Polish CEO reportedly apologizes for taking the child’s hat at US Open

Polish CEO
Sorry I stole the hat of Kamil Majchrzak …
I thought it was for my children !!!
Published
The Polish CEO that Viral went after he essentially left a child’s tennis hat at the US open seems to offer an apology … according to several reports.
A apparently an explanation of Piotr Szczerek -Head of the Drog-Bruk Stone Paving Company in Poland is going around online … And in it the CEO says that he “unambiguously wants to apologize” to the child and his family.
❗️ Pilne❗️#Usopen
Majchrzak Po Wygranym Meczu Rozdawał Autography I Jak to Zwykle Bywa Ręczniki, Piłki Oraz swoją czapkę. Dał czapkę dziecku a jakiś buc zabrał ją practicecznie z ręki 😡 😡 pic.twitter.com/h6izremala– Koneser Unii Europejskiej (@koneserunii) August 29, 2025
@Koneserunii
Szczerek says he takes responsibility for his “bad judgment and hurting actions” … Adding that he never intended to steal Kamil Majchrzak’s hat from a young fan.
When Kamil handed the hat, Piotr says, he became “entangled in the heat of the moment and the joy of the victory, and I believed that Majchrzak gave me a hat to give my sons, who had previously asked for signatures.”
He says he knows that he hurt the boy and many fans … and he really regrets him.
Szczerek says he sent the hat back to the young man and abundantly apologized … Of which he hopes it will at least undo the damage he has caused inadvertently.
Piotr says further: “For years my wife and I have been involved in supporting children and young athletes, but this incident has shown me that a moment of inattention can undo years of work and support. It is a painful but necessary lesson in humility.”
ICYMI … Video became viral last week and showed the Polish tennis star who apparently tried to transfer his hat to a child – when a man took the hat and handed his wife.
Outrage Online came quickly … and Kamil actually Went on social media To try to find the child. They met one-off experience shortly after the incident-one.
It sounds like this might be a case of real miscommunication … one that Piotr and his family may never live.




