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PDF of Aug 15 Results
Huggins and Scott's August 6, 2015 Auction Prices Realized SALE LOT# TITLE BIDS PRICE 1 Incredible 1911 T205 Gold Borders Near Master Set of (221/222) SGC Graded Cards--Highest SGC Grade Average!5 $ [reserve - not met] 2 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Cap Anson SGC 55 VG-EX+ 4.5 22 $ 3,286.25 3 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Jocko Fields SGC 80 EX/NM 6 4 $ 388.38 4 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Cliff Carroll SGC 80 EX/NM 6--"1 of 1" with None Better 8 $ 717.00 5 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Kid Gleason SGC 50 VG-EX 4--"Black Sox" Manager 4 $ 448.13 6 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Dan Casey SGC 80 EX/NM 6 7 $ 418.25 7 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Mike Dorgan SGC 80 EX/NM 6 8 $ 448.13 8 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Sam Smith SGC 50 VG-EX 4 17 $ 776.75 9 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Joe Gunson SGC 50 VG-EX 4 6 $ 239.00 10 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Henry Gruber SGC 40 VG 3 4 $ 155.35 11 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Bill Hallman SGC 40 VG 3 6 $ 179.25 12 1888 Scrapps Die-Cuts St. Louis Browns SGC Graded Team Set (9) 14 $ 896.25 13 1909 T204 Ramly Clark Griffith SGC Authentic 6 $ 239.00 14 1909-11 T206 White Borders Sherry Magee (Magie) Error--SGC Authentic 13 $ 3,585.00 15 1909-11 T206 White Borders Bud Sharpe (Shappe) Error--SGC 45 VG+ 3.5 10 $ 1,912.00 16 (75) 1909-11 T206 White Border PSA Graded Cards with (12) Hall of Famers & (6) Southern Leaguers 16 $ 2,987.50 17 1911 T206 John Hummel American Beauty 460 --SGC 55 VG-EX+ 4.5 14 $ 358.50 18 Incredible 1909 S74 Silks-White Ty Cobb SGC 84 NM 7 with Red Sun Advertising Back--Highest Graded Known8 from$ 5,078.75 Set! 19 (15) 1909-11 T206 White Border SGC 30-55 Graded Cards with Jimmy Collins 15 $ 597.50 20 1921 Schapira Brothers Candy Babe Ruth (Portrait) SGC 40 VG 3 18 $ 448.13 21 1926-29 Baseball Exhibits-P.C. -
Lot# Title Bids Sale Price 1
Huggins and Scott'sAugust 7, 2014 Auction Prices Realized SALE LOT# TITLE BIDS PRICE 1 Ultimate 1974 Topps Baseball Experience: #1 PSA Graded Master, Traded & Team Checklist Sets with (564) PSA12 10,$ Factory82,950.00 Set, Uncut Sheet & More! [reserve met] 2 1869 Peck & Snyder Cincinnati Red Stockings (Small) Team Card SGC 10—First Baseball Card Ever Produced!22 $ 16,590.00 3 1933 Goudey Baseball #106 Napoleon Lajoie—PSA Authentic 21 $ 13,035.00 4 1908-09 Rose Co. Postcards Walter Johnson SGC 45—First Offered and Only Graded by SGC or PSA! 25 $ 10,072.50 5 1911 T205 Gold Border Kaiser Wilhelm (Cycle Back) “Suffered in 18th Line” Variation—SGC 60 [reserve not met]0 $ - 6 1915 E145 Cracker Jack #30 Ty Cobb PSA 5 22 $ 7,702.50 7 (65) 1909-11 T206 White Border Singles with (40) Graded Including (4) Hall of Famers 16 $ 2,370.00 8 (37) 1909-11 T206 White Border PSA 1-4 Graded Cards with Willis 8 $ 1,125.75 9 (5) 1909-11 T206 White Borders PSA Graded Cards with Mathewson 9 $ 711.00 10 (3) 1911 T205 Gold Borders with Mordecai Brown, Walter Johnson & Cy Young--All SGC Authentic 12 $ 711.00 11 (3) 1909-11 T206 White Border Ty Cobb SGC Authentic Singles--Different Poses 14 $ 1,777.50 12 1909-11 T206 White Borders Walter Johnson (Portrait) & Christy Mathewson (White Cap)--Both SGC Authentic 9 $ 444.38 13 1909-11 T206 White Borders Ty Cobb (Green Portrait) SGC 55 12 $ 3,555.00 14 1909-11 T205 & T206 Hall of Famers with Lajoie, Mathewson & McGraw--All SGC Graded 12 $ 503.63 15 (4) 1887 N284 Buchner Gold Coin SGC 60 Graded Singles 4 $ 770.25 16 (6) -
Baseball History
