2 0 2 5

 

 

 

 

 

B O W M A N:

BASE PARALLELS:

______________________________________________________

BOWMAN PROSPECT - NEON GREEN (Non-Chrome):

______________________________________________________

# BP-93 - Numbered 107/399 - Seaver King - Nationals

 

 

____________________________________

BOWMAN CHROME PROSPECTS:

____________________________________

BCP 7 - Gregory Barrios - D'Rays (1st Bowman)

BCP 8 - Dawel Joseph - Mariners

BCP 17 - Colt Emerson - Mariners

BCP 22 - JJ Wetherholt - Cardinals (1st Bowman)

BCP 23 - Lazaro Montes - Mariners

BCP 24 - Max Clark - Tigers

BCP 27 - Yu-Min Lin - D'Backs (1st Bowman) x2

BCP  31 - Ricardo Yan - D'Backs (1st Bowman)

BCP 37 - Esmith Pineda - Reds (1st Bowman)

BCP 40 - Robert Calaz - Rockies

BCP 41 - Mitch Jebb - Pirates (1st Bowman)

BCP 42 - Kristian Campbell - Red Sox

BCP 45 - Victor Rodrigues - Dodgers (1st Bowman)

BCP  46 - Cam Caminiti - Braves

BCP 47 - Dylan Fien - A's (1st Bowman)

BCP 57 - Chase Hampton - Yankees (1st Bowman)

BCP  65 - Aroon Escobar - Phillies (1st Bowman) x 2

BCP 66 - Sammy Hernandez - Cardinals (1st Bowman)

BCP  67 - Franklin Arias - Red Sox (1st Bowman)

BCP 68 - Javier Mogollon - White Sox (1st Bowman)

BCP 71 - Richard Matic - Yankees (1st Bowman)

BCP 73 - Steven Echavarria - A's (1st Bowman)

BCP 80 - Edgleen Perez - Yankees (1st Bowman)

BCP 81 - Aidan Smith - D'Rays

BCP 84 - Jansel Luis - D'Backs (1st Bowman)

BCP 87 - Didier Fuentes - Braves (1st Bowman)

BCP 91 - PJ Morlando - Marlins (1st Bowman)

BCP 95 - Tsung-Che Cheng - Pirates (1st Bowman)

BCP 98 - Anderson Brito - Astros (1st Bowman)

BCP 101 - Tink Hence - Cardinals

BCP 104 - Cobb Hightower - Padres (1st Bowman)

BCP 107 - Christian Moore - Angels

BCP 109 - Samuel Basallo - Orioles

BCP 111 - Jose Pirela - Reds (1st Bowman)

BCP 112 - Cody Freeman - Rangers (1st Bowman)

BCP 114 - Nick Kurtz - A's

BCP 119 - Hyungchan Um - Royals (1st Bowman)

BCP 122 - Chase Burns - Reds

BCP 123 - Jhonayker Ugarte - Royals (1st Bowman)

BCP 124 - Elvin Garcia - Orioles (1st Bowman)

BCP 127 - Emil Morales - Dodgers

BCP 133 - Sebastian Walcott - Rangers

BCP 134 - Onil Perez - Giants (1st Bowman)

BCP 137 - Kellon Lindsey - Dodgers

BCP 139 - Kyle DeBarge - Twins (1st Bowman)

BCP 141 - Chen-Wei Lin - Cardinals (1st Bowman)

BCP 147 - Jhonny Level - Giants (1st Bowman)

 

 

______________________________________________

BOWMAN CHROME - MOJO REFRACTORS:

______________________________________________

# 3 - Bryce Harper - Phillies

# 5 - Freddie Freeman - Dodgers

# 8 - Drew Thorpe - While Sox (RC)

# 12 - Roki Sasaki - Dodgers (RC)

# 16 - Mookie Betts - Dodgers

# 18 - Yoshinobu Yamamoto - Dodgers

# 21 - Ronald Acuna Jr. - Braves

# 23 - Fernando Tatis Jr. - Padres

# 33 - Wyatt Langford - Rangers

# 42 - Dylan Crews - Nationals (RC)

# 44 - Elly De La Cruz - Reds

# 50 - Jackson Jobe - Tigers (RC)

# 61 - Hurston Waldrep - Braves (RC)

# 64 - Jackson Merrill - Padres

# 80 - Kumar Rocker - Rangers (RC)

 

 

___________________________________________________________

BOWMAN CHROME PROSPECTS - MOJO REFRACTORS:

___________________________________________________________

# BCP 24 - Max Clark - Tigers (2)

# BCP 48 - Cam Smith - Astros

# BCP 80 - Edgleen Perez - Yankees (1st Bowman)

# BCP 100 - Sammy Stafura - Reds (1st Bowman)

 

 

_________________________________________________________________

BOWMAN CHROME PROSPECTS - REPTILLIAN REFRACTORS:

_________________________________________________________________

(Estimated 8125 copies of each produced)

# BCP 83 - Emilien Pitre - D'Rays (1st Bowman)

# BCP 149 - Alex Mooney - Guardians

 

 

______________________________________________

CHROME PROSPECTS - RETRO LOGO FOILS:

_______________________________________________

# BCP 77 - Khadim Diaw - Twins

# BCP 83 - Emilien Pitre - D'Rays

 

 

 

 

I N S E R T S:

_________________________

GREATNESS LOADING:

_________________________

# GL 1 - Lazaro Montes - Mariners

# GL 4 - Cam Smith - Astros

# GL 8 - Travis Bazzana - Guardians

# GL 12 - Leo De Vries - Padres

# GL 20 - James Wood - Nationals (RC)

 

 

_________________

HOBBY STARS:

_________________

HS 6 - Mike Trout - Angels (TROUT'S: Catch of the Day Cards)

HS 12 - Dylan Crews - Nationals (CREWS': Capital Cards & Collectibles)

 

 

_______________________

ROCKSTAR ROOKIES:

_______________________

# RR 2 - Trey Sweeney - Tigers (RC)

# RR 9 - Brooks Lee - Twins (RC)

# RR  11 - James Wood - Nationals (RC) x2

# RR 20 - Roki Sasaki - Dodgers (RC)

 

 

__________________________________________________________

BOWMAN CHROME - ROOKIE OF THE YEAR FAVORITES:

__________________________________________________________

(Includes Bowman Chrome Mega Boxes)

ROY 1 - Dylan Crews - Nationals

ROY 8 - Jace Jung - Tigers (RC)

ROY 9 - Drew Romo - Rockies (RC)

ROY 10 - Roki Sasaki - Dodgers (RC)

 

M O J O:

ROY 2 - Coby Mayo - Orioles

ROY 3 - Jackson Jobe - Tigers

ROY 10 - Roki Sasaki - Dodgers (RC)

ROY 13 - Adael Amador - Rockies (RC)

 

PINK - ROY 11 - Numbered 189/199 - Rhett Lowder - Reds (RC)

 

 

_____________________

SCOUTS TOP 100:

_____________________

BTP 27 - Bryce Eldridge - Giants

BTP 33 - Hagen Smith - White Sox

BTP 66 - Luke Keaschall - Twins

BTP 82 - Josue Briceno - Tigers

 

 

_________________________________________

V.I.P. (VERY IMPORTANT PROSPECT)

_________________________________________

(Includes Bowman Chrome Mega Boxes)

VIP 3 - Sebastian Walcott - Rangers

VIP 7 - Chase Burns - Reds (2)

VIP 18 - JJ Wetherholt - Cardinals

 

VIP MOJO REFRACTORS:

VIP 3 - Sebastian Walcott - Rangers

VIP 7 - Chase Burns - Reds

VIP 8 - Travis Bazzana - Guardians

VIP 13 - Colt Emerson - Mariners

 

 

 

 

DONRUSS:

BASE PARALLELS:

______________________

ARTIST'S PROOF:

______________________

# 140 - Numbered 25/25 - Jarlin Susana - Nationals (Rated Prospect)

# 198 - Numbered 12/25 - Ryan Clifford - Mets (Rated Prospect)

 

 

_________________

C L E A R L Y:

_________________

# 151 - Kristian Campbell - Red Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 191 - Kellon Lindsey - Dodgers (Rated Prospect)

# 198 - Ryan Clifford - Mets (Rated Prospect)

 

 

 

BASE HOLO PARALLELS:

# 4 - Carlos Beltran - Yankees

# 17 - Roger Clemens - Red Sox

# 22 - Jairo Iriarte - White Sox (Rated Rookie)

# 23 - Tony Oliva - Twins

# 58 - Hurston Waldrep - Braves

# 63 - Jim Leyland - Tigers

# 64 - Will Clark - Rangers

# 74 - Rhett Lowder - Reds

# 81 - Zebby Matthews - Twins (Rated Rookie)

# 106 - Braylon Doughty - Guardians (Rated Prospect)

# 112 - Slade Caldwell - D'Backs (Rated Prospect)

# 122 - Kevin Alcantara - Cubs (Rated Prospect)

# 150 - Brady House - Nationals (Rated Prospect)

# 160 - Hagen Smith - White Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 195 - Cam Caminiti - Braves (Rated Prospect)

 

 

__________

B L U E:

__________

# 22 - Numbered 110/149 - Jairo Iriarte - White Sox (Rated Rookie)

# 94 - Numbered 30/149 - Jack Keiter - Rangers

 

 

_____________

G R E E N:

_____________

# 39 - Numbered 69/199 - Connor Norby - Marlins

# 143 - Numbered 98/199 - Matt Shaw - Cubs (Rated Prospect)

 

 

_____________

L A S E R:

_____________

# 8 - Heston Kjerstad - Orioles

# 11 - Jake Arrieta - Cubs

# 14 - Bucky Dent - Yankees

# 52 - Jace Jung - Tigers (Rated Rookie)

# 67 - Eddie Matthews - Milwaukee Braves

# 97 - Frank Thomas - White Sox

# 165 - Dillon Head - Marlins (Rated Prospect)

# 167 - Jett Williams - Mets (Rated Prospect)

 

 

________________

L I B E R T Y:

________________

# 2 - Willie Stargell - Pirates

# 3 - Ozzie Smith - Cardinals

# 12 - Catfish Hunter - A's

# 18 - Kumar Rocker - Rangers (Rated Rookie)

# 20 - Tim Hudson - A's

# 27 - Bobby Witt Jr. - Royals

# 36 - Adam Wainwright - Cardinals

# 42 - Bert Campaneris - A's

# 43 - Darren Baker - Nationals (Rated Rookie)

# 44 - Nolan Ryan - Rangers

# 53 - John Smoltz - Braves

# 61 - David Ortiz - Red Sox

# 69 - Dwight Gooden - Mets

# 70 - Jordan Lawlar - D'Backs

# 76 - Jacob Wilson - A's

# 78 - Andrew Walters - Guardians (Rated Rookie)

# 84 - Sammy Sosa - Cubs

# 85 - Craig Biggio - Astros

# 94 - Jack Leiter - Rangers

# 100 - Mike Mussina - Yankees

# 102 - Kyle Teel - White Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 104 - David Shields - Royals (Rated Prospect)

# 112 - Slade Caldwell - D'Backs (Rated Prospect)

# 122 - Kevin Alcantara - Cubs (Rated Prospect)

# 124 - Malcolm Moore - Rangers (Rated Prospect)

# 125 - Dalton Rushing - Dodgers (Rated Prospect)

# 134 - Chase Dollander - Rockies (Rated Prospect)

# 135 - Carson Williams - D'Rays (Rated Prospect)

# 144 - Luis Baez - Astros - (Rated Prospect)

# 145 - Christian Moore - Angels (Rated Prospect)

# 153 - Brice Matthews - Astros (Rated Prospect)

# 154 - Nick Kurtz - A's (Rated Prospect)

# 155 - Roman Anthony - Red Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 163 - Trey Yesavage - Blue Jays (Rated Prospect)

# 164 - Levi Sterling - Pirates (Rated Prospect)

# 165 - Dillon Head - Marlins (Rated Prospect)

# 171 - James Triantos - Cubs (Rated Prospect)

# 173 - Cam Smith - Astros

# 175 - Franklin Arias - Red Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 182 - Tyson Neighbors - Padres (Rated Prospect)

# 183 - Kash Mayfield - Padres (Rated Prospect)

# 191 - Kellon Lindsey - Dodgers (Rated Prospect)

# 193 - Bubba Chandler - Pirates (Rated Prospect)

 

 

___________________

ORANGE LASER:

___________________

# 71 - Numbered 146/299 - Will Wagner - Blue Jays (RR)

# 200 - Numbered 231/299 - Noah Schultz - White Sox - (Rated Prospect)

 

 

______________

P U R P L E:

______________

# 87 - Alex Rodriguez - Rangers

# 100 - Mike Mussina - Yankees

 

 

__________________

PURPLE HOLO:

__________________

# 61 - Numbered 36/99 - David Ortiz - Red Sox

# 157 - Numbered 21/99 - Drew Gilbert - Mets (Rated Prospect)

 

 

_______________

PURPLE ICE:

_______________

# 61 - Numbered 36/99 - David Ortiz - Red Sox

# 113 - Numbered 75/99 - Augustin Ramirez (Rated Prospect)

 

 

________

R E D:

________

# 5 - Numbered 11/250 - Coby Mayo - Orioles

# 31 - Numbered 125/250 - Jim Thome - Phillies

# 142 - Numbered 96/250 - Enrique Bradfield - Orioles (Rated Prospect)

# 153 - Numbered 201/250 - Brice Matthews - Astros (Rated Prospect)

 

 

__________________

RED AND BLUE:

__________________

# 2 - Willie Stargell - Pirates

# 5 - Coby Mayo - Orioles

# 11 - Jake Arrieta - Cubs

# 10 - Edgar Martinez - Mariners

# 12 - Catfish Hunter - A's

# 18 - Kumar Rocker - Rangers (Rated Rookie)

# 19 - Jim Kaat - Twins

# 20 - Tim Hudson - A's

# 23 - Tony Oliva - Twins

# 24 - Ken Griffey Jr. - Reds

# 27 - Bobby Witt Jr. - Royals

# 36 - Adam Wainwright - Cardinals

# 39 - Connor Norby - Marlins

# 40 - Junior Caminero - D'Rays

# 42 - Bert Campaneris - A's

# 43 - Darren Baker - Nationals (Rated Rookie)

# 46 - Johnny Bench - Reds

# 51 - Cliff Lee - Phillies

# 53 - John Smoltz - Braves

# 60 - Pee Wee Reese - Brooklyn Dodgers

# 61 - David Ortiz - Red Sox

# 64 - Will Clark - Rangers

# 68 - Billy Martin - A's

# 69 - Dwight Gooden - Mets

# 78 - Andrew Walters - Guardians (Rated Rookie)

# 81 - Zebby Matthews - Twins

# 82 - Mike Schmidt - Phillies

# 84 - Sammy Sosa - Cubs

# 92 - Chipper Jones - Braves

# 94 - Jack Leiter - Rangers

# 100 - Mike Mussina - Yankees

# 106 - Braylon Doughty - Guardians (Rated Prospect)

# 113 - Agustin Ramirez - Marlins (Rated Prospect)

# 137 - Bryce Cunningham - Yankees (Rated Prospect)

# 147 - Jared Thomas - Rockies - (Rated Prospect)

# 153 - Brice Matthews - Astros (Rated Prospect)

# 157 - Drew Gilbert - Mets to Giants (Rated Prospect)

# 173 - Cam Smith - Astros (Rated Prospect)

# 186 - Owen Caissie - Cubs (Rated Prospect)

# 196 - Tekoah Roby - Cardinals (Rated Prospect)

 

