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This 87-year-old cried tears of joy when he was reunited with his missing baseball mitt

Donald Holcomb, of Chicopee, waves to the crowd at Polar Park on June 10 after the 87-year-old and member of the Western Mass Relics Senior Softball League caught a ceremonial first pitch.
Donald Holcomb, of Chicopee, waves to the crowd at Polar Park on June 10 after the 87-year-old and member of the Western Mass Relics Senior Softball League caught a ceremonial first pitch.

WORCESTER — The search for 87-year-old Donald Holcomb’s baseball glove is finally over.

After catching a ceremonial first pitch prior to the WooSox game on June 10, Holcomb, a longtime resident of Palmer who now lives in Chicopee, realized his first baseman’s mitt was missing. And for over a month, Holcomb thought he’d never see his beloved glove again.

“At that point, I said to myself, ‘Well, my glove is never coming back,’ ” Holcomb said.

But on July 18, a member of the WooSox staff reunited Holcomb with his mitt just outside of Polar Park.

“I was like a two-year-old with a new toy,” Holcomb said. “Tears were just flowing down my face. I was so glad to have my glove back.”

Once Holcomb realized he misplaced his glove last month, his daughter, Kimberly Gallagher, went to Facebook to post a message that implored “family, friends, anyone and everyone” to help spread the word about her father’s missing mitt.

Donald Holcomb, a resident of Chicopee, is on the search for his missing baseball glove after the 87-year-old caught a ceremonial first pitch at Polar Park on June 10.
Donald Holcomb, a resident of Chicopee, is on the search for his missing baseball glove after the 87-year-old caught a ceremonial first pitch at Polar Park on June 10.

The glove, which Holcomb bought in 2000 and has been using for the past 23 years as a member of the Western Mass Relics Senior Softball League, holds a special spot in Holcomb’s heart.

“It’s had a lot of sentimental value over the years,” Gallagher said.

Recently, two of the WooSox’ interns from the Shrewsbury RISE program were sorting through lost-and-found items when their supervisor recognized the glove from social media posts.

Shortly after, WooSox coordinator of marketing and fan engagement George Lorin contacted Gallagher and coordinated a time for Holcomb — and his daughters Gallagher and Dawn Carr — to come by Polar Park to pick up the prized possession.

And when Lorin presented Holcomb with his glove last week, emotions poured out of the 87-year-old.

Donald Holcomb was all smiles after he was reunited with his baseball glove outside of Polar Park on July 18.
Donald Holcomb was all smiles after he was reunited with his baseball glove outside of Polar Park on July 18.

“He was a kid in the candy store,” Gallagher said.

Said Lorin: “The joy was written all over Don’s face.”

“It means the world to me,” Holcomb added.

It was a cheerful conclusion to a strenuous situation for Donald Holcomb, who finally reunited with his beloved baseball glove.

“It’s truly a happy ending to a story and it couldn’t happen to a better person,” Gallagher said. “My dad is a really good guy, and I'm just happy he’s got it back.

“It’s just a miracle that it turned out to be this way.”

— Contact Tommy Cassell at tcassell@telegram.com. Follow him on Twitter @tommycassell44. 

This article originally appeared on Telegram & Gazette: Missing baseball glove returned to Donald Holcomb at Polar Park