Christian Brothers Baseball History 1930 - 1959 By James McNamara, Class of 1947 Joseph McNamara, Class of 1983 1 Introductory Note This is an attempt to chronicle the rich and colorful history of baseball played at Christian Brothers High School from the years 1930 to 1959. Much of the pertinent information for such an endeavor exists only in yearbooks or in scrapbooks from long ago. Baseball is a spring sport, and often yearbooks were published before the season’s completion. There are even years where yearbooks where not produced at all, as is the case for the years 1930 to 1947. Prep sports enjoyed widespread coverage in the local papers, especially during the hard years of the Great Depression and World War II. With the aid of old microfilm machines at the City Library, it was possible to resurrect some of those memorable games as told in the pages of the Sacramento Bee and Union newspapers. But perhaps the best mode of research, certainly the most enter- taining, is the actual testimony of the ballplayers themselves. Their recall of events from 50 plus years ago, even down to the most minor of details is simply astonishing. Special thanks to Kathleen Davis, Terri Barbeau, Joe Franzoia, Gil Urbano, Vince Pisani, Billy Rico, Joe Sheehan, and Frank McNamara for opening up their scrapbooks and sharing photographs. This document is by no means a complete or finished account. It is indeed a living document that requires additions, subtractions, and corrections to the ongoing narrative. Respectfully submitted, James McNamara, Class of 1947 Joseph McNamara, Class of 1983 2 1930 s the 1920’s came to a close, The Gaels of Christian Brothers High School A had built a fine tradition of baseball excellence unmatched in the Sacra- mento area. -
Jan-29-2021-Digital
Collegiate Baseball The Voice Of Amateur Baseball Started In 1958 At The Request Of Our Nation’s Baseball Coaches Vol. 64, No. 2 Friday, Jan. 29, 2021 $4.00 Innovative Products Win Top Awards Four special inventions 2021 Winners are tremendous advances for game of baseball. Best Of Show By LOU PAVLOVICH, JR. Editor/Collegiate Baseball Awarded By Collegiate Baseball F n u io n t c a t REENSBORO, N.C. — Four i v o o n n a n innovative products at the recent l I i t y American Baseball Coaches G Association Convention virtual trade show were awarded Best of Show B u certificates by Collegiate Baseball. i l y t t nd i T v o i Now in its 22 year, the Best of Show t L a a e r s t C awards encompass a wide variety of concepts and applications that are new to baseball. They must have been introduced to baseball during the past year. The committee closely examined each nomination that was submitted. A number of superb inventions just missed being named winners as 147 exhibitors showed their merchandise at SUPERB PROTECTION — Truletic batting gloves, with input from two hand surgeons, are a breakthrough in protection for hamate bone fractures as well 2021 ABCA Virtual Convention See PROTECTIVE , Page 2 as shielding the back, lower half of the hand with a hard plastic plate. Phase 1B Rollout Impacts Frontline Essential Workers Coaches Now Can Receive COVID-19 Vaccine CDC policy allows 19 protocols to be determined on a conference-by-conference basis,” coaches to receive said Keilitz. -
Castrovince | October 23Rd, 2016 CLEVELAND -- the Baseball Season Ends with Someone Else Celebrating
C's the day before: Chicago, Cleveland ready By Anthony Castrovince / MLB.com | @castrovince | October 23rd, 2016 CLEVELAND -- The baseball season ends with someone else celebrating. That's just how it is for fans of the Indians and Cubs. And then winter begins, and, to paraphrase the great meteorologist Phil Connors from "Groundhog Day," it is cold, it is gray and it lasts the rest of your life. The city of Cleveland has had 68 of those salt-spreading, ice-chopping, snow-shoveling winters between Tribe titles, while Chicagoans with an affinity for the North Siders have all been biding their time in the wintry winds since, in all probability, well before birth. Remarkably, it's been 108 years since the Cubs were last on top of the baseball world. So if patience is a virtue, the Cubs and Tribe are as virtuous as they come. And the 2016 World Series that arrives with Monday's Media Day - - the pinch-us, we're-really-here appetizer to Tuesday's intensely anticipated Game 1 at Progressive Field -- is one pitting fan bases of shared circumstances and sentiments against each other. These are two cities, separated by just 350 miles, on the Great Lakes with no great shakes in the realm of baseball background, and that has instilled in their people a common and eventually unmet refrain of "Why not us?" But for one of them, the tide will soon turn and so, too, will the response: "Really? Us?" Yes, you. Imagine what that would feel like for Norman Rosen. He's 90 years old and wise to the patience required of Cubs fandom. -
1955 Bowman Baseball Checklist
1955 Bowman Baseball Checklist 1 Hoyt Wilhelm 2 Alvin Dark 3 Joe Coleman 4 Eddie Waitkus 5 Jim Robertson 6 Pete Suder 7 Gene Baker 8 Warren Hacker 9 Gil McDougald 10 Phil Rizzuto 11 Bill Bruton 12 Andy Pafko 13 Clyde Vollmer 14 Gus Keriazakos 15 Frank Sullivan 16 Jimmy Piersall 17 Del Ennis 18 Stan Lopata 19 Bobby Avila 20 Al Smith 21 Don Hoak 22 Roy Campanella 23 Al Kaline 24 Al Aber 25 Minnie Minoso 26 Virgil Trucks 27 Preston Ward 28 Dick Cole 29 Red Schoendienst 30 Bill Sarni 31 Johnny TemRookie Card 32 Wally Post 33 Nellie Fox 34 Clint Courtney 35 Bill Tuttle 36 Wayne Belardi 37 Pee Wee Reese 38 Early Wynn 39 Bob Darnell 40 Vic Wertz 41 Mel Clark 42 Bob Greenwood 43 Bob Buhl Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 44 Danny O'Connell 45 Tom Umphlett 46 Mickey Vernon 47 Sammy White 48 (a) Milt BollingFrank Bolling on Back 48 (b) Milt BollingMilt Bolling on Back 49 Jim Greengrass 50 Hobie Landrith 51 El Tappe Elvin Tappe on Card 52 Hal Rice 53 Alex Kellner 54 Don Bollweg 55 Cal Abrams 56 Billy Cox 57 Bob Friend 58 Frank Thomas 59 Whitey Ford 60 Enos Slaughter 61 Paul LaPalme 62 Royce Lint 63 Irv Noren 64 Curt Simmons 65 Don ZimmeRookie Card 66 George Shuba 67 Don Larsen 68 Elston HowRookie Card 69 Billy Hunter 70 Lew Burdette 71 Dave Jolly 72 Chet Nichols 73 Eddie Yost 74 Jerry Snyder 75 Brooks LawRookie Card 76 Tom Poholsky 77 Jim McDonald 78 Gil Coan 79 Willy MiranWillie Miranda on Card 80 Lou Limmer 81 Bobby Morgan 82 Lee Walls 83 Max Surkont 84 George Freese 85 Cass Michaels 86 Ted Gray 87 Randy Jackson 88 Steve Bilko 89 Lou -
A National Tradition
Baseball A National Tradition. by Phyllis McIntosh. “As American as baseball and apple pie” is a phrase Americans use to describe any ultimate symbol of life and culture in the United States. Baseball, long dubbed the national pastime, is such a symbol. It is first and foremost a beloved game played at some level in virtually every American town, on dusty sandlots and in gleaming billion-dollar stadiums. But it is also a cultural phenom- enon that has provided a host of colorful characters and cherished traditions. Most Americans can sing at least a few lines of the song “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.” Generations of children have collected baseball cards with players’ pictures and statistics, the most valuable of which are now worth several million dollars. More than any other sport, baseball has reflected the best and worst of American society. Today, it also mirrors the nation’s increasing diversity, as countries that have embraced America’s favorite sport now send some of their best players to compete in the “big leagues” in the United States. Baseball is played on a Baseball’s Origins: after hitting a ball with a stick. Imported diamond-shaped field, a to the New World, these games evolved configuration set by the rules Truth and Tall Tale. for the game that were into American baseball. established in 1845. In the early days of baseball, it seemed Just a few years ago, a researcher dis- fitting that the national pastime had origi- covered what is believed to be the first nated on home soil. -
