06/04/2026
βΌοΈ UPDATE on the 12-year-old boy who was struck in the neck by a baseball and is currently on life support.
Families across the United States are placing baseball bats outside their homes in honor of young Xavier Taylor β a young fan of the Penn State Nittany Lions.
ππππ πππππππ β‘οΈ https://bolivia.wordfarer.blog/posts/south-jersey-community-rallies-prayer-12-year-old-baseball-player-fighting-his-anhts123-team-prism-5867-prism-Uv0E
I have been following Xavierβs story since the moment an ordinary day around baseball turned into something no parent could ever imagine.
Xavier was not playing in a championship game.
He was not making a highlight-reel catch or stepping up for a game-winning hit.
He was simply warming up before a youth baseball game in New Jersey.
According to his family, Xavier β a young pitcher and shortstop who dreamed of one day representing the Penn State Nittany Lions β was walking toward the dugout when a baseball thrown by another player accidentally struck him in the neck.
Within moments, everything changed.
His father says Xavier collapsed, went into cardiac arrest, and had to be airlifted to the hospital.
Days later, he remains unresponsive in the intensive care unit. Medical equipment is now keeping him alive as his family waits, prays, and hopes for any sign that their little boy is still fighting to come back.
As a parent, itβs hard not to think about how quickly life can change.
One moment you are helping your child get ready for baseball.
The next, you are standing beside a hospital bed praying for a miracle.
But there is another child in this story carrying a burden no kid should ever have to bear β the teammate who threw the ball.
Xavierβs father has publicly said he does not blame him. He called it exactly what it was: a tragic freak accident.
Still, it is impossible not to think about what that young player must be feeling as he watches his friend fight for his life.
Two families are now forever connected by a moment nobody could have predicted and nobody can undo.
Over the weekend, hundreds gathered outside the hospital where Xavier is being treated. Teammates, friends, coaches, neighbors, and even strangers stood together looking up toward the ICU windows.
Many wore shirts with Xavierβs number 6.
Xavierβs father, Greg, shared words that have stayed with so many people ever since:
βMy son Xavier loves this game. He will play this game again.β
Not because doctors have promised it.
Not because anyone knows what tomorrow holds.
But because that is what hope sounds like when it is all you have left to hold on to.
Tonight, Xavier remains unresponsive. His family remains at his bedside.
And thousands of baseball fans β including members of the Penn State Nittany Lions community β are praying and hoping that somehow this 12-year-old boy who loves baseball so much will one day pick up a bat, step onto the field, and hear his name called again.
If you would like to join them, place a baseball bat outside your door and say a prayer for Xavier Taylor.
Because right now, the entire baseball world is hoping for the same miracle. πβΎπ