150+ Cuts,Authentic Autos From 1953 to present. ALL SCANNED AND PRICED. NEED $$
Cubfan86
Posts: 12
PLEASE CHECK THE BUCKET LINK AS EVERY CARD IS NOW SCANNED. I am looking for reasonable offers on cards and can work with price depending on # of cards sold.
There are a bunch of cards that do not even have a auto on Ebay and a bunch that have deceased players that may not have many cards out there.
Link
ALL AVAILABLE
OPEN TO REASONABLE OFFERS BUT MANY ARE PRICED TO SELL
1953 Topps
Harry Byrd #131 $20
Vern Benson #205 $25
Chuck Stobbs #89 $25
1954 topps
Tom Wright #140 $20
Joe Jay Rc #141 $35
Don Mueller #42 $20
Bob Borkowski #138 $25
1955 topps
Dick Groat #26 $40
Billy Garnder #27 $20
Tom Casagrande #167 $25
1956 Topps
Bob Nelson #169 $20
Chico Carrasquel #230 $45
Alvin Dark #148A $25
Dusty Rhodes $25
1957 Topps
Roy Sievers #89 $20
Harry Anderson #404 $30
Karl Olson #153 $20
1958 topps
Ruben Gomez #335 ? Very Rare Auto
Jim Brosnan #342 $20
Eddie Bressoud #263 $15
Ray Herbert #379 $15
Gene Fodge #449 $20
Minnie Minoso #295 $40
1959 topps
Don Demeter #324 $20
Paul Foytack #233A $25
Ken Aspromonte #424 $20
Wayne Terwilliger #496 $20
Pete burnside #354 $20
1960 Topps
Steve Ridzik #489 $25
Dan Dobbek #123 $20
Vern Law #453 $25
Carrol Hardy #341 $20
Paul Foytack #364 $20
Russ Kemmerer #362 $20
Larry Sherry #105 $20
1961 Topps
Ty Cline SP #421 $20
Turk Lown #424 $15
Mickey Vernon #134 $30
Paul Richards #131 $20
Charley Maxwell #37 $20
Stu Miller #72 $20
Ken Hamlin #263 $20
Eddie Bressoud #203 $20
1962 Topps
Albie Pearson #343 $15
Hector Lopez #502 $20
Billy Gardner #338 $15
Bill Virdon #415 $15
Dick Groat #270 $20
1963 topps
Jose Tartabull #449 $15
Bobby Bragan #73 $15
RON SANTO #252 AWESOME $85
Dick Schofield #34 $15
Dal Maxvill #49 $20
Bob Bruce #24 $15
Dick Groat #130 $20
Chuck Cottier #219 $20
Jack Lamabe #251 $20
1964 Topps
Milt Pappas #45 $25
Mike Joyce #477 $15
Ed Lopat #348 $20
Bob Duliba #441 $20
1965 Topps
Floyd Robinson #345 $15
Bobby Bragan #346 $15
Jimmy Piersall #172 $25
Bob Aspromonte #175 $15
Del Crandall #68 $20
Bill Virdon #69 $20
1966 Topps
Jim gentile #45 $15
Ed bailey #246 $15
Vic Roznovsky #467 $15
Don Buford #465 $15
1967 topps
Bob Bruce #417 $20
Sammy Ellis #176 $15
Vern Law #351 $15
Bill McCool #353 $15
Phil Linz #14 $20
Jim Pagliaroni #183 $15
Stu Miller #345 $15
1968 Topps
Felix Millan #241 $15
Dick Hall #17 $15
Bill Henry #239 $15
Ron Hunt #15 $15
Jim Ollom #91 $15
1970 Topps
Jim Bunning #403 $20
1972 Topps
Bernie Carbo #463 $15
Gaylord Perry #285 $35
1975 Topps
Clarence Cito Gaston #427 $20
Frank White #569 $15
Walter Alston #6 $45
1976 Topps
Dennis Eckersley Rc #98 $60
1978 Topps
Rod Carew #201 $40
1979 Topps
Johnny Oates #104 $15
Bill Lee #455 $15
1981 Donruss
Ron Cey #296 $15
JACK MORRIS #127 $30
1981 Topps
Rollie Fingers #229 $35
1981 HOF Plaque
Monte Irvin $35
1982 TCMA Greatest Pitchers
BOB LEMON $20
Tommy Davis $20
1982 Topps
Tom Seaver #30 $40
1982 Donruss
Ferguson Jenkins #643 $35
