New Bud Light commercial airs during World Series to celebrate guy who saved the beers

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RiverNorthPhotography/iStock(NEW YORK) —  Not all heroes wear capes, or gloves apparently.Even in a world where a beer costs $9.50 at the ballpark, the choice between dropping two cold, frosty cans to catch a World Series home run ball should be a no brainer. Not so for one Nationals fan, who opted to let the baseball slam his chest instead of spilling the brews, and now his choice has paid off big time.

This man is a hero. Twitter please figure out who this guy is so we can reward him. #WorldSeries pic.twitter.com/suMtVECfXY

— Bud Light (@budlight) October 28, 2019

Bud Light tracked down Jeff Adams, the beer “hero” who they searched for after the viral moment during Game 5, gave him tickets to Game 6 Tuesday night in enemy territory — Houston.The brand quickly mocked up a custom T-shirt for the Nats fan to commemorate his beverage-over-baseball decision and now, Adams is the star of Bud Light’s latest commercial spot.

Pain is temporary, glory is forever. #WorldSeries pic.twitter.com/8fXJ7iEA7L

— Bud Light (@budlight) October 30, 2019

The 15-second ad, run by MLB sponsor Anheuser Busch, aired during Game 6 and Bud Light shared the spot on Twitter with the caption, “Pain is temporary, glory is forever.”

Update: We are in contact with our hero. He’s wearing this beauty to Game 6. pic.twitter.com/CobFG9q8kC

— Bud Light (@budlight) October 29, 2019

Adams brought his good fortune to Houston where the Nats forced a Game 7 after defeating the Astros 7 – 2.Twitter naturally fawned over the viral fanfare and users have campaigned for Adams to receive free beer for life.

Oh we will.

— Bud Light (@budlight) October 28, 2019

Bud Light didn’t immediately respond to ABC News’ request for comment, but the brand did hint in a tweet that they will make it happen.Adams said he credits his little league coach for his move on the play.”He taught me how to put my chest in front of a ball and let it bounce in front of me. So put my chest in front of it, right? And I angled down,” he said. “Sure enough, hit me right in the chest. Went straight down. And I got it.”Editors at Sports Illustrated may have a hard time deciding who makes the cover this week.

@GCTigerTracker @TigerWoods pic.twitter.com/3TRIDGAKeS

— Jason Le (@jvanle78) October 28, 2019

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