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Boy with Down syndrome hits home run, goes viral with adorable celebration

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Here’s a story that will surely bring a smile to your face.

A boy named Billy, who has Down syndrome, hit a home run in a tee-ball game and celebrated with some sweet dance moves before crossing home plate.

Billy, from Long Island, New York, was competing in a game put on by the League of Yes, a Forest Hills, New York-based organization that holds sporting events for children with special needs.

After he smacks the ball off the tee, Billy rounds the bases, and while making his way down the third-base line, he goes through a high-five tunnel of volunteers.

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But then, just before he reaches home plate, he breaks into a dance that includes “the floss,” along with several other moves, before emphatically crossing home plate.

“He’s absolutely adorable,” Kristine Fitzpatrick, who started the League of Yes in 2010, told Inside Edition.

“It was like he won the Olympics,” Fitzpatrick said. “He felt like he was the man. He just goes around now telling everyone he’s famous.”

And he is famous too, as the video has become a viral sensation on social media.

Are you inspired by people like Billy?

The non-competitive league is all about promoting play and having fun.

“We also want to show the world that our special-needs community needs to have play in their lives,” Fitzpatrick said, according to CBS News.

“I can tell you story after story of children’s experience of their joy to play on a team and also the confidence they have been building on and off the field,” she added.

Fitzpatrick hopes the attention from Billy’s video leads to similar leagues being formed in other parts of the country.

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“It’s been my dream to make this a national thing,” Fitzpatrick said. “The kids just want to play.”

Now that indeed is certainly a worthy goal.

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Dave is a lifelong sports fan who has been writing for The Wildcard since 2017. He has been a writer for more than 20 years for a variety of publications.
Dave has been writing about sports for The Wildcard since 2017. He's been a reporter and editor for over 20 years, covering everything from sports to financial news. In addition to writing for The Wildcard, Dave has covered mutual funds for Pensions and Investments, meetings and conventions, money market funds, personal finance, associations, and he currently covers financial regulations and the energy sector for Macallan Communications. He has won awards for both news and sports reporting.
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