1983 Donruss
Buddy bell #215 $15
1983 Fleer
Ray Knight #453 $15
Toby Harrah & Andre Thornton Dual Auto #635 $35
Rich Goose Gossage #381 $35
Aurelio Rodriguez #249 $15
1983 Donruss HOF Heroes
Luke Appling #8 $25
1983 Topps
Tony Larussa #216 $20
WADE BOGGS #498 $50
1984 Fleer Update
JOE MORGAN #u-80 $20
1984 Topps Cereal Series
ANDRE DAWSON #6 $45
1984 Donruss
TONY GWYNN #324 $35
1985 Donruss
Tony Gwynn #25 $35
1985 Fleer
JIMMY KEY Rc #110 $20
Ron Washington #292 $20
1985 topps
OREL HERSHISER Rc #493 $40
1987 Nestle Drean Team
CARL HUBBEL $35
1987 Topps
FERNANDO VALENZUELA #410 $20
1989 Pacific Legends
HANK BAUER x2 $20
BOB FELLER $20
1990 Topps
Robin ventura $15
1991 Topps Archives (1953 topps)
J.W. PORTER $20
1993 Ted Williams Cards
Minnie Minoso #27 $25
2000 Fleer Showcase Noise of Summer Insert
JEFF BAGWELL #2 $45
2006 Fleer Greats of the Game
MARK GRACE #64 $25
No Date
GAYLORD PERRY $20
PHILLY's FINEST 1/1 CUTS
Bobby Stevens Deceased 2005 $30
Wayne Ambler Deceased 1998 $30
Robert Geary Deceased 1980 $40
Roy Bruner Deceased 1986 $45
Eddie palmer Deceased 1983 $40
Lawrence File Deceased 2008 $40
Johhny Blatnik Deceased 2004 $40
Ken Richardson Deceased 1987 $40
Mickey Rutner Deceased 2007 $40
George Staller Deceased 1992 $75
Ken Heintzelman Deceased 2000 $30
Freddie Toliver $30
Al Todd Deceased 1985 $45
Mike Kreevich Deceased 1994 $40
PRIDE of PINSTRIPES 1/1 CUTS
Bobby Meacham $25
Doug Bird $20
Spike Owen $20
Ted Sepkowski Deceased 2002 $25
Gus Triandos $25
Horace Clarke $25
Dennis Rasmussen $25
Fred Kipp $25
BEANTOWN HEROES 1/1 Cuts
JOE CRONIN Deceased 1984 $85
Jim Suchecki Deceased 2000 $40
Dave Henderson $30
Steve Barr $30
Harley Hisner $30
Mickey Vernon Deceased 2008 $40
John Falherty $20
Chuck Schilling $25
Ted Sizemore $25
BROOKLYN BOYS 1/1 CUTS
AL CAMPANIS Deceased 1998 $75
Billy Sullivan jr Deceased 1994 $90
Frank LEFTY O'Doul Deceased 1969 $150
Elmer Knetzer Deceased 1975 $75
Greek George Deceased 1999 $65
1934 Goudey Leo Durocher Auto 9 $800 OBO
Did some research on the Cuts of Deceased players.
Really neat Bios as most served in World War 2.
Philly’s Finest Cut Signature Autos 1/1
Bobby Stevens
Robert Jordan Stevens (April 17, 1907 – December 30, 2005) was an American professional baseball player who played in twelve games for the Philadelphia Phillies during the 1931 season.
He played 12 games in 1938, hitting .343 in 35 at-bats with four RBI. His baseball career also included time in the Carolina League. He was honored at Veterans Stadium in August 2000 and helped to unveil a plaque to be placed at the site of the original Baker Bowl ballpark. The park had been used until the 1938 season. During World War II, he served in the Army Air Corps. Following his career in baseball, he worked in the accounting department of the Veterans Administration. He later drove the bookmobile for the Montgomery County Public Library until his retirement in 1977. He was a Little League baseball coach from 1960 to 1967.
