Showing posts with label SiS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SiS. Show all posts

Friday, December 11, 2009

1997 Score, Brian McRae



#99 Brian McRae

This is the sixth and final (so far) Brian McRae card that I have posted on here. I got this card signed this past spring at the Spring into Sports youth baseball clinic. I had another card of Brian that I got signed at the event, but I sent it to Paul since it was on a Mets card.

Brian is set to appear at Royals Fanfest next month. I think that I have one more card of him that I want signed (two if I can find another Mets card of him). When Fanfest comes, there are going to be a handful of players that I already have a ton of autographs from. I think that I will try to get some cards signed for some other bloggers with those players. Let me know if you might be interested.

So, just to recap, here are all the previous B-Mac cards I have had on here.

#1- A nice Spring Training shot on a '91 Leaf.

#2- A nice posed shot on the old Royals Stadium astroturf, courtesy of '91 Topps.

#3- Another Spring Training batting picture from '92 Donruss. But this one has Brian seemingly leaping over a pitch in a single bound.

#4- A nice-looking '92 Stadium Club of Brian heading to first in powder blue.

#5- A '95 Leaf card of Brian as a Cub.

I like the photo on this card (I know another blogger that might like it as well and it isn't the Night Owl). The photo seems real clean and crisp. It also appears that Brian has come to a stop. It must have been a quick play (like scoring from third on a groundball) since it seems that there wasn't enough time to get the bat out of the way.

Friday, October 23, 2009

1995 Leaf, Brian McRae



#347 Brian McRae

This is the fifth Brian McRae card that I have posted on here. But this one is different. Unlike the previous four, I actually know when and where I got this card signed. The rest of them had been accumulated over the years and they just seemed to blend together. But not this one. Also, this is the first B-Mac card where he is not a Royal.

I got this card signed this past spring at the youth baseball clinic here in town. B-Mac was one of the five former Royals helping to teach the kids. They weren't any infielders in the group, so Brian did the infield and base running teaching.

On a side note, I got my first ever 1 of 1 today. I got a Josh Hamilton magenta printing plate out of a pack of Topps U&H. I will be trying to get it signed next summer.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

1986 Topps Traded, Dennis Leonard



#65T Dennis Leonard

This is the third and final Dennis Leonard card from the youth baseball camp last month. A couple of days after that, I was looking through a stack of cards and became a little agitated with myself. In that stack, I found a '79 Topps card of Dennis that a bought a few months ago to get signed and I had forgot about it. After seeing that card, I remembered that Dennis had a card in the Pacific Senior Baseball League set that I bought and also forgot about. The three cards that I got signed by Dennis were the ones that I wanted to get signed at Royals Fanfest this past February. But, Dennis didn't attend the event the same day that I did. So, when I was looking for cards for the clinic, those three cards were still together and I took them without even thinking about grabbing my newer ones. Oh well. At least I got a couple more cards for the next time. I may have to start giving a few Leonards away.

This is another card that I got from Stats on the Back during his winter housekeeping.

Monday, June 8, 2009

1986 Fleer Update, Dennis Leonard



#U-67 Dennis Leonard

This is the second card from Dennis Loenard that I got signed at the Spring Into Sports youth clinic last month.

As for the card itslef, it is kind of a funny story of how I got it. A little of a year ago, a friend brought over all the cards he could find from when he was a kid. Most of them were in a shoe box and he also had a 700 count box. Inside of that was a set of '87 Fleer and '86 Fleer Update. I thought those were going to be fun to go through until I realized all of the rookies and some stars were missing out of both. So, needless to say, they were not complete sets. He ended up leaving all of the cards at my place for about a month. After badgering him enough to come and get them, he came over one day and got the shoebox. He left the Fleer here and they are still here to this day. Whenever I need a card from those sets to get signed, that is where I go to get them. And that is where this card came from.

Friday, May 29, 2009

1981 Donruss, Dennis Loenard



#102 Dennis Leonard

I was able to get this card signed at the Spring Into Sports youth baseball clinic a couple of weeks ago. I got cards signed by three former Royals that day, including Dennis Loenard. I was able to intercept the other two players on the way from the ballfield to the autograph signing. I didn't get to Dennis until there was a line of kids and parents wanting autographs. So, I waited for the line to finish before I went up there.

At the clinic, the boys were instructed by the Royals alums. The girls were instructed by one of the local high school girls softball team. Some of the girls on the team got at the end of the line to get autographs. Then they got some team pictures taken with the former Royals. I was trying to get my cards signed before the pictures, but was unable to. It looked like Dennis was signing his first name, smiling for the camera, signing his last name, then smiling for the camera again. It was like that for all three cards that he signed. I was kind of surprised that he signed all three cards after the last time I had a chance to get his autograph.

After the girls got done getting there pictures taken, they noticed the cards that Dennis was signing for me and they were like "whoa, is that you?". Dennis replied "yep, a long time ago". Then one of the girls said "wow, you must have been pretty good". Dennis said something like "I was just lucky to play on a good team". Nice answer, Dennis. I don't think Crash Davis could have said it better.

Friday, May 22, 2009

1976 Topps, Marty Pattin



#492 Marty Pattin

Here is the second card that I got signed by Marty at the Spring into Sports youth clinic two weeks ago. I only had two cards of Marty, so this will be the last one. I got this card prior to Royals Fanfest since Marty was supposedly going to be there. He wasn't there and I contemplated sending it through the mail to get signed. I held off on that and was lucky enough when this cool clinic came to town. The card is not in the best of shape, but that doesn't really matter to me.

In case you don't know it, Marty is known as the Duck because he does a spot-on Donald Duck impersonation. At the autograph signing after the clinic, one of the local high school softball coaches got into a small converstion with him while both of them were talking in Donald voices. I was too far away to hear what was being said, but John Mayberry mentioned that Marty might have met his match.

Here is an interesting excert from Jim Bouton's "Ball Four" about Marty-

"I had a long talk with Marty Pattin on the bus. He's had a tough, interesting life. He's from Charleston, Illinois, and his mother and father were separated when he was a baby and he was shipped off to live with his mother's folks. He was still a junior in high school when his grandfather died, so he moved into a rooming house and tried to work his way through the rest of high school. It was there he met a man named Walt Warmouth who helped him get through school - not only high school but college. Warmouth owned a restaurant, and Marty worked there and got his meals there, and every once in a while he'd get a call from the clothing store in town and be told he could pick up a suit and a bunch of other stuff and it was all paid for. they never would tell him who had paid, but Marty knew anyway. "The guy was like a father to me," Marty said. "And not only to me. He must have sent dozens of kids through school just the way he did me." Marty has a masters degree in industrial arts, and when he can he likes to help kids. That's why he signed up for the clinic.

"What a terribly lonely life Marty must have had. Hell, it was a traumatic experience for me just going away to college and living in a dorm with a bunch of other kids. And here's Marty, still in high school, living in a rooming house. Not only that, but he goes on to become an All-American boy, complete with all the good conventional values. Like he was telling the kids at the clinic that sure it was difficult to throw a ball well or be a good basketball player. It was difficult to do a lot of things, but that they were all capable of doing a lot of difficult things if they were willing to work hard and practice. I guess he ought to know."

Forty years later, Marty is still doing clinics and still spreading the same message. That's good stuff.

And one last updated remark. My favorite part about this card is the old Royals scoreboard. That beauty stood for 34 years and even in its updated version, it is still one of the most recognizable scoreboards in baseball.

Monday, May 18, 2009

1974 Topps, Marty Pattin



#583 Marty Pattin

Here is the first (and only) '74 Topps card that I have got signed. And what an ugly card it is. Check out the horrible airbrush job on that hat. It took some real talent to make that KC.

Anyway, I got this card signed last week at a Spring Into Sports youth baseball clinic. Five former Royals came to town to help teach the local kids the fundamentals of the game. The other players were John Mayberry, Brian McRea, Dennis Leonard, and Jaime Bluma. I talked to Marty for a bit and he said that they go all around to do the clinic and head up as far as South Dakota. I told him that it was great that they do that and thanked him. I wish they had stuff like that when I was a kid.

I almost didn't even find out about the clinic. It's not something that they really advertise a whole lot. The parks and rec department mainly just lets the teams know about it. Luckily, when I was headed to a Wingnuts game last week, they mentioned it on the radio (three days before the event). If it wasn't for that, I would not have even known about it.

I got this card from Andy of Traded Sets. When he shut down the '78 Topps blog, I was able to get some old Royals cards from him in a trade.