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 Thursday, July 26, 2007
Cleveland National a great place to honor Feller
Posted by T.S.



   With our National Convention returning to Cleveland next week, it occurred to me that the five-day extravaganza offers a unique opportunity for our hobby to honor someone who has played an important, though often misunderstood, role in the world of autographs.
   Feller.jpg
   The man who is subjected to a famous hobby aphorism about “the only thing worth more than a Bob Feller signed 8-by-10 photo is an unsigned version” has actually been a significant hobby pioneer, helping to make autograph appearances by current and former stars a mainstay in a hobby dominated by cardboard at the time.
  
   With Feller being one of the autograph headliners at the National, it would be neat if the show promoters, acting on behalf of the entire hobby, could find a way to honor him in the city where it all began more than 70 years ago. Feller is approaching 89 years old, so even though the National returns to Cleveland in a couple of years, now would seem like the ideal moment for a well-deserved tribute.

   I can remember Feller simply showing up at the Philly Show on the music pier in Ocean City, N.J., in the 1980s, charging three or four dollars for an autograph and just generally serving as an elder statesman and ambassador to the game as he regaled awestruck fans with stories from his career.

   Twenty-five years and a couple of zillion signatures later, Feller’s contribution to our hobby gets largely lost amid the trite jokes about how much he has signed. Yeah, there’s a cogent criticism we ought to level at one of the greatest pitchers of all time: you signed too many autographs, shook too many hands, posed for too many pictures with fans and did it all at prices that ought to make modern ballplayers embarrassed.

   Apparently well on the way to becoming something of a grouchy old man myself, I’m not really bothered by some of the politically incorrect Feller commentary over the years. Besides, you don’t have to agree with everything he’s ever uttered in order to take note of his contributions to the game of baseball in general and our quirky hobby in particular.


*  *  *  *  *


Fiery fate for pile of Bonds cards is reminiscent


   A Chicago area card dealer is organizing a “Barry Bondsfire” that’s designed as a protest against Barry Bonds’ alleged steroid use. Keith McDonough, owner of Bleachers Sports in Winnetka, Ill., has organized a protest that is slated to follow on the heels of the moment when/if Henry Aaron’s all-time home run mark falls to Bonds.

   McDonough, who has operated his store on Chicago’s North Shore for 15 years, has apparently started something when he announced he was going in incinerate his Bonds cards, a provocative announcement that he repeated on ESPN2’s “Cold Pizza” morning talk show last week. “We want to protest it,” McDonough told SCD’s editorial director Brian Earnest in a phone interview. “We’ve got lots and lots of cards. Now we have kids coming in and dropping their Bonds cards in the fire pit, and that’s a kick.”

   In an interesting twist, McDonough said he’s been beseiged by e-mails revealing a startling dichotomy: many collectors have sent in cards and memorabilia to be included in the “Bondsfire,” but an even greater number of Bonds fan have sent a flood of angry e-mails defending the controversial slugger.

   For his part, McDonough is quick to point out the firey symbolism is not personal but merely directed at the alleged steroid use. And he added that he doesn’t sell Sammy Sosa or Rafael Palmiero cards in his store, either.

   For me, the interesting part part was that the gesture recalled another bonfire from 26 years ago. The beef back then was against Major League Baseball and the players as stunned fans looked for ways to vent their rage against the most significant labor stoppage in MLB up to that point. A New England dealer, David Carter, reportedly orchestrated the public incineration of 64,000 baseball cards, nearly half of that number coming from Carter himself and reportedly including a 1952 Topps Mickey Mantle, valued at $1,300.

   At the time the demonstration seemed a bit quixotic, but no more than the current bit of pyromania. If you’re going to quibble, both events seem a little self-defeating, since Bonds presumably doesn’t care if we burn his cards and MLB and its employees also didn’t blink when Carter took a match to The Mick in 1981, but they still seem(ed) liked effective symbolism.

*  *  *  *  *

An expensive Clemens autograph

   I saw a news item in USA Today last week that reported a Japanese reporter had his membership in the Baseball Writers Association of America revoked because he asked Roger Clemens for an autograph.
  
   I fully understand the principle at work here: journalists need to be doing journalism or thereabouts when they are covering teams and it opens up an ethical can of worms if they start asking for autographs while on the job. Fair enough.
  
   But in this instance the penalty seemed a bit harsh, especially since the writer, who works for a tabloid newspaper based in Tokyo, apparently didn’t realize he had broken the rules. The story didn’t make it clear just exactly what the implications were from losing his BBWAA credentials, but it’s reasonable to assume it means he can’t cover the Yankees or any other major league ballclub.

   According to the article, Hiroki Homma went up to Clemens with a stack of pictures that had been taken by the newspaper’s photographer; Homma, apparently thinking that the pitcher might like to have them to commemorate his 350th win, offered the stack to the pitcher, and asked Clemens to sign one of the photos for him. A security staffer apparently witnessed it and reported the violation.

   Bummer. Seems harsh, but I understand at that level they would want to make an example if somebody stepped, or even stumbled, over the line.




7/26/2007 11:21:45 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [4]
 Monday, July 09, 2007
Baseball in Israel and the Bronx is Burning
Posted by T.S.

