Most Tennis Balls Held in the Mouth – Dog
WHO: Augie
WHAT: Five tennis balls
WHERE: Dallas, Texas, USA
WHEN: July 6, 2003
The world record for the most tennis balls held in the mouth by a dog at one time is five. Augie, a golden retriever owned by the Miller family in Dallas, Texas, USA, successfully gathered and held all five regulation-sized tennis balls on July 6, 2003.
While it is a Guinness World Record, I get very nervous when I see dogs do this. My Ollie used to carry 3 balls and boy was he proud of himself.
Here is a tale I have had up at my site’s page on getting a dog for years. Ever since hearing about it, I have not allowed my furkids to become ball nuts.
Special Safety Warning
Goldens are known to be ball fiends, some loving to chew on or carry multiple balls in their mouths. But, this alarming story from Bev Fillmore, who works with the Golden Retriever Rescue of Michigan, may give you a few good reasons to select some different toys for your Golden kids.
Two days ago, my three-year-old Golden, Woody, was playing with a rubber ball. With him, one ball in his mouth is never enough. He picked up a second ball and the first one went down his throat. He dropped the ball he had just picked up and started choking. I knew what was wrong as soon as he did it. I ran to him, did the Heimlich Maneuver on him and all I got out was blood and old food out of his stomach. There was blood and mucus everywhere and the ball was still stuck. I could see it.
I tried to get my fingers around it in his throat and his tongue was turning blue, his front legs went out from under him and I knew he was going to die. I tried to push the ball back up by pushing upward on his throat, no way. He finally swallowed it far enough to get air through his nose. I dragged him to the car and we headed for the vet. He was barely breathing but conscious. The vet’s office was packed but they know me because I take so many rescued Goldens in there. I bypassed the desk and headed for the surgical room. I told the receptionist what the problem was as I was dragging Woody by the desk.
The vet laid him on the floor and started hollering orders to the crew. They gave him Sodium Pentathol to relax him and his throat. The vet took hold of his tongue and tried to get the ball with forceps but it kept slipping. He finally got a good hold on it, it moved a little and then slipped off again. That much movement cut off his air supply again and his tongue turned blue, then black. The vet ran and got a pair of small nose, long bone cutters and went after the ball. All the girls in the room were in tears, with me, because Woody was dying. The vet got hold of the ball and jerked it out. When Woody took that huge breath of air after the ball had been removed, everyone cheered. The vet tech took the ball to the front and showed the people waiting, what could kill their dog.
Woody slowly came out of anesthesia and we went home, covered with blood and determined not to let this happen to any one else’s dog. I measured the ball that he swallowed. It was 2¾”. Not small. About the size of a tennis ball.
Please be careful what size ball and toys you give your dogs to play with. They can suck it down their throat and be dead before you know what happened. My vet is less than ½ mile away from our home, so I was lucky. My Golden will get to have his 4th birthday.

































My Molli had a vinyl ball with marks that makes it look like a baseball. She would walk around the house making it squeak. 3 weeks later she was not her perky self. I took her to the vet and they x-rayed her. She had squeezed the ball until she got it full of spit, and then collapsed it and swallowed it whole. When it got to the stomach, it filled up with stomach acid and became hard as a rock. Surgery saved her life, and we threw away all the squeeky balls.