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Arizona Little Leaguer Killed When Pitch Hits Chest


First Posted: 06/ 3/11 11:42 PM ET Updated: 06/ 4/11 09:56 PM ET

Amanda Lee Myers, Associated Press

PHOENIX -- A 13-year-old Arizona boy was killed in a freak accident after a baseball hit him over the heart as he tried to bunt, officials in his Little League said Friday.

Hayden Walton went for the bunt during a game Tuesday night in the close-knit northern Arizona city of Winslow, said Jamey Jones, a Winslow Little League official.

"He took an inside pitch right in the chest," Jones said. "After that he took two steps to first base and collapsed."

He died the next morning at a local hospital.

The boy's parents, who were at the game, are heartbroken, shocked and unable to speak to members of the media, league president and family spokesman Dale Thomas said.

"It's a hard thing to handle for everyone," Thomas said. "When you're touched by something of this magnitude, it sends shock waves throughout the community."

Story continues below

Thomas said he grew up around the boy's family and described Hayden as "the epitome of what every little boy ought to be." Besides participating in Little League, Hayden was a Boy Scout, loved to work on cars and helped neighborhood widows by mowing their lawns and doing odd jobs for them, Thomas said.

He said Hayden had a younger sister.

The league suspended games until Friday and has counselors available for players or parents who need them.

Stephen Keener, president and CEO of Little League Baseball and Softball, said in a statement that "the loss of a child is incomprehensible."

"Words cannot adequately express our sorrow on the passing of Hayden," he said. "Our thoughts and prayers go out to Hayden's family, all the players and volunteers of the Winslow Little League, his classmates, and his friends, at this difficult time."

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Amanda Lee Myers, Associated Press PHOENIX -- A 13-year-old Arizona boy was killed in a freak accident after a baseball hit him over the heart as he tried to bunt, officials in his Little League sa...
Amanda Lee Myers, Associated Press PHOENIX -- A 13-year-old Arizona boy was killed in a freak accident after a baseball hit him over the heart as he tried to bunt, officials in his Little League sa...
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1 hour ago (11:26 PM)
Our Hearts are Broken to here of such a travisty, You see My child has played softball for 4 years, and this was His first year Playing hardball. He worked very, very hard being a good player, He has good sportsmans­hip and Love for the game. We found out about Hayden's Death the same time We were finding out that our 8 yr. old Had made the Allstar team, We meaning My Husband and Myself, and Very close Friends of our's Whose 8yr. old Son Has traveled down the same road as our Son. They have done it together and has played on the same team except for this year, they played on two Dixie Hardball teams, but we were Blessed that there start of Hopefully a very young start of a Career, But we will not go back out on the field without of some type of Chest Protection and in Hayden's Memory they will play and win for Him, and let not His Memory be forgotten. With our Deepest Sympathy to Haydens Family! Sad in Louisiana
52 minutes ago (11:59 PM)
Sad in LA, I understand your thinking about the chest protection­. These sort of tragedies often cause people to start demanding that kind of protective gear. However, a study published last year found that chest protectors currently used in baseball and lacrosse do not lessen the risk of these types of events. Money would be better spent on an automatic defibrilla­tor as quickly shocking the victim of an event like this is their best hope for survival, and the chest protectors have not been found to be helpful in preventing the events.
3 hours ago (9:45 PM)
I feel terrible for the parents and the pitcher. Rest in peace little one.
4 hours ago (8:36 PM)
What a tragedy for absolutely everyone involved and all of Hayden's family and friends. My heart aches thinking about their grief.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shaun Dawson
4 hours ago (8:22 PM)
This is a really sad story. Condolence­s to the family.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jabandit
In vino veritas.
5 hours ago (7:58 PM)
RIP little man
5 hours ago (7:30 PM)
That's it,, I've just decided that my future children will be enveloped in bubble wrap!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Allen Powers
51, Married, Desert Rat.
5 hours ago (7:24 PM)
Definitely not fair. Proof that there is no karma - nothing to set things right at the end of the day.
6 hours ago (6:38 PM)
That's why more and more americans are putting the kids in soccer teams, which is a lot safer than other sports.
1 hour ago (11:33 PM)
Silly comment. Where I live pop warner, little league, club\trave­l baseball, and lacrosse are huge, and soccer is a after thought for everyone. I'm a huge soccer fan, went to SA to the world cup last year, but that's not translatin­g in youth participat­ion.
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Spiggy
If I can get you to think then I have succeeded.
6 hours ago (6:31 PM)
Two Words....P­ortable defibrilla­tors ...there is absolutely no reason not to have one of those readily available at any sporting even with someone CPR qualified to use it.

Yeah it is hindsight, but come on, 1200-2500 is the best money ever spent if you need to use it.
5 hours ago (8:14 PM)
Did his heart go into a-fib or stop?. A defibrilla­tor won't shock a heart that has stopped.

But you are right--the­se should be in more public places because they can save lives.
1 hour ago (11:29 PM)
His heart probably went into V-FIB ( ventricual­r fibrillati­on) or asystole. I've never seen a patient drop dead from A-fib. CPR in conjunctio­n with an AED( or a thump on the chest) may have saved this child's life. All coaches and leagues should be taught the basics and given the tools just in case.
4 hours ago (8:32 PM)
Amazingly, I just read that these devices still can only work about 35% of the time.

But you are right--the­se should be in more public places because they can save lives.
7 hours ago (6:16 PM)
What a terrible thing to happen in a case where normally a child should be having fun doing a sport they enjoy. My heart goes out to the family, just a sad tragedy.
7 hours ago (5:53 PM)
These new heart guard protectors seem so unobtrusiv­e and simple to wear
http://www­.woodburys­ports.com/­Heart-Guar­d-p/mcdavi­dhrtgrdyou­thshrt.htm
The odds of this happening to someone are probably pretty small, but if my son/daught­er were playing, there is no way I would take the chance after reading this, when the prevention of it is only 30$.

RIP
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anti-Panoptic
Conscious Grad Student
7 hours ago (5:32 PM)
Poor kid. Condolence­s to his family.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paul Sta
7 hours ago (5:25 PM)
Baseball can be very dangerous. my brother got a minor concussion from a line drive which bounced once and hit him in the forehead. My condolence­s to the family truly horrible.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yolande Long
Trinigurl NYorker turned Virginian
8 hours ago (5:00 PM)
OMG My condolence­s to his family. Rest in Peace little man - your time on this earth was very brief, but as I read all that you did to help others, it was not wasted. May your loved ones take solace in that.
8 hours ago (4:38 PM)
This, I'd assume was a little league hard ball pitch, that routinely cracks heads of audience members? But no one anticipate­s injury in sports that are inherently dangerous? Naaah.
8 hours ago (5:17 PM)
Ridiculous and cold thing to say. How many Little League baseball games do you think have been played in this country in which not one child was injured, much less killed? Should we lock them up indoors since crossing the street is inherently dangerous, keep them out of cars since moving vehicles are inherently dangerous?