On Wednesday, the Cubs' Albert Almora Jr. hit a foul ball that struck a little girl sitting on the third-base side at Minute Maid Park. (Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports)
On Wednesday, the Cubs' Albert Almora Jr. hit a foul ball that struck a little girl sitting on the third-base side at Minute Maid Park. (Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports)

WATCH: Bryant gives thoughtful answer when asked about netting at ballparks


by - Senior Writer -

The scary incident involving a little girl being struck by a foul ball that careened off the bat of Chicago Cubs center fielder Albert Almora Jr. and into the stands on the third-base side at Minute Maid Park overshadowed the game played between the Cubs and the Houston Astros on Wednesday night. The horrible occurrence represented an addition to a continually growing list of senseless injury suffered at MLB parks due to a lack of sufficient protective netting in front of the seats.

Debates have been at the forefront of MLB discussions in recent years concerning whether or not the netting behind the plate should be extended down the foul lines in order to prevent lined foul balls from striking fans, and Wednesday's horrible happening indicated why the netting definitely should be extended. Cubs leader Kris Bryant conducted a postgame interview with ESPN reporter Jeff Passan following the game and echoed that sentiment.

"Yes," Bryant quickly answered when asked if he felt that netting should surround foul territory at big-league ballparks. "You can see through these nets here. There are a lot of young kids coming to the games, wanting to watch us play."

Frightening incidents involving foul balls and accidentally flung bats heading into the stands have marred several major-league games in recent years, yet MLB has sloughed off extending the netting at its stadiums. The dramatic nature of this latest incident, as well as the fact that it was aired on ESPN for a national audience to witness, will certainly incentivize a new push to have the net barrier expanded, and Bryant explained to Passan why that desperately needs to happen.

"The ball's coming hard," Bryant said, "and the speed of the game is quick. I think we should do any safety measure we can take to make sure that fans are safe."

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