Stevens died of heart failure in December 2005 at the age of 98.
Wayne Ambler
Wayne Harper Ambler (November 8, 1915 – January 3, 1998) was an American professional baseball player whose career spanned six season, including three in Major League Baseball with the Philadelphia Athletics (1937–1939). Over his career in the majors, Ambler player second base and shortstop. He also played in the minor leagues, Ambler played for the Class-A Williamsport Grays (1939), the Double-A Jersey City Giants (1940) and the Double-A Indianapolis Indians (1941). Ambler made his major league debut on June 4, 1937, after never playing in the minors, a rare feat. During his major league career, Ambler compiled a batting average of .224 with 175 hits, 39 doubles, two triples, 73 runs batted in (RBIs) and four stolen bases in 271 games played.
Ambler was discovered in 1933 by an amateur baseball umpire who introduced him to Connie Mack, the manager of the Philadelphia Athletics at the time. Mack later introduced him to his friend and manager of the Duke Blue Devils baseball team, Jack Coombs, who persuaded Ambler to play baseball at Duke University. While attending Duke, Ambler's tuition was paid for by Mack. He graduated from that institution in 1937 with a Bachelor's Degree in business administration. In 1989, he was inducted in the Duke Sports Hall of Fame. Ambler entered military service in 1941 after the attack on Pearl Harbor and later reached the rank of Lieutenant fighting in World War II. Ambler never returned to professional baseball after returning home from service.
Robert Geary
Robert Norton Geary (1891–1980) was an American Major League Baseball pitcher. He played for the Philadelphia Athletics during the 1918 and 1919 seasons and the Cincinnati Reds during the 1921 season.
In 1918 Geary served in the military during World War I.[
Roy Bruner
Walter Roy Bruner (February 10, 1917 - November 30, 1986) was a Major League Baseball pitcher. Bruner played for the Philadelphia Phillies from 1939 to 1941. In 19 career games, he had a 0-7 record with a 5.74 ERA. He batted and threw right-handed. Bruner had to leave baseball to serve in WWII. He was a bomber pilot in the war and was shot down on at least one occasion. After the war he owned Bruner Aluminum Company, which manufactured storm windows until he closed the business at his retirement.
Bruner was born in Cecilia, Kentucky and died in St. Matthews, Kentucky.
Eddie Palmer
Edwin Henry Palmer (June 1, 1893 – January 9, 1983) was a third baseman in Major League Baseball. He played for the Philadelphia Athletics in 1917
Lawrence File
Samuel Lawrence File (May 18, 1922 – September 25, 2008) was a shortstop in Major League Baseball. He played for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1940
Johnny Blatnik
John Louis Blatnik (March 10, 1921 - January 21, 2004) was an outfielder in Major League Baseball who played from 1948 through 1950 for the Philadelphia Phillies (1948–1950) and St. Louis Cardinals (1950). Listed at 6' 0", 195 lb., Blatnik batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Bridgeport, Ohio
Known as a line-drive hitter and a strong-armed outfielder, Blatnik was the regular left fielder for the 1948 Phillies. He appeared in a career-high 121 games while hitting .260 with 41 extrabases that season, and he also led the National League outfielders with nine assists. However, a number of injuries cut short his career, and Blatnik appeared in just 28 games over the next two years.
In a three-season career, Blatnik was .253 hitter (113-for-447) with six home runs and 46 RBI in 138 games, including 59 runs, 27 double, eight triples, three stolen bases, and a .317 on-base percentage
Ken Richardson
Ken Richardson (May 2, 1915 - December 7, 1987) was a baseball player who spent parts of 2 seasons in Major League Baseball. He played for the Philadelphia Athletics in 1942 and the Philadelphia Phillies in 1946.
Richardson also played in the minor leagues for 21 seasons and spent 5 years managing in the minors, 4 with affiliates of the Milwaukee Brewers
Mickey Rutner
Milton "Mickey" Rutner (March 18, 1920 - October 17, 2007) was a third baseman in Major League Baseball who played briefly for the Philadelphia Athletics during the 1947 season. Listed at 5' 11", 190 lb., Rutner batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Hempstead, New York.