   Our old friend and ace SCD columnist Marty Appel just keeps getting famouser and famouser (I know it’s not a word; I just like the way it sounds, and it is in the online Urban Dictionary). He just returned from Israel last week where he was supervising the PR effort for the launch of the Israel Baseball League, the first professional baseball league in the Middle East, which he described as “a great adventure.”
Reggie.jpg
   It’s all detailed in Marty’s column, which appears in the Aug. 3 issue of Sports Collectors Digest, which will mail to subscribers in about a week. He set up the communications plan for the league (www.israelbaseball.league.com), served as the associate producer of the opening day telecast and editor of the yearbook, all skills that reminded him of his days as the public relations guy for the Yankees in the 1970s, which, in turn, offers a natural segue into his second adventure.

   I’ll let Marty tell about it in his own words: “Friends, not only do I strongly recommend that you see ESPN’s ‘The Bronx is Burning’ premiering 10 p.m. EST tonight, July 9, but imagine my surprise when the promo for the mini-series, which I saw during the Yankees game last night, featured me, playing myself, sitting on the extreme left of the dais as ‘Reggie Jackson’ (Daniel Sunjata) proclaimed that he had ‘brought his star with him’ to New York.”

   Appel said his line was apparently cut out of the scene (“which I nailed in one take, I might add,” he noted proudly), but then he did point out that he’s there in the shot, decked out in a 1977-style suit, sitting next to the Gabe Paul actor and “my new pal Erik Jensen, as my old pal Thurman Munson.” Turns out, Marty didn't wind up on the editing room floor: I watched the show last night and there he was, big as life, in the scene as described.

   The eight-week mini-series stars John Turturo as Billy Martin and Oliver Platt as George Steinbrenner.

*  *  *  *

   As savvy online types no doubt can tell, I am trying to get the hang of this online business, and one of the components, obviously, is the shared back-and-forth from including links to other cool outposts in cyberspace. I don’t do as much cruising around as I should, but I did run across one that reminded of a hilarious (but brief) radio interview from the mid-1980s.

   The website www.baseball-almanac.com obviously is a marvelous source of information about the game (I suspect serious online types are shaking their heads in dismay at my lack of sophistication). In this particular link, they posted the complete word-for-word transcript of Casey Stengel’s July 8, 1958, Senate Antitrust and Monopoly Subcommittee Hearings.

   I’ve read the transcript many times, and seen newsreel footage of portions of it, but if anybody’s unfamiliar with it (or even if you’ve nearly memorized it), the website is worth a visit. For purposes of this posting, the transcript is essentially classic Stengel rambling for what must have been 45 minutes or more, and then when the thoroughly amused but bewildered senators turned to get Mickey Mantle’s views on the topic of baseball’s antitrust exemption, The Mick said, “My views are just about the same as Casey’s.” The senate chambers erupted in laughter.

   Anyway, what that trip into cyberspace reminded me of was some work 24 years ago (might have been 23) when I was working as a consultant to the Empire State Games Radio Network during the Summer Games in August in Buffalo, N.Y.
TimRoye.jpg
   The “consultant” monicker sounds snazzier than it really was. I was, in point of fact, a mildly glorified assistant to Tim Roye, (shown at right) the hardest-working son-of-a-gun I ever encountered in my life. He was the key talent for the radio network, maybe the only talent, now that I think of it.

   Serious sports fans will recognize that name as one of the television voices of the Oakland A’s and the radio broadcaster for the Golden State Warriors. His ascension into the big time (along with another former Empire State Games staffer, Sean McDonough) is one of those things that provides great assurance about the notion that hard work and ability ultimately leading to the top. There can’t be a more deserving individual in radio or television, and we all knew it more than 20 years ago.

   Anyway, Tim would do all the taped and live interviewing and reporting; I just helped out where I could to make myself useful. The Summer Games would be four frenzied days with 6,000 athletes in 24 sports all over Syracuse or Buffalo, and we did hourly reports from venues all over whichever city was hosting that year.

   We (Empire State Games) used to get big-name guys in a number of summer and winter sports, but none more than in basketball, where we ended up with St. John’s and Syracuse standouts Chris Mullin and Dwayne “Pearl” Washington, among a host of others. Oh, yeah, and Walter Berry.

   This particular time we drove into downtown Buffalo from the Game’s HQ on the Buffalo State campus to interview Berry during halftime of the Basketball Finals. Tim had worked like mad to set up the interview beforehand, and it was a good trick to even collar the star of the New York City squad at the intermission.

   Tim shoves the microphone under Berry’s nose and launches into this long, detailed question, pointing out how the Games atmosphere must be so different from the St. John’s games in rough-and-tumble New York City, and how the camaraderie with the other 5,999 young athletes must be such a departure for him, etc., etc.

   And when Roye was finished with his long-winded question, Berry looked at me for some reason, and said softly, “Yeah, what he said,” as he gestured toward Tim. And off he went to the locker room.

   We had saved a pretty big hole for Berry’s comments in the next network feed about an hour away, so we had to scramble like crazy to work around his four words. We’ve laughed about it by the end of the games that summer, and for years afterward, but I don’t think we did so immediately after the interview.

   Maybe Berry had listened to the Stengel transcript, too.






7/9/2007 4:02:02 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [6]