Addie Joss 2nd no-hitter ticket
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Bumping this terrific thread that our friend Jimmie (The King of Clout) started nearly 11 years ago, I'm lucky enough to contribute this 500th post. Wow!
RIP Jimmie! ;) I'm very excited to add this uber rare ticket stub from 1910 at the CWS South Side Park III to my advanced no-hitter collection. On April 20th, 1910 HOF'er Addie Joss hurled his 2nd no-hitter against the Chicago White Sox in front of 7,000 fans. Joss struck out 2 and had 2 BB, but what really stood out was that he made an unparalleled 10 assists himself in support of his no-hitter. This game would prove to be Addie's last dominant game in his short, but spectacular HOF career. Tickets from South Side Park, which was constructed of wood, are very scarce indeed. What makes tickets from 1910 special is that the CWS moved to Comiskey Park, which was cavernous and constructed of steel, in July of 1910. CWS tickets from this era were not dated to the best of my knowledge, so the fact that the ticket states that it could be used for any date in the 1910 season easily qualifies it for my collection. It literally is like finding a needle in a haystack... The seller recently unearthed this ticket from the bottom of a box in a basement that at one time belonged to his great grandfather who attended the game in 1910. It's appearance is new to the hobby. :cool::) |
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Congrats Scott!
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WOW!!!!:eek::eek::eek::eek: Beyond words Scott.
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Amazing Scott!! Congratulations!
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That's awesome.
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Bob Gibson's 250th Win
Pair of full tickets to Bob Gibson's Last win as a starter which was also his 250th win.
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...e763daed_z.jpgthumbnail_IMG_2564 by Guy Bourque, on Flickr |
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I hope you are well. I'm sorry that my label description bothers you. You are correct, it is not a completely dated ticket, but it is for the correct year (1910) and to the correct stadium (South Side Park) since this ticket would have gained the patron entrance to ANY game played during the 1910 season as stated on the ticket itself. There is nothing about the ticket that would exclude it from being used in this particular game. Ideally, as a collector, I would love to have a fully dated ticket to this game, but this is as close to being a 100% lock that I can hope for because of the early vintage scarcity of ANY CWS ticket from this era. I'll take it. As the saying goes, "Close enough for government work". ;) |
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This is a long shot but I thought I would ask nonetheless. Does anyone know if it's possible to date this ticket stub?
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Quincy Trouppe, only MLB hit
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Thought I’d add one here! I’ve posted this before but this is the ticket from the May 10, 1952 game between the Cleveland Indians and St. Louis Browns. The Tribe lost 6-4 in front of just over 14,000 fans however the game is significant as Quincy Trouppe, former Negro League star would collect his only MLB hit and start his only complete game at catcher going nine innings. Unfortunately Trouppe would be sent to Indianapolis the following day with the game on May 10 being his last in the majors. As a 39 year old rookie he batted .100 in 11 plate appearances over six games. In the eyes of most fans and players that day it was a routine game but to Trouppe the culmination of a career.
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I hope that you & your family are doing well and are healthy up in Seattle. There isn't really any way to actually date this Cardinals ticket. Sam Breadon the Cardinals team President was with the Cards from 1920-1947, but the ticket price would be indicitave of the 1940's as the time period. Beyond that, it's anybody's guess. Sorry that I can't offer any additional help. |
Thanks Scott that's what I thought. You be safe as well.
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Carl Erskine 2nd career no-hitter full, unused ticket
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Many thanks to net54 board member Jeff Weisenberg for allowing me to add this beautiful example of Brooklyn Dodger great Carl Erskine's 2nd career no-hitter on May 12, 1956.
Oisk no-hits the crosstown Giants 3-0 with 3 K's and 2 BB. Full tickets to this game are scarce & I'm grateful to be able to add this beauty to my advanced no-hit ticket collection. This photo demonstrates Erskine's pitching form in his 1956 2nd no-hitter. Looks like Oisk was really slinging the rock that day! ;) BTW, thanks to all of the net54 collector community that has helped me build my collection over the last decade. I'm always amazed at the helpful collectors that provide such a great network to find these unique collectibles. |
Scott, that's a great ticket. Sometimes I think you could find the Holy Grail if you asked your network contacts. LOL
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Pictures of the Holy Grail are coming soon... ;):D |
Hi Scott,
Love seeing your pickups! Since someone mentioned the Holy Grail, what's your personal Holy Grail right now -- the number one thing for your unique collection that you are still hoping to find? Greg |
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I've had this rain check since I was 13 years old. September 14, 1968--the afternoon of Denny McLain's 30th victory of the season. My mother took me to a lot of Ladies/Retirees days at Tiger Stadium when I was a kid--women and kids 14 and younger got in for fifty cents. A heckuva good deal! And I knew this game was an important one. My scorecard is long gone, but the rain check has stayed with me through half a dozen moves. Great memories!
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Thank you! Actually there are two Post WWII no-hitter tickets that I would really love to find: Virgil Trucks 1st no-hitter- 5/15/52 @ DET Bobo Holloman's no-hitter- 5/6/53 @ ST. LOUIS BROWNS Additionally, I am always on the hunt for any no-hitter ticket pre 1950. On the Nolan Ryan front, I'm really down to needing about 46 Ryan ticket dates, none of which are major milestones. Vander Meer, it would be Mark's Vandy double no-hitter pennant, which is way cool. Other than that, I'm a pretty happy guy as far as the collection goes. |
Expos Opening day Full tickets 1972, 1973, 1974 , If you have any Expos opening day tickets any year full or stub , Let me know
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...b45854234a.jpgthumbnail_IMG_2677 by Guy Bourque, on Flickr |
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great stuff everyone. was recently able to add the fifth night game to my now 15 year quest for all seven of the first big league night games played. if anyone has games 3 or 6 available, i'd love to hear about it.