Forgotten Heroes
Forgotten Heroes: Sam Hairston by Center for Negro League Baseball Research Dr. Layton Revel Copyright 2020 “Sam Hairston Night” – Colorado Springs (1955) “Sam Hairston Night” at the Colorado Springs Sky Sox Ball Park Sam Receives a New Car (1955) Hairston Family at Colorado Springs Ball Park “Sam Hairston Night” (front row left to right - Johnny, Sam Jr., Wife and Jerry) (1955) Samuel Harding Hairston was born on January 20, 1920 in the small town of Crawford, Lowndes County which is in the eastern part of the state of Mississippi. He was the second of thirteen children (eight boys and five girls) born to Will and Clara Hairston. Will Hairston moved his family from Crawford to the Birmingham area in 1922. The primary reason for the move was to find better work so that he could support his large family. Will became a coal miner and worked alongside Garnett Bankhead who was the father of the five Bankhead brothers who all played in the Negro Leagues. By 1930 Will had gained employment with American Cast Iron and Pipe (ACIPCO) as a laborer in their pipe shop. According to United States census records the Hairston family also lived in North Birmingham and Sayreton. Sam spent his formative years in Hooper City and attended Hooper City High School. Reportedly Sam did not finish high school and when he was 16 he told the employment office at ACIPCO that he was 18 and was given a job working for the company. According to Sam he went to work to help support the family and give his brothers and sisters the opportunity to go to school. -
Beyond the Sports Page: Baseball, the Cuban Revolution, and Rochester, New York Newspapers, 1954-1960
Western University Scholarship@Western Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository 12-4-2014 12:00 AM Beyond the Sports Page: Baseball, The Cuban Revolution, and Rochester, New York Newspapers, 1954-1960 Evan K. Nagel The University of Western Ontario Supervisor Robert K. Barney The University of Western Ontario Graduate Program in Kinesiology A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree in Master of Arts © Evan K. Nagel 2014 Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd Part of the Sports Studies Commons Recommended Citation Nagel, Evan K., "Beyond the Sports Page: Baseball, The Cuban Revolution, and Rochester, New York Newspapers, 1954-1960" (2014). Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. 2564. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/2564 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BEYOND THE SPORTS PAGE: BASEBALL, THE CUBAN REVOLUTION, AND ROCHESTER, NEW YORK NEWSPAPERS, 1954- 1960 Monograph by Evan Nagel Graduate Program in Faculty of Health Sciences: School of Kinesology A Thesis Submitted in Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Masters of Arts The School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies The University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada © Evan Nagel 2015 i Table of Contents Abstract…………………………………………………………….........ii Glossary -
Baseball News Clippings
! BASEBALL I I I NEWS CLIPPINGS I I I I I I I I I I I I I BASE-BALL I FIRST SAME PLAYED IN ELYSIAN FIELDS. I HDBOKEN, N. JT JUNE ^9f }R4$.* I DERIVED FROM GREEKS. I Baseball had its antecedents In a,ball throw- Ing game In ancient Greece where a statue was ereoted to Aristonious for his proficiency in the game. The English , I were the first to invent a ball game in which runs were scored and the winner decided by the larger number of runs. Cricket might have been the national sport in the United States if Gen, Abner Doubleday had not Invented the game of I baseball. In spite of the above statement it is*said that I Cartwright was the Johnny Appleseed of baseball, During the Winter of 1845-1846 he drew up the first known set of rules, as we know baseball today. On June 19, 1846, at I Hoboken, he staged (and played in) a game between the Knicker- bockers and the New Y-ork team. It was the first. nine-inning game. It was the first game with organized sides of nine men each. It was the first game to have a box score. It was the I first time that baseball was played on a square with 90-feet between bases. Cartwright did all those things. I In 1842 the Knickerbocker Baseball Club was the first of its kind to organize in New Xbrk, For three years, the Knickerbockers played among themselves, but by 1845 they I had developed a club team and were ready to meet all comers. -