In a 12-game career, Rutner was a .250 hitter (12-for-48) with one home run and four RBI, including one double and four runs. In 11 third base appearances, he recorded five putouts with 18 assists and committed three errors in 26 chances for a .885 fielding percentage.
Rutner died in Georgetown, Texas at age 88.
He is the basis for the main character, Mike Kutner, in the Eliot Asinof novel, Man On Spikes
George Staller
George Walborn Staller (April 1, 1916 — July 3, 1992) was an American outfielder, scout and coach in Major League Baseball. He served as first base coach on Earl Weaver's Baltimore Orioles staff from 1968-75, working on the Orioles' three consecutive American League championship teams (1969-70-71) and Baltimore's 1970 World Series champion.
Born in Rutherford Heights, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, Staller threw and batted left-handed and stood 5'11" (180 cm) tall and weighed 200 pounds (91 kg). He originally signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1937 and progressed as far as the top-level Montreal Royals in 1940-41, where he led the International League in doubles (40) and triples (12) in 1940. But his only major league service occurred in 1943, when he was purchased by the Philadelphia Athletics from the minor league version of the Baltimore Orioles after leading the 1943 IL in runs batted in (with 98). Staller appeared in 21 games with the 1943 A's, batting .271 with 23 hits in 85 at bats, including three home runs and 12 RBI. He then joined the armed forces in 1944-45.
Staller was a minor league manager for 14 seasons, 1948 through 1961. He began in the A's system (1948-53), then moved with Philadelphia general manager Arthur Ehlers to the American League Orioles organization in its first season in Baltimore, 1954. Staller reached the Triple-A level for one season, in 1960 with the Vancouver Mounties; his career managing record was 922 wins, 1,043 losses (.469).
Staller's first term as an Orioles coach came in 1962, when he served one year under skipper Billy Hitchcack. Then, after six seasons as a Baltimore scout, he joined Weaver in midyear 1968 and served until his retirement at the close of the 1975 season. He died at age 76 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
PRIDE OF PINESTRIPES YANKEES CUT SIGNATURES 1/1’s
Ted Sepkowski
Theodore Walter Sepkowski (November 9, 1923 - March 8, 2002) was a Major League Baseball utility player who played for three seasons. He played for the Cleveland Indians in 1942 and from 1946 to 1947, and the New York Yankees in 1947
There are a bunch of cards that do not even have a auto on Ebay and a bunch that have deceased players that may not have many cards out there.
Link
ALL AVAILABLE
OPEN TO REASONABLE OFFERS BUT MANY ARE PRICED TO SELL
1953 Topps
Harry Byrd #131 $20
Vern Benson #205 $25
Chuck Stobbs #89 $25
1954 topps
Tom Wright #140 $20
Joe Jay Rc #141 $35
Don Mueller #42 $20
Bob Borkowski #138 $25
1955 topps
Dick Groat #26 $40
Billy Garnder #27 $20
Tom Casagrande #167 $25
1956 Topps
Bob Nelson #169 $20
Chico Carrasquel #230 $45
Alvin Dark #148A $25
Dusty Rhodes $25
1957 Topps
Roy Sievers #89 $20
Harry Anderson #404 $30
Karl Olson #153 $20
1958 topps
Ruben Gomez #335 ? Very Rare Auto
Jim Brosnan #342 $20
Eddie Bressoud #263 $15
Ray Herbert #379 $15
Gene Fodge #449 $20
Minnie Minoso #295 $40
1959 topps
Don Demeter #324 $20
Paul Foytack #233A $25
Ken Aspromonte #424 $20
Wayne Terwilliger #496 $20
Pete burnside #354 $20
1960 Topps
Steve Ridzik #489 $25
Dan Dobbek #123 $20
Vern Law #453 $25
Carrol Hardy #341 $20
Paul Foytack #364 $20
Russ Kemmerer #362 $20
Larry Sherry #105 $20
1961 Topps