 

 

__________________________

RED AND BLUE LASER:

__________________________

# 26 - Manny Ramirez - Red Sox

# 55 - Lou Gehrig - Yankees

# 135 - Carson Williams - D'Rays (Rated Prospect)

 

 

 

__________________

R O C K E T S:

__________________

# 11 - Jake Arrieta - Cubs

# 14 - Bucky Dent - Yankees

# 17 - Roger Clemens - Red Sox

# 22 - Jairo Iriarte - White Sox (Rated Rookie)

# 26 - Manny Ramirez - Red Sox

# 51 - Cliff Lee - Phillies

# 58 - Hurston Waldrep - Braves

# 92 - Chipper Jones - Braves

# 97 - Frank Thomas - White Sox

# 102 - Kyle Teel - White Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 112 - Slade Caldwell - D'Backs (Rated Prospect)

# 123 - Konnor Griffin - Pirates (Rated Prospect)

# 127 - Rintaro Sasaki - Stanford Cardinals (NCAA - Rated Prospect)

# 147 - Jared Thomas - Rockies (Rated Prospect)

# 180 - Colt Emerson - Mariners (Rated Prospect)

 

___________________

SILVER DIE CUT:

___________________

# 71 - Numbered 67/75 - Will Wagner - Blue Jays (Rated Rookie)

 

 

___________

T E A L:

___________

# 58 - Numbered 13/25 - Hurston Waldrep - Braves

 

 

 

OPTIC PARALLELS:

__________

B A S E:

__________

# 1 - Luisangel Acuna - Mets

# 4 - Carlos Beltran - Yankees

# 5 - Coby Mayo - Orioles

# 6 - Albert Pujols - Cardinals

# 7 - Rickey Henderson - A's

# 8 - Heston Kjerstad - Orioles

# 9 - Greg Maddux - Braves

# 10 - Edgar Martinez - Mariners

# 12 - Catfish Hunter - A's

# 13 - Andruw Jones - Braves

# 14 - Bucky Dent - Yankees

# 15 - Buster Posey - Giants

# 16 - Alex Gordon - Royals

# 19 - Jim Kaat - Twins

# 20 - Tim Hudson - A's

# 22 - Jairo Iriarte - White Sox (Rated Rookie)

# 23 - Tony Oliva - Twins

# 24 - Ken Griffey Jr. - Reds

# 25 - Jeff Bagwell - Astros

# 28 - Dustin Pedroia - Red Sox

# 29 - Paul Skenes - Pirates

# 30 - Thomas Saggese - Cardinals (Rated Rookie)

# 31 - Jim Thome - Phillies

# 32 - Deion Sanders - Reds

# 34 - Jim Rice - Red Sox

# 35 - Austin Wells - Yankees

# 36 - Adam Wainwright - Cardinals

# 38 - Terry Francona - Red Sox (Manager)

# 39 - Connor Norby - Marlins

# 40 - Junior Caminero - D'Rays

# 42 - Bert Campaneris - A's

# 45 - Pedro Martinez - Red Sox

# 46 - Johnny Bench - Reds

# 47 - Spencer Arrighetti - Astros

# 48 - Mike Piazza - Dodgers

# 49 - Jake Peavy - Padres

# 51 - Cliff Lee - Phillies

# 53 - John Smoltz - Braves

# 55 - Lou Gehrig - Yankees

# 56 - Tony Perez - Red Sox

# 59 - Ryan Braun - Brewers

# 60 - Pee Wee Reese - Brooklyn

# 63 - Jim Leyland - Tigers (Manager)

# 64 - Will Clark - Rangers

# 65 - Randy Johnson - D'Backs

# 66 - Yadier Molina - Cardinals

# 68 - Billy Martin - A's

# 72 - Johnny Mize - Yankees

# 73 - Brooks Lee - Twins

# 74 - Rhett Lowder - Reds (Rated Rookie)

# 76 - Jacob Wilson - A's

# 77 - Evan Carter - Rangers

# 78 - Andrew Walters - Guardians (RR)

# 80 - Colt Keith - Tigers

# 81 - Zebby Matthews - Twins (Rated Rookie)

# 82 - Mike Schmidt - Phillies

# 83 - Jimmy Rollins - Phillies

# 84 - Sammy Sosa - Cubs

# 86 - Robin Ventura - White Sox

# 87 - Alex Rodriguez - Rangers

# 88 - Cal Ripken Jr. - Orioles

# 89 - Michael Young - Rangers

# 90 - Juan Marichal - Giants

# 92 - Chipper Jones - Braves

# 93 - Ian Kinsler - Rangers

# 94 - Jack Leiter - Rangers

# 96 - Jake Bloss - Blue Jays

# 98 - Don Mattingly - Yankees

# 100 - Mike Mussina - Yankees

# 102 - Kyle Teel - White Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 107 - Chase DeLauter - Guardians (Rated Prospect)