Spring Record Book Baseball Girls’ Lacrosse Boys’ Lacrosse Softball Tennis Girls’ Track and Field Boys’ Track and Field Table of Contents
2014 MPSSAA Spring Record Book Baseball Girls’ Lacrosse Boys’ Lacrosse Softball Tennis Girls’ Track and Field Boys’ Track and Field table of contents Sport Pages Baseball 2-8 Girls’ Lacrosse 9-12 Boys’ Lacrosse 13-17 Softball 18-24 Tennis 25-28 Girls’ Track and Field 29-50 Boys’ Track and Field 51-78 1 MPSSAA Baseball Records 2 Honor Roll Of Team Champions CLASS AA CLASS A CLASS B CLASS C 1975 Northeast-AA 8-4 Northwood 4-3 Williamsport 9-1 Bruce 4-0 Coach Harry Lentz Brady Straub Larry Wadel George Wolfe 1976 Arundel 3-1 Catonsville 4-3 Paint Branch 3-2 Joppatowne 2-0 Coach Bernie Walter Jack Peddicord Kevin Kelly Don Gaughan 1977 Arundel 9-6 Oxon Hill 5-2 Cambridge 6-2 Joppatowne 6-3 Coach Bernie Walter Donnie Key Doug Fleetwood Don Gaughan 1978 Kenwood 5-2 Aberdeen 7-2 Queen Anne’s 2-0 Walkersville 5-4 Coach Carroll Hess George Connolly John Sharp Tom Ford 1979 Churchill 4-3 Paint Branch 4-1 Sparrows Point 7-1 Mt. Savage 3-2 Coach Chuck Stevens Kevin Kelly Rich Eshmont George Bishields 1980 Old Mill 4-3 Woodward 4-3 Brooklyn Park 4-2 Clear Spring 6-0 Coach Mel Montgomery Tom George Tim McMullen Jim Hutson 1981 Bowie * 3-2 Arundel 4-2 Edgewood 3-1 North East-C * 6-4 Coach Bill Vaughn Bernie Walter Steve Williams Mel Bacon 1982 Bowie * 3-0 Thomas Stone 10-2 Great Mills 8-3 Washington 8-0 Coach Bill Vaughn Ron Stover Steve Hoopengardner George Stewart 1983 Dundalk 7-3 Thomas Johnson 13-9 Glenelg 8-7 Broadneck 5-0 Coach Bo Eibner Steve Parsons Terry Coleman Tim McMullen 1984 Bowie 2-1 Gwynn Park 6-5 Milford Mill 11-6 Francis Scott Key 15-4 Coach Bill Vaughn Ken Gentry David Wright Richard Long 1985 Randallstown 2-1 Franklin 7-4 North East-C 12-0 Boonsboro 2-1 Coach Jack Peddicord Rick Wiscott Mel Bacon Wayne Ridenour 1986 Woodlawn 7-4 North Hagerstown 3-2 Pikesville 8-0 Mt. -
Dimaggio's Other Streak
General Admission DiMaggio’s Other Streak by S. Derby Gisclair Member, Society for American Baseball Research In 1933, Joe DiMaggio was an 18-year old rookie playing for his hometown San Francisco Seals in the Class AA Pacific Coast League (PCL). An unknown who had been playing semi-pro ball two years earlier as a newsboy, his name was often misspelled in the press of the day as De Maggio, even after he broke the PCL record for hitting safely in consecutive games set in 1915 by Jack Ness. It wasn’t until Seals owner and PCL vice-president Charley Graham was making arrangements to have DiMaggio’s name engraved on a gold watch presented to him for breaking the record that the question arose. After all, Joe’s older brother Vince, a former Seal who was then playing with the Hollywood Stars, spelled his name DiMaggio. Joe had actually played 3 games at shortstop with the Seals at the end of the 1932 season and had only been invited to spring training in 1933 after his brother Vince argued his case to manager Lefty O’Doul. It worked out well for Joe, who the team signed, but not so well for Vince, who the team released. Luckily for DiMaggio and for the fans in San Francisco, O’Doul moved him from shortstop to right field. DiMaggio was very erratic, always overthrowing the first baseman. His throwing arm was better suited to an outfielder and he was a pretty fair hitter. No one had any idea of what was to come.