Ty Cline SP #421 $20
Turk Lown #424 $15
Mickey Vernon #134 $30
Paul Richards #131 $20
Charley Maxwell #37 $20
Stu Miller #72 $20
Ken Hamlin #263 $20
Eddie Bressoud #203 $20
1962 Topps
Albie Pearson #343 $15
Hector Lopez #502 $20
Billy Gardner #338 $15
Bill Virdon #415 $15
Dick Groat #270 $20
1963 topps
Jose Tartabull #449 $15
Bobby Bragan #73 $15
RON SANTO #252 AWESOME $85
Dick Schofield #34 $15
Dal Maxvill #49 $20
Bob Bruce #24 $15
Dick Groat #130 $20
Chuck Cottier #219 $20
Jack Lamabe #251 $20
1964 Topps
Milt Pappas #45 $25
Mike Joyce #477 $15
Ed Lopat #348 $20
Bob Duliba #441 $20
1965 Topps
Floyd Robinson #345 $15
Bobby Bragan #346 $15
Jimmy Piersall #172 $25
Bob Aspromonte #175 $15
Del Crandall #68 $20
Bill Virdon #69 $20
1966 Topps
Jim gentile #45 $15
Ed bailey #246 $15
Vic Roznovsky #467 $15
Don Buford #465 $15
1967 topps
Bob Bruce #417 $20
Sammy Ellis #176 $15
Vern Law #351 $15
Bill McCool #353 $15
Phil Linz #14 $20
Jim Pagliaroni #183 $15
Stu Miller #345 $15
1968 Topps
Felix Millan #241 $15
Dick Hall #17 $15
Bill Henry #239 $15
Ron Hunt #15 $15
Jim Ollom #91 $15
1970 Topps
Jim Bunning #403 $20
1972 Topps
Bernie Carbo #463 $15
Gaylord Perry #285 $35
1975 Topps
Clarence Cito Gaston #427 $20
Frank White #569 $15
Walter Alston #6 $45
1976 Topps
Dennis Eckersley Rc #98 $60
1978 Topps
Rod Carew #201 $40
1979 Topps
Johnny Oates #104 $15
Bill Lee #455 $15
1981 Donruss
Ron Cey #296 $15
JACK MORRIS #127 $30
1981 Topps
Rollie Fingers #229 $35
1981 HOF Plaque
Monte Irvin $35
1982 TCMA Greatest Pitchers
BOB LEMON $20
Tommy Davis $20
1982 Topps
Tom Seaver #30 $40
1982 Donruss
Ferguson Jenkins #643 $35
1983 Donruss
Buddy bell #215 $15
1983 Fleer
Ray Knight #453 $15
Toby Harrah & Andre Thornton Dual Auto #635 $35
Rich Goose Gossage #381 $35
Aurelio Rodriguez #249 $15
1983 Donruss HOF Heroes
Luke Appling #8 $25
1983 Topps
Tony Larussa #216 $20
WADE BOGGS #498 $50
1984 Fleer Update
JOE MORGAN #u-80 $20
1984 Topps Cereal Series
ANDRE DAWSON #6 $45
1984 Donruss
TONY GWYNN #324 $35
1985 Donruss
Tony Gwynn #25 $35
1985 Fleer
JIMMY KEY Rc #110 $20
Ron Washington #292 $20
1985 topps
OREL HERSHISER Rc #493 $40
1987 Nestle Drean Team
CARL HUBBEL $35
1987 Topps
FERNANDO VALENZUELA #410 $20
1989 Pacific Legends
HANK BAUER x2 $20
BOB FELLER $20
1990 Topps
Robin ventura $15
1991 Topps Archives (1953 topps)
J.W. PORTER $20
1993 Ted Williams Cards
Minnie Minoso #27 $25
2000 Fleer Showcase Noise of Summer Insert
JEFF BAGWELL #2 $45
2006 Fleer Greats of the Game
MARK GRACE #64 $25
No Date
GAYLORD PERRY $20
PHILLY's FINEST 1/1 CUTS
Bobby Stevens Deceased 2005 $30
Wayne Ambler Deceased 1998 $30
Robert Geary Deceased 1980 $40
Roy Bruner Deceased 1986 $45
Eddie palmer Deceased 1983 $40
Lawrence File Deceased 2008 $40
Johhny Blatnik Deceased 2004 $40
Ken Richardson Deceased 1987 $40
Mickey Rutner Deceased 2007 $40
George Staller Deceased 1992 $75
Ken Heintzelman Deceased 2000 $30
Freddie Toliver $30
Al Todd Deceased 1985 $45
Mike Kreevich Deceased 1994 $40
PRIDE of PINSTRIPES 1/1 CUTS
Bobby Meacham $25
Doug Bird $20
Spike Owen $20
Ted Sepkowski Deceased 2002 $25
Gus Triandos $25
Horace Clarke $25
Dennis Rasmussen $25
Fred Kipp $25
BEANTOWN HEROES 1/1 Cuts
JOE CRONIN Deceased 1984 $85
Jim Suchecki Deceased 2000 $40
Dave Henderson $30
Steve Barr $30
Harley Hisner $30
Mickey Vernon Deceased 2008 $40
John Falherty $20
Chuck Schilling $25
Ted Sizemore $25
BROOKLYN BOYS 1/1 CUTS
AL CAMPANIS Deceased 1998 $75
Billy Sullivan jr Deceased 1994 $90
Frank LEFTY O'Doul Deceased 1969 $150
Elmer Knetzer Deceased 1975 $75
Greek George Deceased 1999 $65
1934 Goudey Leo Durocher Auto 9 $800 OBO
Did some research on the Cuts of Deceased players.