# 109 - Marcelo Mayer - Red Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 112 - Slade Caldwell - D'Backs (Rated Prospect)

# 117 - Braylon Payne - Brewers (Rated Prospect)

# 119 - Brandon Sproat - Mets (Rated Prospect)

# 122 - Kevin Alcantara - Cubs (Rated Prospect)

# 125 - Dalton Rushing - Dodgers (Rated Prospect)

# 129 - Arjun Nimmala - Blue Jays (Rated Prospect)

# 133 - Thatcher Hurd - Yankees (Rated Prospect)

# 135 - Carson Williams - D'Rays (Rated Prospect)

# 139 - Colson Montgomery - Cubs (Rated Prospect)

# 145 - Christian Moore - Angels (Rated Prospect)

# 148 - Leo De Vries - Padres (Rated Prospect)

# 149 - Caleb Lomavita - Nationals (Rated Prospect)

# 155 - Roman Anthony - Red Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 158 - Carson Benge - Mets (Rated Prospect)

# 162 - Jesus Made - Brewers (Rated Prospect)

# 164 - Levi Sterling - Pirates (Rated Prospect)

# 165 - Dillon Head - Marlins (Rated Prospect)

# 166 - Tink Hence - Cardinals (Rated Prospect)

# 175 - Franklin Arias - Red Sox (Rated Prospect)

# 176 - Walker Janek - Astros (Rated Prospect)

# 186 - Owen Caissie - Cubs (Rated Prospect)

# 187 - James Tibbs III - Giants (Rated Prospect)

# 196 - Tekoah Roby - Cardinals (Rated Prospect)

# 198 - Ryan Clifford - Mets (Rated Prospect)

 

 

OPTIC PRIZMS:

______________________

BLACK PANDORA:

______________________

 

 

 

_____________________

BLACK VELOCITY:

_____________________

# 67 - Numbered 20/39 - Eddie Matthews - Milwaukee Braves

# 120 - Numbered 8/39 - Kaelen Culpepper - Twins (Rated Prospect)

 

 

___________________

BLUE VELOCITY:

___________________

# 11 - Jake Arrieta - Cubs (2)

# 18 - Kumar Rocker - Rangers (Rated Rookie)

# 34 - Jim Rice - Red Sox

# 35 - Austin Wells - Yankees

# 52 - Jace Jung - Tigers (Rated Rookie) x 2

# 69 - Dwight Gooden - Mets

# 76 - Jacob Wilson - A's

# 77 - Evan Carter - Rangers

# 93 - Ian Kinsler - Rangers (2)

# 103 - Sebastion Walcott - Rangers (Rated Prospect)

# 104 - David Shields - Royals (Rated Prospect)

# 114 - Cooper Pratt - Brewers (Rated Prospect)

# 124 - Malcolm Moore - Rangers (Rated Prospect)

# 157 - Drew Gilbert - Mets to Giants (Rated Prospect)

# 167 - Jett Williams - Mets (Rated Prospect)

# 173 - Cam Smith - Astros (Rated Prospect)

# 177 - Griff O'Ferrall - Orioles (Rated Prospect)

# 182 - Carter Holton - Braves (Rated Prospect)

# 183 - Kash Mayfield - Padres (Rated Prospect)

# 192 - JD Dix - D'Backs (Rated Prospect)

# 193 - Bubba Chandler - Pirates (Rated Prospect)

 

 

____________

CIRCLES:

____________

# 3 - Ozzie Smith - Cardinals

# 6 - Albert Pujols - Cardinals

# 16 - Alex Gordon - Royals

# 20 - Tim Hudson - A's

# 21 - Ivan Rodriguez - Rangers

# 24 - Ken Griffey Jr. - Reds

# 36 - Adam Wainwright - Cardinals

# 44 - Nolan Ryan - Rangers

# 47 - Spencer Arrighetti - Astros

# 57 - Jim Palmer - Orioles

# 62 - Prince Fielder - Brewers

# 74 - Rhett Lowder - Reds

# 78 - Andrew Walters - Guardians

# 79 - Miguel Tejada - Orioles

# 82 - Mike Schmidt - Phillies

# 97 - Frank Thomas - White Sox

# 107 - Chase DeLauter - Guardians (Rated Prospect)

# 108 - George Lombard Jr. - Yankees (Rated Prospect)

# 117 - Braylon Payne - Brewers (Rated Prospect)

# 134 - Chase Dollander - Rockies (Rated Prospect)

# 140 - Jarlin Susana - Nationals (Rated Prospect)

# 147 - Jared Thomas - Rockies (Rated Prospect)

 

 

__________________

CRACKED ICE:

__________________ 

# 22 - Numbered 1/25 - Jairo Iriarte - White Sox

# 194 - Numbered 12/25 - Charlie Condon - Rockies (Rated Prospect)

 

 

__________

GREEN:

__________

 # 90 - Numbered 16/149 - Juan Marichal - Giants

# 170 - Numbered 140/149 - Ethan Anderson - Orioles

 

 

_________

HOLO:

