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MLB Memorabilia & Autographed MLB Photos. Tom Tommy Henrich Autographed / Signed 10th Queens Baseball Card Sports Memorabilia Show Cache Comes with a Certificate of Authenticity
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PAT KELLY. Sports Card signed: "Pat Kelly" . Color, 2½x3½. Topps baseball card no. 212 for 1976, captioned: "Pat Kelly/Outfield White Sox". Career minor and major league batting record through 1975 on verso. Pat Kelly, not to be confused with the Yankees' Pat Kelly of the 1990s, was a fleet-footed outfielder with six American League teams between 1967 and 1981 . He stole 25 or more bases four times , and hit the game-winning homer in the final game of the 1979 League Championship series , sending...
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Baseball Hall of Fame Plaque Postcard signed: "James 'Cool Papa' Bell" . Color, 3½x5½. A talented centerfielder with blazing speed, Hall of Famer James 'Cool Papa' Bell was arguably the fastest man to ever play professional baseball. He began his career as a knuckleball pitcher and later became a leadoff hitter and stolen base artist for three Negro Leagues dynasties: the St. Louis Stars of the late 1920s, the Pittsburgh Crawfords of the 1930s and the Homestead Grays of the mid-1940s. Fine...
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Shirley Home Run Povich Autographed / Signed 3x5 Card - Sports Writer (James Spence Authenticated)
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Baseball Hall of Fame Plaque Postcard signed: "George L. Kelly". Color, 3½x5½. Kelly batted over .300 for six consecutive seasons (1921-26) and was intermittently impressive as a long-ball hitter. Twice he hit three home runs in one game, the splurge in 1924 accounting for all eight Giant runs, the National League record for most RBIs in a game while batting in all the club's runs. The same year, he set another NL record by hitting seven homers in six games, with at least one in each. He also...
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Sports Card signed: "Ed Lopat" . Color, 2½x3½. Topps Card no. 348 showing Lopat as Kansas City A's manager, with printed summary of his career on verso. A left-handed pitcher who spent 12 years in the Major Leagues (1944-1956), Lopat was a key part of the five consecutive World Championship New York Yankee teams of 1949-1953. All All-Star in 1951, when he won a career high 21 games, Lopat led the league in earned run average two years later (2.42). Lopat threw mostly slow, breaking balls. He...
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AL LOPEZ. Baseball Hall of Fame Plaque Postcard signed: "Al Lopez." Color, 3½x5½. Al Lopez (1908-2005) was a catcher in over 2,000 games before managing the Cleveland Indians (1951-1956) and the Chicago White Sox (1957-1965, 1968-1969) , finishing first twice and second ten times. The New York Yankees won the American League pennant every year from 1949-1964 except twice: 1954 to Lopez's Indians and 1959 to Lopez's White Sox. He was enshrined in the Hall of Fame in 1977. In a poll taken among...
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MLB Memorabilia & Autographed MLB Photos. This is a 1984 Sports Design Trade card that has been hand signed by Willie Mays. It has been authenticated and slabbed by PSA/DNA.
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GENE MAUCH. Sports Card signed: " Gene Mauch ". Color, 3½x2½. Depicts the 1964 Philadelphia Phillies, who finished second in the National League. Mauch was the Coach of the team. Topps Card #338; stats for batting and pitching leaders imprinted on verso. Second baseman Gene William "Skip" Mauch (1925-2005), who debuted in the major leagues in 1944 with the Brooklyn Dodgers , also played the infield for the Pittsburgh Pirates (1947) before returning to Brooklyn in 1948. He then played for the...
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RON CEY . Baseball Card signed: "Ron Cey" . Color, 2½x3½. Career bio on verso. Ron "Penguin" Cey filled a traditional trouble spot when he became the Dodgers' regular third baseman in 1973. He held the position for ten seasons and became the leading home run hitter in L.A. Dodger history . Six times an All-Star in the 1970s , Cey got his nickname from his stocky build, short legs, and choppy running style. In 1981 his string of 11 seasons with 20 or more homers was interrupted by the players...
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AL BARLICK. Hall of Fame Plaque Postcard signed: " Al Barlick ". Color, 3½x5½. From the plaque, in full: "ALBERT JOSEPH BARLICK/Umpire/National League 1940-1971/Earned respect of peers and players alike with booming, basso calls, clear and decisive hand signals, knowledge of rules, proficiency on balls and strikes, ability to anticipate and then handle rough situations and unceasing hustle. Professional umpire for five decades; and at age 25, one of youngest to reach majors, where he worked...
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Sports Card signed twice : "Al Hrabosky" . Color, 2½x3½. Topps baseball card #108 for 1974. Major and minor league pitching record through 1973 on verso, where Hrabosky has signed again. (There is also a facsimile signature on verso.) Al Hrabosky's ancestry, droopy mustache, long hair, and angry stomp to the back of the mound to psyche himself up before a pitch, earned him the nickname "the Mad Hungarian." He was one of baseball's most effective relievers in the 1970s, leading the NL in saves...
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Baseball Card signed: "Bobby Shantz" , 3½x5½. Topps card #177. Pitcher Bobby Shantz, the first pitcher to win a Gold Glove , won the honor for the first four years it was awarded (1957-1960). Shantz, who played for the Philadelphia (1949-1954) and Kansas City (1955-1956) Athletics , the New York Yankees (1957-1960), the Pittsburgh Pirates (1961), the Houston Astros (1962), the St. Louis Cardinals (1962-1964) and the Chicago Cubs and Philadelphia Phillies (1964), was also an All-Star in 1951...