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Thanks, Scott!
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Greg |
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Super pumped to add another ticket to my collection.
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Drysdale throws a 5th straight shut-out, to tie the ML record, which he proceeded to break in his next start.
Too bad there's all that annoying writing on the back. Doug "that was a joke" Goodman |
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Was happy to finally find this one. Phils CF Richie Ashburn was well known for being able to foul off pitches at will. In this game he fouled one off hitting a woman in the face and stopping play. After they got the woman on the stretcher and play resumed, Ashburn fouled the next pitch off and hit the same woman in the knee as she was being carted off!
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I'd like to see that a PSA slab. |
I'm late to this thread, as I am not a ticket collector. However, among other things, I collect Paul Blair trading cards. Recently, a ticket purportedly from Game 3 of the 1966 World Series was listed on eBay. That is the game that the Orioles won 1-0 on the back of a Blair homerun. I thought it would be a nice addition to my collection. But, I have no expertise in determining if it is real or not. Are there any good resources to help me?
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When it comes to collecting, I probably only have 2 white whales left. One I probably don't want to spend what it would cost, and the other I had never seen before. Well, leave it to our own Scott Garner to remember a communication we had several months ago. When Scott found this in his own collection, he graciously allowed me to purchase it from him. So, may I present you a ticket from the Sept 9, 1969 game between the Cubs and the Mets. Tom Seaver won his 20th, but more importantly in baseball lore, this was the game that's better known as the black cat game. That famous cat strolled past Ron Santo in the on-deck circle and then across the Cubs dugout. Much like the Billy-Goat game many years previous, it was felt by many that this moment marked the end for the Cubs. Whether it did or didn't, it still a fun part of baseball history, and now I can finally go about finishing up my 1969 Cubs project. Thanks again to Scott, a true friend and great collector.
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I'm glad your Black Cat game ticket arrived safely & definitely happy to help a great hobby friend find one of his personal "white whales". ;):)::D |
Cool story and ticket. Way to go Scott for helping out a fellow collector. What is your other white whale ticket if you don’t mind sharing?
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I was anxious to see baseball return after the strike of 1981 (as I do now) and I went to the Phillies/Cardinals game to see if Pete Rose would break the National League hit record (going into the game he was tied with Musial)....Here is my own ticket from that evening signed by Pete & Mark Littell (who surrendered the hit):
https://i.imgur.com/Z70WNJv.jpg |
Good luck Mike I hope you find that ticket cheap or at least affordable.
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It wasn't for sale, before I read "the price is somewhere in the 3-4k range" which I assume is for a full ticket that missed the game, not a stub that watched the whole thing, and was closer to Reggie than most people have ever been. Doug |
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https://www.ebay.com/itm/SCARCE-May-...cAAOSwGYNd7BQK |
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Admittedly I have seen a stub to Catfish Hunter's perfect game sell for in $4K range (large catalogue auction with a vintage signed Catfish Hunter ball), that is certainly the exception, not the rule. Be patient, my friend... Under $1500 is more in the normal range, from my personal experience. FYI, I sold a duplicate stub that I had in my collection in NMT condition to another collector for $1200 within the last 2-3 years. My 2 cents: A lot of people list things on eBay for crazy prices that will never be realized, making it more of a museum than the online active auction site that started the whole thing... |
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Nice ticket! Trivia time: Who was the pitcher that Pete Rose predicted he would get this milestone hit off? Also, do you know the cool back story that surrounds that not happening the way Pete predicted it? |
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I do not know the answers to those trivia questions but as a neat aside, Mark Littell told me after he gave up the hit and during the on-field ceremony with Rose & Musial, catcher Gene Tenace walked out to the mound and said "Congratulations, looks like you got your f*#%ing name in the record book again." |
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I'm curious as to the answer to the trivia question. Maybe Pete was going to wait to get the hit until he could place a bet on which pitcher? LOL
I do know an interesting fact is that the man in went past for most National League hits (San Musial) had exactly the same number of hits at home as he did on the road. Talk about consistency. |
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It turns out that Pete Rose is not only an avid student of baseball history, but he also looks carefully at statistics and used it to fuel his path towards becoming MLB's all-time hit king. Looking ahead in his schedule in early 1981, prior to the baseball strike, Rose made the prediction that his historic milestone hit passing Stan Musial would be at the hands of HOF'er Nolan Ryan during their upcoming homestand with the Astros. Rose & Ryan, which always had a friendly competitive rivalry, passed each other prior to the game played on 6/10/81. Rose announced that he would get the NL record hit off of Nolan that night. Ryan said something to the effect that "it would never happen". In his 1st at bat, Rose lined a ball right past Ryan's head for the hit that would tie him with Stan the Man as the NL hit leader. Ryan muscled up and struck Rose out the next three times in a row, thereby NOT allowing Rose to get the historic hit off of him and making Rose wait. The next day, the strike began, shelving baseball until the game you attended. Rose has stated in that he was pissed that Nolan made him wait! :D Great rivalry amongst two of the greatest competitors of all time, ML's all-time Hit King & ML's all-time strikeout king! |
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It actually depends... As I stated recently in another thread, more collectors are focused on collecting tickets. On Facebook there is a ticket collector group of younger collectors that not only are very active, but they seem to pay crazy amounts for modern tickets. FWIW, I still subscribe to the supply & demand dictate value theory when it comes to intrinsic collectibles. Some prices are down with the pandemic, but others seem to continue to ratchet up. As you know, I collect no-hitter tickets. Overall, tickets to older scarcer no-hit tickets continue to absolutely escalate in value. |
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Charlie Lea's No Hitter
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It's a difficult no-hitter to find... |
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