Amidst the chaotic Boston Red Sox season, an unexpected emotional story has left the baseball world speechless.
Not a home run walk-off.
Not a blockbuster trade.
But the moment a father walked into an MLB arena and realized the person waiting for him in the parking lot…was his own son.
According to a touching article from The Boston Globe, Boston Red Sox third-base interim coach Chad Epperson experienced what he called “one of the best moments of his career” when he worked with his son Drew Epperson for the first time at the same MLB arena.
It sounds ordinary.
But for the Epperson family, this was a dream come true after more than 20 years.
Drew Epperson is currently a video assistant for the Kansas City Royals after being recruited by the team for the 2024-25 offseason. And when the Red Sox traveled to Kansas City this week, for the first time in his life, father and son “checked in for work” at an MLB game.
That moment brought Chad Epperson to tears.
“This is as special to me as the Duck Boat parade,” he shared, his voice choked with emotion. “This is one of the best things I’ve ever experienced in my baseball career.”
And then the story behind it truly moved Boston fans.
Chad Epperson has lived baseball for over three decades. He’s been through minor leagues, worked in various systems, and spent most of his life on the endless buses of lower-league baseball.
Throughout that journey, Drew has always been by his side.
According to the Boston Globe, Drew started accompanying his father to the baseball field in 2004, when Chad was coaching the Red Sox’s Single-A team, Augusta. The boy grew up surrounded by the clubhouse, baseball gloves, and batting practice sessions.

Baseball wasn’t just their family business.
It was their life.
But what’s remarkable is that Drew didn’t pursue a career as a player. Instead, he quietly climbed the ladder from the least-noticed positions in the baseball world: clubhouse manager, technical support, video analyst.
He graduated from UMass-Lowell and persevered through years of internships before finally landing a chance with the Royals.
The moment he got the job, Drew immediately called his father.
But a strange coincidence happened right then.
While Drew was preparing to share the good news of his MLB debut, Chad Epperson called to announce that the Red Sox had promoted him to the first team amidst the chaotic coaching reshuffle of the 2026 season.
Drew recounted that he was almost trembling with emotion.
“I was shaking because of him,” Drew shared. “I realized… for the first time in our lives, we’re going to be working together on an MLB court.”
It sounds like something out of a Hollywood baseball movie.
But it’s true.
And in the context of the Red Sox’s turbulent season, that story became a rare source of relief for the Boston clubhouse.
After firing a number of coaching staff members, including head coach Alex Cora, the Red Sox entered a period of unprecedented turmoil under Fenway Sports Group.
Chad Epperson was one of the faces promoted from the minor leagues to help the team navigate the crisis.
But instead of just bringing the pressure…
He brought his whole family to MLB.
According to the Boston Globe, his wife—Anne Epperson—was also in Kansas City to witness that special moment.
A mother.
A father.
A son.
Three people standing together in an MLB stadium after decades of dedication to baseball.

That’s why this story deeply moved the American baseball community.
Because in an era full of controversy, money, and pressure to achieve results, the Epperson family reminds everyone that baseball is still a sport of simple dreams.
Not everyone dreams of becoming a superstar.
Sometimes, just standing next to loved ones in the same dugout is a big deal.
And for Chad Epperson, that moment was perhaps more precious than any victory.
“This is something I will remember for the rest of my life,” he said.
Not because of the MLB lights.
Not because of the tens of thousands of spectators.
But because for the first time in over 20 years of playing baseball…
He got to see his dream and his son’s dream come true on the world’s biggest baseball field.