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BUCK LEONARD. Baseball HOF Plaque Postcard signed: "Buck Leonard". Color, 3½x5½. Leonard is the only Negro League first baseman enshrined in Cooperstown. A lefthanded power hitter, he teamed with legendary slugger Josh Gibson to lead the Homestead Grays to nine consecutive Negro National League championships from 1937 through 1945. The duo was dubbed the "Thunder Twins" by the black press. Leonard was called a black Lou Gehrig, Gibson a black Babe Ruth. While Gibson slugged tape measure home...
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Sports card "Bud Zipfel" in blue ink. Color, 2½x3½. Topps card, no. 69, with minor league stats from 1956 to 1961 and major league stats from 1961 to 1962 on back. Zipfel, born in 1938 in Belleville, Illinois, played two seasons of major league baseball with the Washington Senators from 1961 to 1962. These were the first two seasons of the third team to bear that name; they're now the Texas Rangers. Known as "Zipper the Ripper", Zipfel had a .220 batting average with 10 homeruns and 39 RBIs....
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Baseball Hall of Fame Plaque Postcard signed: "Carl Hubbell". Color, 3½x5½. Carl Hubbell (1903-1988), master of the difficult screwball pitch, was a 20-game winner five seasons in a row for the New York Giants (1933-1937) and was the only peacetime pitcher to win the Most Valuable Player Award twice (1933, 1936). His most famous feat was striking out six, including five future Hall of Famers (Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmie Foxx, Al Simmons and Joe Cronin), in three scoreless innings of the 1...
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Sports card signed "Dom Zanni". Color, 2½x3½. Topps card, no. 233, with major league stats from 1958 to 1965 on back. Zanni, born Dominick Thomas Zanni in 1932, was a pitcher with the San Francisco Giants, Chicago White Sox and Cincinnati Reds from 1958 until 1966, missing the 1960 and 1964 seasons and much of the 1963 season. He has a career ERA of 3.75 with 9 wins and 6 losses and 148 strikeouts. He never pitched a complete game, although he came close in a June 22, 1962 game with the White...
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GEORGE WITT. Sports Card signed: "G Witt" . Color, 2½x3½. Topps baseball card #110 for 1959. Major and minor league pitching record through 1958 on verso. George Witt pitched for the Pittsburgh Pirates for five seasons (1957-1961) before splitting his final year between the Angels and Astros. His best season was 1958, when he went 9-2 with a 1.61 ERA. He appeared in three World Series games for the World Champion 1960 Pirates. Fine condition. Slightly soiled. Otherwise, fine condition.
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Baseball Card signed: "Gil McDougald" . Color, 2½x3½. 1958 Topps #20. Yankees' infielder Gil McDougald joined the team in 1951, batted .306 with 14 HR and became Rookie of the Year. On May 3, he tied a major league record with six RBI in one inning. McDougald capped the year by becoming the first rookie to hit a grand slam in the World Series (Game Five). A member of eight Yankee pennant-winners, he ranks among the leaders with 53 WS games and 190 WS at-bats. He was All-Star in 1952 and again...
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Sports card signed " Herb/Score " in blue ink. Color, 2½x3½. Topps card no. 185 for 1961 with minor and major league stats from 1952 to 1960 on verso. © Topps Chewing Gum. With a catapulting delivery that left him in an awkward fielding position, Score (1933-2008, born Herbert Jude Score in Rosedale, New York) simply overpowered American League hitters for the first two years of his career. In that short time, he joined Whitey Ford and Billy Pierce as the league's dominant left-handed...
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Sports Card signed: "Hoyt Wilhelm". Color, 2½x3½. At the time of his retirement in 1972, knuckle balling master reliever Wilhelm had appeared in more games (1,070) than any pitcher in major league history, with a late-starting career that still spanned 21 years. He established records for relief wins (123), games pitched in relief (1,018), games finished by a pitcher (651), and innings pitched in relief (1,870). His 227 saves place him among the all-time leaders. Fittingly, he was the first...
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Sports card signed "Jeff Torborg" in blue ink. Color, 3 ½ x 2 ½. Topps baseball card no. 351, © 1978, with b/w photo of Torborg as a player and color photo of him as a manager and major league stats on verso from 1964 to 1973. Torborg, born in 1941 in Plainfield, New Jersey, is a former Major League Baseball catcher and manager. He was a catcher with the Los Angeles Dodgers and California Angels from 1964 to 1973, where he tallied a batting average of .214 with eight homeruns and 101 RBIs...
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JERRY STALEY. Sports Card signed: " Jerry Staley ". Color, 2½x3½. Pictured as a pitcher for the Chicago White Sox , stats imprinted on verso. Staley, who pitched for Chicago from 1956-1961, appeared in the 1959 World Series, in which the White Sox were beated by the L.A. Dodgers. Born Gerald Lee Staley in 1920, Staley began his major league career with the St. Louis Cardinals (1947-1954) before playing for the Cincinnati Redlegs (1955) and the New York Yankees (1955-1956). All All-Star in 19...
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Baseball Hall of Fame Plaque Postcard signed: "Jesse Haines". Color, 3½x5½. Jesse Haines (1893-1978) was a durable right-hander and tough competitor who won 210 games during his 18 years with the Cardinals. By adding a knuckleball to his pitching repertoire, the future Hall of Famer became an ace, achieving 20 victories on three occasions. He pitched a no-hitter against Boston in 1924 and two years later he defeated the Yankees twice in the World Series-once by shutout. He also won another Series...
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