_________

# 4 - Carlos Beltran - Yankees

# 5 - Coby Mayo - Orioles

# 13 - Andruw Jones - Braves

# 23 - Tony Oliva - Twins

# 54 - Dylan Crews - Nationals

# 57 - Jim Palmer - Orioles

# 63 - Jim Leyland - Tigers

# 98 - Don Mattingly - Yankees

# 105 - Brody Brecht - Rockies (Rated Prospect)

# 122 - Kevin Alcantara - Cubs (Rated Prospect)

# 152 - Cole Young - Mariners

# 156 - Billy Amick - Twins (Rated Prospect)

# 197 - Starlyn Caba - Marlins (Rated Prospect)

 

 

___________________

ORANGE HOLO:

___________________

# 59 - Numbered 4/199 - Ryan Braun - Brewers

# 89 - Numbered 147/199 - Michael Young - Rangers

# 94 - Numbered 181/199 - Jack Leiter - Rangers

# 160 - Numbered 192/199 - Hagen Smith - White Sox (Rated Prospect)

 

 

______________________

ORANGE VELOCITY:

_______________________

# 20 - Tim Hudson - A's

# 67 - Eddie Matthews - Milwaukee Braves

# 100 - Mike Mussina - Yankees

# 132 - Jurrangelo Cijntje - Mariners (Rated Prospect)

# 140 - Jarlin Susana - Nationals (Rated Prospect)

# 188 - Kyle DeBarge - Twins (Rated Prospect)

 

 

____________________

PINK VELOCITY:

____________________

# 193 - Numbered 67/79 - Bubba Chandler - Pirates (Rated Prospect)

 

 

________

R E D:

________

# 72 - Numbered 76/99 - Johnny Mize - Yankees

 

 

 

I N S E R T S:

__________________

BOMB SQUAD:

__________________

# 1 - Chris Davis - Orioles

# 2 - Spencer Jones - Yankees

# 4 - Prince Fielder - Tigers

# 6 - Cam Smith - Astros (2)

# 7 - Reggie Jackson - Yankees

# 9 - David Ortiz - Red Sox

# 13 - Carlos Beltran - Mets

# 16 - Tommy White - A's

# 17 - Austin Wells - Yankees

# 20 - Mike Schmidt - Phillies

 

 

______________________

DIAMOND KINGS:

______________________

# 1 - Slade Caldwell - D'Backs

# 7 - Sebastian Walcott - Rangers

# 11 - Travis Bazzana - Guardians

 

 

_________________________

DIAMOND MARVELS:

_________________________

# 1 - Paul Skenes - Pirates

# 4 - Evan Carter - Rangers

# 6 - Nick Yorke - Pirates (RC)

# 8 - Travis Bazzana - Guardians

# 14 - Luisangel Acuna - Rangers (RC)

# 15 - Kumar Rocker - Rangers (RC)

# 16 - Aaron Judge - Yankees (2)

# 17 - Jordan Lawlar - D'Backs

# 18 - Seaver King - Nationals

 

RED XPLOSION # 19 - Numbered 92/99 - Aidan Miller - Phillies

 

 

__________________

ELITE SERIES:

__________________

# 1 - Ozzie Smith - Cardinals

# 4 - Rhett Lowder - Reds (RC) x 2

# 7 - Aaron Judge - Yankees

# 14 - Dylan Crews - Nationals (RC)

# 16 - Spencer Jones - Yankees

# 19 - Cal Ripken Jr. - Orioles

 

BLUE XPLOSION:

# 19 - Numbered 36/49 - Cal Ripken Jr. - Orioles

PENDING TRADE W/JACK PALLEN - 9/28/25

 

GREEN LASER:

# 5 - Kristian Campbell - Red Sox

# 14 - Dylan Crews - Nationals (RC)

 

 

__________________

MILESTONES:

__________________

# 2 - Trevor Hoffman - Padres (1,133 Career Strikeouts)

# 8 - Don Mattingly - Yankees (.307 Career Batting Average)

# 11 - Mike Piazza - Mets (12-Time All-Star)

# 14 - Gary Sheffeld - Yankees (509 Career Home Runs)

# 17 - Ryne Sandberg - Cubs (282 Career Home Runs)

# 18 - Barry Larkin - Reds (.295 Career Batting Average) x 2

 

GREEN LASER:

# 14 - Gary Sheffeld - Yankees (509 Career Home Runs)

# 15 - Jack Morris - Tigers (2,478 Career Strikeouts)

 

HOLO:

# 8 - Numbered 132/199 - Don Mattingly - Yankees (.307 Career Batting Average)

 

 

__________________

UNLEASHED:

__________________

# 3 - Aaron Judge - Yankees

# 6 - Rintaro Sasaki - Stanford

# 7 - Tommy White - A's

# 8 - Spencer Jones - Yankees

# 10 - Jackson Chourio - Brewers

# 17 - Braden Montgomery - White Sox

# 18 - Carson Benge - Mets

 

PURPLE ICE # 18 - Numbered 21/99 - Carson Benge - Mets

 

 

 

____________________________________

MEMORABILIA LANE:

____________________________________

JERSEY KINGS:

# JK-MM - Malcolm Moore - Rangers

 

 

BLUE ICE PARALLELS: 

# JK-GO - Griff O'Ferrall - Orioles

# JK-KR - Kumar Rocker - Rangers

 

 

RED PARALLEL # JK-DC - Numbered 65/99 - Dylan Crews - Nationals

 