Really neat Bios as most served in World War 2.
Philly’s Finest Cut Signature Autos 1/1
Bobby Stevens
Robert Jordan Stevens (April 17, 1907 – December 30, 2005) was an American professional baseball player who played in twelve games for the Philadelphia Phillies during the 1931 season.
He played 12 games in 1938, hitting .343 in 35 at-bats with four RBI. His baseball career also included time in the Carolina League. He was honored at Veterans Stadium in August 2000 and helped to unveil a plaque to be placed at the site of the original Baker Bowl ballpark. The park had been used until the 1938 season. During World War II, he served in the Army Air Corps. Following his career in baseball, he worked in the accounting department of the Veterans Administration. He later drove the bookmobile for the Montgomery County Public Library until his retirement in 1977. He was a Little League baseball coach from 1960 to 1967.
Stevens died of heart failure in December 2005 at the age of 98.
Wayne Ambler
Wayne Harper Ambler (November 8, 1915 – January 3, 1998) was an American professional baseball player whose career spanned six season, including three in Major League Baseball with the Philadelphia Athletics (1937–1939). Over his career in the majors, Ambler player second base and shortstop. He also played in the minor leagues, Ambler played for the Class-A Williamsport Grays (1939), the Double-A Jersey City Giants (1940) and the Double-A Indianapolis Indians (1941). Ambler made his major league debut on June 4, 1937, after never playing in the minors, a rare feat. During his major league career, Ambler compiled a batting average of .224 with 175 hits, 39 doubles, two triples, 73 runs batted in (RBIs) and four stolen bases in 271 games played.
Ambler was discovered in 1933 by an amateur baseball umpire who introduced him to Connie Mack, the manager of the Philadelphia Athletics at the time. Mack later introduced him to his friend and manager of the Duke Blue Devils baseball team, Jack Coombs, who persuaded Ambler to play baseball at Duke University. While attending Duke, Ambler's tuition was paid for by Mack. He graduated from that institution in 1937 with a Bachelor's Degree in business administration. In 1989, he was inducted in the Duke Sports Hall of Fame. Ambler entered military service in 1941 after the attack on Pearl Harbor and later reached the rank of Lieutenant fighting in World War II. Ambler never returned to professional baseball after returning home from service.
Robert Geary
Robert Norton Geary (1891–1980) was an American Major League Baseball pitcher. He played for the Philadelphia Athletics during the 1918 and 1919 seasons and the Cincinnati Reds during the 1921 season.
In 1918 Geary served in the military during World War I.[
Roy Bruner
Walter Roy Bruner (February 10, 1917 - November 30, 1986) was a Major League Baseball pitcher. Bruner played for the Philadelphia Phillies from 1939 to 1941. In 19 career games, he had a 0-7 record with a 5.74 ERA. He batted and threw right-handed. Bruner had to leave baseball to serve in WWII. He was a bomber pilot in the war and was shot down on at least one occasion. After the war he owned Bruner Aluminum Company, which manufactured storm windows until he closed the business at his retirement.
Bruner was born in Cecilia, Kentucky and died in St. Matthews, Kentucky.
