When Stephen Drew hit a home run into the right-field stands last Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium, Nick Paccione watched it sail over his head. The next thing he knew, the ball ricocheted off a seat behind him and right into his hands.
A few minutes later, he recognized Eddie Fastook, the Yankees’ head of security, coming down the aisle toward him. He suddenly had a sinking feeling.
“I knew who Eddie was,” said Paccione, a lifelong Yankees fan from Commack, N.Y. “Right away, I’m thinking, uh-oh, what did I do wrong?”
But Fastook was there to make Paccione a deal too good to pass up. The home run happened to be the 1,000 hit of Drew’s career, and in exchange for the ball, Fastook offered Paccione and his party of five - which included three boys - the chance to meet Drew, get autographed baseballs from him, pose for photos and tour the clubhouse after the players cleared out.
“It was an easy decision,” Paccione said.
For years, Fastook, a former police officer and longtime bodyguard for George M. Steinbrenner, has taken pride in a particular duty: going into the stands to retrieve home run balls that might be significant to the Yankee players who hit them. Among the milestones have been Derek Jeter’s 3,000th hit and, in recent weeks, the first career home runs by the rookies Slade Heathcott, Jose Pirela and Mason Williams.