 

PROSPECT - JERSEY KINGS:

BLUE ICE PARALLEL:

# PJK-BR - Bryce Rainer - Tigers

# PJK-CB - Carson Benge - Mets

# PJK-CS - Cam Smith - Astros

# PJK-NK - Nick Kurtz - A's

 

 

ORANGE ICE PARALLEL:

# PJK-BM - Braden Montgomery - White Sox

# PJK-KG - Konnor Griffen - Pirates

 

 

 

PURPLE PARALLEL:

# PJK-SK - Numbered 17/49 - Seaver King - Nationals

 

 

 

A U T O G R A P H S:

OPTIC SIGNATURE:

HOLO # 164 - Levi Sterling - Pirates (Rated Prospect)

 

 

 

SIGNATURE SERIES:

# SG - BMG - Braden Montgomery - White Sox

# SG - RAR - Roderick Arias - Yankees

# SG - RVT - Robin Ventura - White Sox

 

LASER PARALLELS:

# SG - APK - Andrew Pinckney - Nationals

# SG - CLM - Colson Montgomery - Cubs

 

 

 

 

 

~ HISTORIC AUTOGRAPH & CARD COMPANY ~

ALL-TIME SETS:

 

 

HERE'S WHAT THEY SAY...

2025 Historic Autographs All-Time Sets feature some of the biggest names from the most popular sets in the hobby.

Our design team has re-imagined each card - the 110-card set and the checklist include only the best of the best subjects.

Each card in the set is available in each of the 8 tiers.

 

HERE'S WHAT I SAY...

It's always easy to critique a set design by pointing out "This is what I would have done with the set"...

 

I absolutely LOVE the use of vibrant (almost 3-D like) foil on the card fronts...

The use of various old-time sets each player appeared in once upon a time...

That said, I would've reduced in size, by half, the ALL-TIME SETS logo at the bottom of each...I think that distracts from

the overall impact...

 

On the reverse, each Print Run is clearly marked, making it easy to assign each card to the various tiers + a list of the original cards the players are represented on + a highlighted box identifying which card each represents.

 

Overall, these really are some cool foil cards, and the mainstream companies dropped the ball by not producing this product. You've gotta love the underdog!

 

HERE ARE THE SPECIFICS OF EACH TIER + SPECIAL INSERTS:

- TIER 1 // Print Run of 800

- TIER 2 // Print Run of 400

- TIER 3 // Print Run of 200

- TIER 4 // Print Run of 150

- TIER 5 // Print Run of 100

- TIER 6 // Print Run of 75

- TIER 7 // Print Run of 50

- TIER 8 // Print Run of 25

 

Included inserts:
• Cracked Ice cards (#/4) (pull rate 1:15 boxes)
• Buyback vintage cards (pull rate 1:14 boxes)
• 1/1 Printing Plates (pull rate 1:14 boxes)
• Cut signature cards (pull rate 1:11 boxes)
• 1/1 parallel cards (pull rate 1:7 boxes)
• Written Word cards (pull rate 1:6 boxes)
• Stained Glass cards (#/15) (pull rate 1:5 boxes)

I've also included a short bio for each player...

 

 

 

 

__________________________________________________________

TIER 1 / Print Run = 800:

___________________________________________________________

 

 

# 1 - CHIEF BENDER - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - HOF 1953 (Veterans Committee)

(x 4)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1903-1914)

- Baltimore Terrapins (1915)

- Philadelphia Phillies (1916-1917)

- White Sox (1925)

Charles Albert "Chief" Bender (May 5, 1884 – May 22, 1954) was a Native American pitcher who played during the 1900s

and 1910s - In 1911, Bender tied a record by pitching 3 complete games in a single World Series.

He finished his career with a 212–127 win-loss record for a .625 winning percentage and a career 2.46 ERA.

 

 

# 2 - CHRISTY MATHEWSON - 1909 T206 (White Cap) - NY Giants - HOF 1936

(x 5)

Christopher Mathewson (August 12, 1880 – October 7, 1925), nicknamed "Big Six," "the Christian Gentleman," "Matty," and "the Gentleman's Hurler," was a pitcher who played 17 seasons for the NY Giants. Among the most dominant pitchers in baseball, he ranks in the all-time top 10 in several key pitching categories, including wins, shutouts, and ERA.

 

 

# 3 - CHRISTY MATHEWSON - 1909 T206 (Dark Cap) - HOF 1936

(x 5)

 

 

# 4 - CHRISTY MATHEWSON - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - NY Giants - HOF 1936

(x 5)

 

 

# 5 - CY YOUNG - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - HOF 1937

(x 2)

- Cleveland Spiders (1890-1898)

- St. Louis Perfectos/Cardinals (1899-1900)

- Boston Americans/Red Sox (1901-1908)

- Cleveland Naps (1909-1911)

- Boston Rustles (1911)

Denton True "Cy" Young (March 29, 1867 – November 4, 1955) worked on his family's farm as a youth before starting his professional baseball career. Young entered the major leagues in 1890 with the NL's Cleveland Spiders, and pitched for them

until 1898. He was then transferred to the Cardinals franchise. In 1901, Young jumped to the AL, and played for the Red Sox franchise until 1908, helping them win the '03 World Series.

