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Rockies fan who caught Shohei Ohtani’s 300th home run ball earns $44,322 in auction

Emily Sauvageau caught the milestone Ohtani homer in a Dodgers win over the Rockies on June 24

Adams State softball player Emily Sauvageau stands in left field at Coors Field in Denver, on Saturday, Aug. 09, 2025. Sauvageau caught Los Angeles Dodgers Shohei Ohtani’s 300th home run ball (milestone from both the Nippon Professional Baseball and Major League Baseball) from the exact same spot June 24, 2025. The actual ball, not the one in her glove, is going to auctioned off to the highest bidder. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Adams State softball player Emily Sauvageau stands in left field at Coors Field in Denver, on Saturday, Aug. 09, 2025. Sauvageau caught Los Angeles Dodgers Shohei Ohtani’s 300th home run ball (milestone from both the Nippon Professional Baseball and Major League Baseball) from the exact same spot June 24, 2025. The actual ball, not the one in her glove, is going to auctioned off to the highest bidder. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Kyle Newman, digital prep sports editor for The Denver Post.
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For Emily Sauvageau, it officially pays to be a Rockies fan.

No matter that Colorado is cruising toward its worst season ever. Sauvageau made $44,322 from selling a Shohei Ohtani home run ball she caught on June 24 at Coors Field.

Sauvageau put the Ohtani ball, the Dodgers’ star’s 300th combined homer between NPB and MLB, up The auction ended late Saturday night.

It didn’t fetch the six-figure price tag the auction house was projecting, but Sauvageau — a Rockies diehard who has been to 838 MLB games, the majority of them in LoDo — is grateful for the payout.

“It was such a fun experience,” Sauvageau said. “It was really exciting getting to see the bids go up especially towards the end. I couldn’t be more grateful for the money and just the experience in general.”

Sauvageau attended her first Rockies game when she was seven months old. Her dad, Dan Sauvageau, has had season tickets since 1999. The family’s tickets are in the front row of Section 153 in left field, where Emily (a ) snagged Ohtani’s opposite-field shot in a Dodgers win over the Rockies.

The 21-year-old plans to split the money with her younger brother, Ryan.

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