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Like many I've met dozens of hall of famers at various shows over the years, some good some not so good. I work in sports and when I was finishing grad school I interned at the Major League Baseball Players Alumni Association (MLBPAA) marketing office when it was in Pittsburgh. Over the course of my six months I had three notable interactions that I treasure to this day.
The first was finding out they need one more person to drive over to Bob Feller’s home near Cleveland and have Bob sign 2,000 lithographs for a program we were doing with Campbell’s. We arrived mid-afternoon after Bob had already made an appearance somewhere else that day. We found the prickly guy that is often discussed. This was in 1994 so he wasn’t exactly young even then and you could tell he was tired. I was pretty uptight as he signed in near silence and was relieved when we wrapped for the night. We arrived back the next morning to complete the signing and found a rested, engaging Bob. We chatted easily while he signed, talked about his time in the bigs, how the clubhouse guy could sign everybody’s name but most of all his time in World War II. He had a large wall size world map and he took us over and showed where the USS Alabama was a various point while he was aboard. We completed the signing and he was off to another appointment but he made sure his wife Anne gave us a full tour of his home. We ended up in his private office where he had a number of model John Deere tractors and one of the coolest signed baseball I’ve ever seen. When he was 10 or so Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig’s Bustin' Babes-Larrupin' Lous barnstorming tour passed through Iowa. He attended the game and got a baseball signed by Ruth and Gehrig and then added his own “Robert Feller” in your standard child’s cursive. It was truly a one of a kind piece. My second interaction was similar, I had to drive to Bill Mazeroski’s home outside of Pittsburgh and have him sign a few things, as I recall it was mostly pictures and a few dozen balls. Bill was a super nice man and his wife was as well. She was scurrying around the house cleaning and eventually shows up with a MLBPAA sweater vest in her hands that was way too small for Bill and asked me if I wanted it. Of course I took it and still have it somewhere packed in a box. My final interaction was with Fergie Jenkins. The MLBPAA assembled a team that participated in a barnstorming tour through Ontario, 13 games in 12 days as I recall. As a native of Chatham, Ontario Fergie was a huge hit and definitely was the most popular player along with Ernie Whitt. Fergie was a cool guy, pulling pranks on everyone including me. One stop I had to wait for Fergie at the hotel with the team going ahead. He was very easy to talk to and even let me hold his Hall of Fame ring to get a closer look. It was a fantastic experience and even though it was an unpaid internship I was well compensated in autographed balls and experiences that I will never forget.
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Russ Always on the lookout for Jim Abbott, vintage Olympic/Team USA baseball and Detroit Tigers. |
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#2
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Great stories, Russ!
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#3
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A couple more run-in's with HOF's left me with positive and negative memories.
The two negative memories are as follows....Willie Stargell was signing at Gibraltor in Detroit a few years before his passing and from what I remember, there wasn't an additional cost for an inscription, so I politely asked him if he could write his 'HOF year' under his signature. To my surprise, he was extremely rude and gave me a hard time about it. He eventually inscribed it then did his best Willie Mays impression by rolling the ball back to me across the table. Thanks Willie for the great memory! (On a side note, I sold the ball on ebay a year or so after his passing and it went for a whopping $263 .....the ball was snow white with a perfect sig.) Next, I was at a Cardinals spring training game in about 2004 and I brought my Bob Gibson '59 topps rookie to possibly get it signed. Gibson accessed the field in the right field corner before the game and he came over to sign for a few people standing there. He reached for my card, then changed his mind and said "I'm not signing that". I asked why not? He said, "That's card show stuff, catch me at a show". Thanks Bob. (Sorry about the '68 WS). On a positive note, I used to attend a lot of Indy Car races in the mid '90's and to my surprise, Walter Payton showed up at the Detroit Grand Prix on a Friday morning as he was a partial team owner with Dale Coyne (they were known as Payton-Coyne Racing). A few people recognized him as he was just hanging out by his team's transporter in the paddock and he motioned for me to come over. He wasn't super thrilled people were noticing him and I was probably the last autograph he signed that morning, but he wasn't rude and gave me a great signature. On a side note regarding other celebs that hung around the Indy Car series, Paul Newman and Joe Montana were impossible autographs back then. I never saw either one sign a single autograph over several years. Matt |
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#4
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Matt...
Just wondering what other people were asking Gibson to sign that he didn't consider 'card show stuff?' What a stupid comment...ANYTHING could be considered card show stuff. |
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#5
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