Welcome to our community

Be apart of something great, join today!

MrMopar's New Dodgers Autograph Thread (and other interesting items on a slow mailday)

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

mrmopar

Member
Joined
Jan 19, 2010
Messages
6,775
Reaction score
5,669
Alston Morrell
Alston Morrell.png


1981 Banquet Program. This has a few assorted autos, but Garvey was what made me find it. Garvey, Lasorda, Garagioia, Hugh Green, Jaworski, Dave Logan. Features an early Dan Marino appearance, unfortunately no Dan Marino auto. Would have made it unaffordable though.
Jaworski Program.png
 

mrmopar

Member
Joined
Jan 19, 2010
Messages
6,775
Reaction score
5,669
The only time you know for certain what someone bidding on ebay is willing to pay is when you are the winning bidder. Not only do you know what you were willing to pay, you know what the runner up was willing to pay.

On the flip side, I often feel like I end up paying my max more often than I'd like. How do I know this? Well, I am the winning bidder and someone has bid me up to my max. Now, more often than that, I am 2nd high bidder and that is frustrating as well. I often wonder just how high the winner was willing to go. Did they steal it from me because I didn't raise my bid by a buck or two, did i do the same thing to them and max them out OR am I just a small irritating speck on their road to victory, with a runner up bid that was only a fraction of their max bid?

Lately it feels like I either end up as runner up or I am paying my full snipe bid and it can be frustrating at the same time rewarding, because you won. Here are a couple great exceptions to that rule (besides the Garvey).

Starting off is a new variation of the Select Garvey card that I must have about 10 different now. This is blue /199. It was cheap and whatever I paid was fine and expected. The next two surprised me pleasantly.
Garvey Blue 199.png


First win was this Jim "Junior" Gilliam autographed postcard. it's ugly thanks to someone folding it up, but it's still a mostly clean signature. The postage was close to $6, which sucked because I would have been willing to risk this one in a standard trading card package, despite my great opposition to this method lately for anything that I deem special or irreplaceable.

The auction price for this signature was $1!
Gilliam.png

I have numerous Jim Gilliam autographs. He seemed to be a very gracious signer. Several come from multi-player items, like programs, yearbooks, etc. He died of a heart attach in 1978 and a pretty young age, but luckily his signature is fairly common for someone who died then.

This last item really makes me appreciate the occasional steal you can still get on ebay every now and again. I was a little concerned at first, because after i won this and immediately paid, it was assigned a tracking number right away and then sat. A week passed without any updates before I finally reached out to the seller to ask when it was actually going to ship out. I can't know for sure, but I have my suspicions. They claimed it was left at the PO, but a day or so after my inquiry, the tracking finally updated. I think they finally handed it over to the PO after I asked.

It arrived today. Part of me thought...it's going to be the wrong item or a piece of wood or something else, but not the item I won. I was still in disbelief that I had won it for so little $. Well, happy to report that the item was as described and now resides in my Dodger autograph collection. The item is actually many items, a lot of 1985 Coke postcards, all signed! Now these particular postcards aren't anywhere as common as the older Mitock or Dexter Press team issued cards from the 70s/80s, but all being signed was a huge bonus.

The highlights include now deceased players or coaches Tommy Lasorda, Fernando Valenzuela (still weird to say that), Jay Johnstone, Ron Perranoski, Carlos Diaz, Bob Welch, Bobby Castillo, Ken Howell, Monty Basgall and Steve Howe. Crazy to think that many have already died from a mid 1980s team. Among the living highlights include Orel Hershiser, Steve Sax, Al Oliver., Mike Scioscia, Pedro Guerrero and maybe another 15 more.

The final hammer was $22.72 plus tax and shipping! I am a very happy Dodger fan right now. I need to check, but this may be a complete setas well.

Dodgers PClot Coke Au.png
 

mrmopar

Member
Joined
Jan 19, 2010
Messages
6,775
Reaction score
5,669
Garvey/Cey/Baker /6
Garvey Cey Baker 6.png
Garvey /5. I don't love the pink. Just about any of the other colors would be better. I especially like Blue and green.
Garvey 5.png
Garvey/Freeman /75
Garvey Freeman 75 GU.png

Grove /199
Grove 199.png


Billy Cox 1974 TCMA Boys of Summer. He only had a few years to sign these, as he died in early 1978 at age 58. His signature seems to have varied quite a bit from examples I have seen. Earlier signatures seem to have more flair. Assuming this is in fact legit, this would be a near end of life signature.
Cox TCMA.png
 

Members online

No members online now.

Latest posts

Top