Sports Collectors Home
Read 4,000+ More Stories
Contact Info
Advertising Info
What's Hot on eBay
eBay Items With Most Bids
Editor's Blog
Sponsored Links
JB Sports Auctions
Football Cards
Game Used Jerseys
EveryAthleteAutographEvent
Cheap Sports Cards
Autographs
Sports Cards
T206 For Sale
1952 Topps Baseball
Sports Card Boxes
Basketball Autographs
Baseball Card Grading
Shop Baseball Cards
Heritage Auctions: Consign
Baseball Cards
Autographed Baseball Cards
Collecting Resources
About Us/Media Inquiries
cards auction baseball sports jersey series collectors memorabilia autograph topps signed hobby store autographed slugger flood online collection upper reserve rookie auctions louisville popular jerseys

Joomla Modul

Sports Collectors Home arrow Read 4,000+ More Stories arrow Misc. Sports Collecting News arrow Ex-Big Leaguers Sign, Play for Cooperstown Crowd
Advertisement

Ex-Big Leaguers Sign, Play for Cooperstown Crowd

Print E-mail
Share This Story
Delicious
NewsVine
Reddit
YahooMyWeb
Technorati
Digg
Fark
Stumble
Monday, 22 June 2009
By most accounts, the Hall of Fame Classic was a big hit for Cooperstown visitors who found a unique way to celebrate Father's Day.

Sunday's inaugural Baseball Hall of Fame Classic ushered in a new tradition in Cooperstown, and the legends who came to Doubleday Field didn't disappoint.

The leisurely event replaced the annual Hall exhibition game between two less than interested big league teams.

With 90-year-old Bob Feller (Hall of Fame Class of 1962) starting the game on the mound for Team Wagner, the 7,069 fans at Doubleday Field were treated to a Hall of Fame matchup right off the bat when Paul Molitor (Hall of Fame Class of 2004) came to the plate for Team Collins and singled to center.

"We made a deal -- he said no bunting, and I told him I'd keep line drives out of the middle of the field," Molitor said after his hit.

Bobby Grich followed Molitor and promptly brought the house down by half-heartedly charging the mound after a Feller offering came a little too close for comfort. There were home runs and fastballs, but mostly laughs.

Feller left the game soon after facing Grich, signing autographs for fans, many of whom were not born when he threw his last Major League pitch in 1956. But more than 50 years later, Feller's legend remains larger than life.

Watch the story courtesy of WKTV in Utica:

Sports autographs on eBay

 

Shop for sports cards by year
1880s-present

Baseball

Football

Basketball

Hockey
Card Informant
Sports Card Forum
Trader Retreat
Home | Sports Collecting News | Contact Info | Editor's Blog | Site Map
Joomla! Integration by Principal Web Solutions