NEW YORK -- Matt Murphy's stopover in San Francisco included

a pretty wild ride, and it wasn't on a cable car.

The 21-year-old college student who grew up near Shea Stadium

emerged from a mad scramble at AT&T Park on Tuesday night with a

bloodied face and the city's most-prized souvenir: the ball from

Barry Bonds' record 756th home run.

"I won the lottery," Murphy told The Daily News in a story

posted on its Web site Wednesday. "I'm scraped up but nothing

serious."

Murphy said the ball was "under lock and key."

"I'm going to be smart about what I do with it," he said.

"Funny enough, I'm only keeping 51 percent of what the ball

brings."

Murphy said the rest would go to a friend who went with him to

the game, wearing an Alex Rodriguez jersey.

Murphy had a layover in San Francisco on his way to visit a

friend in Australia. As of Wednesday, he was planning to catch a

later flight.

One of Murphy's neighbors said the family is born-and-bred from

Queens and that his mother grew up in the home.

"I think it's extraordinary, what a stroke of good luck. I hope

they get a lot of money. They certainly deserve it. They're a very,

very, very nice family," John Kroeger said.



But before Murphy celebrates his windfall, he should probably call his accountant.

By most estimates, the ball that put Bonds atop the list of

all-time home run hitters with 756 would sell in the half-million

dollar range on the open market or at auction.

That would instantly put Murphy in the highest tax bracket for individual income, where he would

face a tax rate of about 35 percent, or about $210,000 on a

$600,000 ball.

"It's an expensive catch," said John Barrie, a veteran tax

lawyer with Bryan Cave LLP in New York who grew up watching the

Giants play at Candlestick Park. "Once he took possession of the

ball and it was his ball, it was income to him based on its value

as of yesterday,"

Even if he does not sell the ball, Murphy would still owe the

taxes based on a reasonable estimate of its value, according to

Barrie. Capital gains taxes also could be levied in the future as

the ball gains value, he said.

On the other hand, he said, if the ongoing federal investigation

into steroid abuse among professional athletes takes a criminal

turn for Bonds, the ball's value could go down -- which would likely

allow Murphy to claim a loss.



Wearing a Mets jersey, Murphy went to the stadium and took his

seat in the right-center field seats to see the Giants play

Washington.

Then in the fifth inning, Bonds struck. The slugger sent a drive

into the stands to break Hank Aaron's home run record.

"The first thing I saw once it hit was I'm sure somebody was coming out of that pile bloodied," Philadelphia Phillies star

Ryan Howard said. "I'm sure they were in there scratching, clawing,

scraping, punching, kicking, doing whatever they could do to get

that ball."

That's about what happened, Murphy said.

"When I caught the ball, I just curled up under a bleacher and

immediately there was a 30-person dogpile," Murphy told the News.

"I kept yelling, 'I got it! I got it!" he said. "The SFPD

saved my life."

San Francisco police officer Ana Morales and her partner, Kevin

Martin, were assigned to that section at the ballpark. When Bonds

connected, "there was complete chaos," she told The Associated

Press in a phone interview Wednesday from San Francisco.

Morales said the ball "hit something, bounced up and then as it

was going down toward the ground, he [Murphy] leaned over and got

it."

There was a massive pile of fans scrambling to get to the ball,

and Murphy was on the bottom, Morales said. The officers began

peeling people off the top.

"Everyone wanted to be a part of it and everybody wanted the

ball," she said.

When they got to Murphy he was bent over and bloodied, with the

ball in his hand. She told him: "Put the ball in your pocket and

we will protect you."

Morales and Martin led Murphy to a secure area in the ballpark

and Giants officials who authenticated the baseball.

"I didn't get to see the rest of the game, which kind of upset

me," Murphy said. "My Mets jersey? I had to throw it out. It was

trashed."

Morales said Murphy "didn't seem to want any publicity. He was

a kid who just wanted to take his ball and go home."

Murphy grew up in Queens and when he's not in school, he lives

in a tidy wood-framed house with his parents, grandmother and

little brother.

Next-door neighbor Kay Mitchell said Murphy is a real clean-cut

guy. "You never hear anything bad about him. He's just a nice

college kid," she said.

Even though there were thousands of loyal Giants fans in

attendance, Morales said she's happy that Murphy ended up with the

ball because he seemed like a true fan of the game.

And anyway, she had consolation: "I got to touch it," she

said.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.