-
Mickey Mantle, Joe DiMaggio, Hank Aaron, Whitey Ford - 14 Total HOFers PSA Authenticated Signatures on ONE BALL! PSA has authenticated all 14. Comes with LOA. Mickey Mantle, Joe DiMaggio, Hank Aaron, Whitey Ford, Bob Feller, Eddie Mathews, George Kell, Early Wynn, Luis Aparicio, Brooks Robinson, Duke Snider, Jim Palmer, Bob Gibson & Warren Spahn. 2 / 67 -
Limited Edition Framed Mickey Mantle Topps Commemorative Card Sheet. This commemorative card sheet features every year the famed Yankees slugger had a baseball card from his 1951 bowman rookie card to his final regular appearance, a 1969 Topps baseball card. Limited to 10,000 it comes with a LOA from Topps. This one is 5,017 / 10,000 5 / 67 -
1960 Topps #227: Casey Stengel and #212: Walt Alston. Stengel was elected to Hall of Fame in 1966 and Alston in 1983. Casey Stengel managed the 1950s NY Yankees dynasty to 10 AL pennants and seven World Series championships. Walt Alston managed the Brooklyn and LA Dodgers for 23 seasons and led them to seven NL pennants and four World Championships. 11 / 67 -
1961 Topps #20: Robin Roberts. Elected to the Hall of Fame in 1976. He was a member of the Philadelphia Phillies “Whiz Kids†during the 1950s helping them to the 1950 World Series Championship. Played most of his 19-year career with the Phils (1948-1961) and the Orioles (1962-1965), He was a brilliant ace, excellent fielder and above-average hitter for a pitcher. Robin Roberts was the first number retired by the Phillies organization. 13 / 67 -
1961 Topps #30: Nellie Fox and #88: Richie Ashburn. Fox was elected the Hall of Fame in 1997 and Ashburn in 1995. Fox was named 1959 AL MVP, posting a .306 average, 191 hits and 70 RBI and helped the White Sox to the AL pennant. Ashburn had more hits than any other player in the 1950s and was a member of the Phillies 1950 National League Champion “Whiz Kids.†14 / 67 -
1961 Topps #80: Harmon Killebrew. Elected to the Hall of Fame in 1984 he once blasted a 530 ft. home run into the upper deck of Metropolitan Stadium, reportedly shattering two chairs. Killer led the American League six times in home runs, topping the 40-mark eight times, drove in 100 or more runs nine times and won the AL MVP in 1969. He retired with 573 home runs, 2,086 hits, 1,584 RBI, a .509 career slugging percentage, and a .256 career batting average. 15 / 67 -
1961 Topps #200: Warren Spahn. Elected to the Hall of Fame in 1973. He is the winningest left-handed pitcher in MLB history with 363 wins. Topped the 20-win mark 13 times in his career and was one of the most dominant NL pitchers of any era. He pitched for the Boston/Milwaukee Braves (1942, 1946-1964) for virtually his entire career, earning 17 All-Star selections. He was the ace of the Braves pitching staff helping the heavy hitting squad to three NL pennants and one World Series title in 1957. He posted a 21-11 record with 18 complete games, 130 strikeouts and a 2.69 ERA and won the 1957 Cy Young Award. 16 / 67 -
Walt Alston 18 / 67 -
Braves Pitcher Phill Niekro card 29 / 67 -
1966 Topps #78: Red Schoendienst, #116: Walt Alston and #386: Gil Hodges. Schoendienst, long time Cardinals player and manager was elected to the HOF in 1989, Alston the great Dodgers manager in 1983 and Hodges, the Dodger first baseman, and manager of the 1969 Miracle Mets, was elected in 2022. 31 / 67 -
1966 Topps #130 Joe Torre and #210: Bill Mazeroski. As a player Torre was a 9-time All-Star and as Yankees manager a 4-time WS Champion, he was elected to the HOF in 2014. Mazeroski the Pirates second-baseman played his entire career in Pittsburgh, was a 10-time All-Star, 2-time WS Champion and 8-time Gold Glove Award winner and was elected to the HOF in 2001 33 / 67 -
1970’s Kansas City Royals Signed Baseball: 19 signatures on a Rawlings Official American League, Lee MacPhail, Baseball. Signatures include Hall of Famers Whitey Herzog on the sweet spot and George Brett, as well as Clint Hurdle, John Mayberry, Al Cowens, and Al Hrabosky – “The Mad Hungarian.†60 / 67
Photos 1 - 67 of 67
Per page: