SAUGUS – Gianna Oshry is destined to be a Red Sox fan, whether the baby girl likes it or not.Clad all in pink including a pink Red Sox bib and clutching a green Wally doll, six-month-old Gianna posed with her parents Andrea and Gary and the 2007 World Series trophy at Business Copy Associates Inc. Tuesday.As the official copier for the Boston Red Sox for about four years now, BCA owner Bill Horrigan said they were afforded the chance to play host to the trophy for a few hours and it was a chance the Oshry family of Andover couldn’t pass up.Gary posed for a family shot with the trophy, then took his own camera and snapped off a series of close-ups, posed with his daughter, posed alone with the icon, posed his daughter alone with the trophy and took a final shot just to be sure.”It’s an amazing time to be a Boston fan,” he said, admitting he has been a lifelong fan of the Sox and he has tickets to the Sunday’s Patriots-Chargers AFC Championship game at Foxborough.His wife laughed and said she would turn those photos, ticket stubs, pins and pictures of the 2004 trophy into a collage.”But this I’ll frame and hang in her room,” Andrea said picking up the family photo.Andrea said her daughter’s pink and green room is already punctuated with splashes of the Red Sox.”She has a Wally mobile,” she said referring to the team’s mascot, “and she falls asleep to ‘Take Me Out to the Ballgame,’ every night.”And she has been an official member of Red Sox Nation since she was born. Because she was born in Beth Israel Hospital during the team’s run for the 2007 pennant, Andrea said Gianna, along with all the babies born during that time, was named a citizen of Red Sox Nation.The hospital gave Gianna a Red Sox tote bag and baseball hat and an invitation to come to Fenway Park on her fifth birthday for a tour.Red Sox Security team member John McDermott pointed out that Gianna’s fifth birthday would fall on the 100th anniversary of the oldest ballpark in America.”I just got goose bumps,” Andrea said with a laugh.Andrea admits she too has been Sox fan forever and has only the fondest memories of going to games with her father. A tradition she hopes to share with her daughter.Attending another World Series game is also something she wouldn’t mind doing with her daughter.”You enter Fenway and you’re there and everyone is happy, everyone is euphoric,” she said shaking her head. “Your face hurts from smiling. The energy is amazing.”When asked how she would feel if Gianna turned out to not be a baseball fan, Andrea Oshry said she didn’t think it would happen.”My father gives tours in the (Red Sox training) park in Florida. My brother goes to spring training,” she said. “It’s just in our blood. I think you’re born with it.”Horrigan said the morning traffic flow to see the trophy was moderate but he expected it to get busier in the lunch hour and he was right. As noon approached the parking lot of BCA began filling up.”We’ve been associated with the Red Sox for four years,” he said, “and we’ve had two trophies in those four years. That’s pretty good.”