Philly Guy Tries To Bring His Emotional Support Alligator To A Baseball Game
In a not-so-surprising move, reports are that the Philadelphia Phillies did not let a man bring his emotional support alligator to a game.
You heard me correctly, did not let a man bring his emotional support ALLIGATOR to a baseball game.
The man is Joie Henney and his emotional support ‘gator is named “Wally”. Mr. Henney says that he gets a lot of love and support from Wally. According to reports, “Wally likes to give and receive hugs.” Mr. Henney claims that Wally has never bitten anyone and that the gator helps him battle depression.
I was very curious about Wally the support alligator so I went into an internet rabbit hole for a few minutes. Wally is an Instagram star!
Here we see Wally getting pretty far in a “Favorite Pet” contest:
Joie, Wally’s owner, has been getting emotional support from Wally the alligator for about seven years. He brings the ‘gator a lot of places. But, sadly, not every place is cool with having an alligator on a leash in their establishment. Looks like we can count a Major League Baseball game among those places that aren’t comfortable with an alligator hanging around. They didn’t let Joie or Wally in the ball park. Here’s a picture of Wally the emotional support alligator on the sidewalk outside the Phillies game last Wednesday:
Are you kidding me. A #Phillies fan tried to come into game tonight with what they said was a “service animal.” An Alligator! Yes an Alligator. Thing’s I’ve never seen. This is it. @SportsRadioWIP pic.twitter.com/H7A0FM0IYC
— Howard Eskin (@howardeskin) September 27, 2023
That’s a big f’n alligator! At seven years old Wally looks to be about 5 or 6 feet long. Despite being a creature that looks like it could take your arm off, some of the general public let it crawl over them so they can embrace it. In fact, Wally made the news:
I don’t know if it’s time for Major League Baseball to reconsider their rules on what exactly constitutes a “service animal” or not but clearly this alligator seems like it’s made of something different than something pulled out of the Everglades. Clearly this isn’t our normal “sports report“.