starts since the start of July, Eovaldi was tagged for three home runs while allowing season highs of five runs and eight hits in five innings against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Monday night. The 35-year-old right-hander struck out three and walked one before exiting with Texas down 5-1. Eovaldi had given up only six runs total over his previous seven starts, and half of those runs came in the same game. There had only been two long balls against him his past 14 games. When he pitched one-hit ball over eight innings in a 2-0 win over the New York Yankees last Tuesday, it was the 13th time in a 14-game span allowing one or zero runs. Hall of Fame pitcher Bob Gibson is the only pitcher since 1900 to record that kind of streak, according to STATS, and he did it in 1968, the season he won both the NL Cy Young and MVP awards. Even though Evoladi's overall ERA rose from 1.38 to 1.71, that is still better than the 1.94 of qualified MLB leader Paul Skenes. The AL leader is reigning Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal at 2.35. Eovaldi, who missed most of June with elbow inflammation, has thrown 116 innings in the Rangers' 120 games. Pitchers need one inning per team game to qualify as a league leader. Arizona's first five batters were retired before rookie first baseman Tyler Locklear homered on a 402-foot shot to left field in the second inning. Jake McCarthy opened the third with a double and Corbin Carrol followed with his 26th homer, a shot that ricocheted off the right-field pole. Ketel Marte was then hit by a pitch on his left elbow before Geraldo Perdomomo's 12th homer made it 5-0. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. Eovaldi benefitted from double plays in both the fourth and fifth to avoid giving up any more runs after Arizona also had hits in both those innings. The Diamondbacks were coming off a 17-hit game in their 13-6 win at home over Colorado on Sunday, when they set a franchise record with nine consecutive hits in the fifth inning — all with two outs. Only four MLB pitchers since 1920 had a lower ERA than the 1.38 for Eovaldi in the first 19 starts of a season, with Gibson's 1.06 for St. Louis in 1968 the lowest. This is Eovaldi's third season with the Rangers, who gave him the $100,000 All-Star bonus that is in his contract even though he was left off the American League All-Star team last month. ___ AP MLB: