The world of baseball card collecting isn’t just packs, stats, and wax wrappers—it’s a sprawling industry filled with vivid personalities, heated rivalries, and the kind of cultural history that ...
The first thing you'll notice is that the BGS 9.5 graded cards in the table warrant healthy and sometimes massive premiums to ungraded book value. For example, a BGS 9.5 1993 SP Derek Jeter RC carries ...
For many years, Rob Daugherty has stood before packed rooms and before TV cameras to explain that there was another color barrier broken in Major League Baseball 50 years before ...
Back in 1973, a pair of baby boomer baseball fans named Fred Harris and Brendan Boyd came forth with a baseball book unlike any other. With cheerful sarcasm, an abiding love of the game and wink-nudge ...
When I was a little boy, I loved rummaging through the family attic and basement. I remember the brittle, yellowed newspapers from the Kennedy assassination and the death of Yankees manager Miller ...
Baseball cards have changed a lot over the years, and this is hardly surprising. What is surprising, perhaps, is just how much they've also stayed the same. Pick up a card from 1910s (or even the ...
The 1950s are often referred to as the “Golden Age” in the United States due to a strong economy, the baby boom, and widespread optimism following World War II. This decade is also considered the ...
Within minutes of the recent passing of Sy Berger, the longtime Vice President for sports and licensing at Topps Chewing Gum Company, at the age of 91, ESPN.com and the New York Times posted long ...
For many Jewish fans who collect baseball cards, the joy of opening a new pack and finding a Jewish player is second to none. That was Seymour Stoll’s experience years ago when he drew a Sandy Koufax ...
NEW YORK — Back in 1973, a pair of baby boomer baseball fans named Fred Harris and Brendan Boyd came forth with a baseball book unlike any other. “The Great American Baseball Card Flipping, Trading ...
NEW YORK (AP) - Back in 1973, a pair of baby boomer baseball fans named Fred Harris and Brendan Boyd came forth with a baseball book unlike any other. With cheerful sarcasm, an abiding love of the ...