Eddie Palmer
Edwin Henry Palmer (June 1, 1893 – January 9, 1983) was a third baseman in Major League Baseball. He played for the Philadelphia Athletics in 1917
Lawrence File
Samuel Lawrence File (May 18, 1922 – September 25, 2008) was a shortstop in Major League Baseball. He played for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1940
Johnny Blatnik
John Louis Blatnik (March 10, 1921 - January 21, 2004) was an outfielder in Major League Baseball who played from 1948 through 1950 for the Philadelphia Phillies (1948–1950) and St. Louis Cardinals (1950). Listed at 6' 0", 195 lb., Blatnik batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Bridgeport, Ohio
Known as a line-drive hitter and a strong-armed outfielder, Blatnik was the regular left fielder for the 1948 Phillies. He appeared in a career-high 121 games while hitting .260 with 41 extrabases that season, and he also led the National League outfielders with nine assists. However, a number of injuries cut short his career, and Blatnik appeared in just 28 games over the next two years.
In a three-season career, Blatnik was .253 hitter (113-for-447) with six home runs and 46 RBI in 138 games, including 59 runs, 27 double, eight triples, three stolen bases, and a .317 on-base percentage
Ken Richardson
Ken Richardson (May 2, 1915 - December 7, 1987) was a baseball player who spent parts of 2 seasons in Major League Baseball. He played for the Philadelphia Athletics in 1942 and the Philadelphia Phillies in 1946.
Richardson also played in the minor leagues for 21 seasons and spent 5 years managing in the minors, 4 with affiliates of the Milwaukee Brewers
Mickey Rutner
Milton "Mickey" Rutner (March 18, 1920 - October 17, 2007) was a third baseman in Major League Baseball who played briefly for the Philadelphia Athletics during the 1947 season. Listed at 5' 11", 190 lb., Rutner batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Hempstead, New York.
In a 12-game career, Rutner was a .250 hitter (12-for-48) with one home run and four RBI, including one double and four runs. In 11 third base appearances, he recorded five putouts with 18 assists and committed three errors in 26 chances for a .885 fielding percentage.
Rutner died in Georgetown, Texas at age 88.
He is the basis for the main character, Mike Kutner, in the Eliot Asinof novel, Man On Spikes
George Staller
George Walborn Staller (April 1, 1916 — July 3, 1992) was an American outfielder, scout and coach in Major League Baseball. He served as first base coach on Earl Weaver's Baltimore Orioles staff from 1968-75, working on the Orioles' three consecutive American League championship teams (1969-70-71) and Baltimore's 1970 World Series champion.
Born in Rutherford Heights, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, Staller threw and batted left-handed and stood 5'11" (180 cm) tall and weighed 200 pounds (91 kg). He originally signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1937 and progressed as far as the top-level Montreal Royals in 1940-41, where he led the International League in doubles (40) and triples (12) in 1940. But his only major league service occurred in 1943, when he was purchased by the Philadelphia Athletics from the minor league version of the Baltimore Orioles after leading the 1943 IL in runs batted in (with 98). Staller appeared in 21 games with the 1943 A's, batting .271 with 23 hits in 85 at bats, including three home runs and 12 RBI. He then joined the armed forces in 1944-45.
Staller was a minor league manager for 14 seasons, 1948 through 1961. He began in the A's system (1948-53), then moved with Philadelphia general manager Arthur Ehlers to the American League Orioles organization in its first season in Baltimore, 1954. Staller reached the Triple-A level for one season, in 1960 with the Vancouver Mounties; his career managing record was 922 wins, 1,043 losses (.469).
Staller's first term as an Orioles coach came in 1962, when he served one year under skipper Billy Hitchcack. Then, after six seasons as a Baltimore scout, he joined Weaver in midyear 1968 and served until his retirement at the close of the 1975 season. He died at age 76 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
PRIDE OF PINESTRIPES YANKEES CUT SIGNATURES 1/1’s
Ted Sepkowski
Theodore Walter Sepkowski (November 9, 1923 - March 8, 2002) was a Major League Baseball utility player who played for three seasons. He played for the Cleveland Indians in 1942 and from 1946 to 1947, and the New York Yankees in 1947
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Take out the spaces