He finished his career with the Cleveland Naps and the Boston Rustlers, retiring in 1911.

Young was one of the hardest-throwing pitchers in the game early in his career. After his speed diminished, he relied more on his control and remained effective into his forties. By the time Young retired, he had established numerous pitching records, some of which have stood for over a century. He's often regarded as one of the greatest pitchers of all time, as well as a pioneer of modern pitching - and remarkably, was inducted into the Hall on the SECOND ballot.

In 1956, one year after his death, the CY Young Award was created to annually honor the best pitcher in the Major Leagues (later each League) of the previous season, cementing his name as synonymous with excellence in pitching.

 

 

# 6 - CY YOUNG - 1909 T206 (Glove Shows) - HOF 1937

(x 2)

 

 

# 7 - CY YOUNG - 1909 T206 (Bare Hands) - HOF 1937

 

 

# 8 - EDDIE COLLINS - 1909 T206 - HOF 1939

- Philadelphia Athletics (1906-1914)

- Chicago White Sox (1915-1926)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1927-1930)

Edward Trowbridge Collins Sr. (May 2, 1887 – March 25, 1951), nicknamed "Cocky", was a player, manager,  and executive.

Collins holds major league career records in several categories and is among the top few players in several other categories.

In 1925, Collins became just the sixth person to join the 3.000 hit club – and the last for the next 17 seasons. Collins is the only non-Yankee to win five or more World Series titles with the same club as a player. He is also the only player to have been a member of all five World Series championships won by the Athletics during the franchise's time in Philadelphia.

 

 

# 10 - HOME RUN BAKER - 1909 T206 - HOF 1955 (Veterans Committee)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1908-1914)

- NY Yankees (1916-1919 // 1921-1922)

John Franklin "Home Run" Baker (March 13, 1886 – June 28, 1963), also known as Frank Baker, was a 3rd baseman.

Although he never hit more than 12 home runs in a season and hit only 96 in his major league career, Baker has been called the "original home run king of the majors".

Baker was a member of the Athletics' storied $100,000 infield, and helped the Athletics win the 1910, 1911, and 1913 World Series. After a contract dispute, the Athletics sold Baker to the Yankees, where he and Wally Pipp helped the Yankees' offense. Baker appeared with the Yankees in the '21 and '22 World Series, though the Yankees lost both, before retiring.

 

 

# 11 - HONUS WAGNER - 1909 T206 - HOF 1936

- Louisville Colonels (1897 - 1899)

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1900-1917)

Johannes Peter "Honus" Wagner (February 24, 1874 – December 6, 1955) was a shortstop who played 21 seasons...

Nicknamed "the Flying Dutchman" due to his superb speed and German heritage, Wagner was a prototypical 5-tool player,

known for being a versatile defender who could combine a strong throwing arm with the ability to play almost any defensive position as well as being capable of hitting for average and for power. He is widely regarded as the greatest shortstop of all time.

 

 

# 12 - JOE TINKER - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - HOF 1946 (Old Timers Committee)

Joseph Bert Tinker (July 27, 1880 – July 27, 1948) played from 1902 through 1916 for the Chicago Cubs & Cincinnati Reds (MLB) and the Chicago Whales of the Federal League.

Tinker was a member of the Chicago Cubs dynasty that won four pennants and two World Series championships between 1906 and 1910. After playing one season with Cincinnati in 1913, he became one of the first stars to jump to the upstart Federal League in 1914. After leading the Whales to the pennant in 1915, he returned to the Cubs as their player/manager in 1916, his final season in MLB.

 

 

# 12 - JOE TINKER - 1909 T206 (American Caramel)

HOF 1946 (Old Timers Committee)

 

 

# 17 - SAM CRAWFORD - 1909 T206 (With Bat) - HOF 1957

(x 2)

 

 

# 18 - SAM CRAWFORD - 1909 T206 (Throwing) - HOF 1957

(x 3)

Reds (1899 - 1902)

Tigers (1903 - 1917)

Samuel Earl Crawford (April 18, 1880 – June 15, 1968), nicknamed "Wahoo Sam", was an outfielder - He batted and threw left-handed - Taking advantage of the competition for players between the National and American leagues, Crawford left the Reds and joined the Tigers.

He was one of the greatest sluggers of his era, leading his league in homers twice and RBIs 3 times. He still holds the MLB record for most career triples with 309, a record likely never to be broken.

While with the Tigers, Crawford played alongside superstar Ty Cobb, and the two had an intense rivalry while also helping Detroit win three AL championships from 1907 to 1909.

 

 

 

# 19 - TRIS SPEAKER - 1909 T206 - HOF 1939

(x2)

- Boston Americans / Red Sox (1907-1915)

- Cleveland Indians (1916-1926)

- Washington Senators (1927)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1928)

Tristram Edgar Speaker (April 4, 1888 – December 8, 1958), nicknamed "the Gray Eagle", was a center fielder from 1907 to 1928. Considered one of the greatest players in the history of Major League Baseball, he compiled a career batting average of .345 (9th all-time), and his 792 career doubles represent an MLB career record. His 3,514 hits are 5th on the all-time hits list. Defensively, Speaker holds career records for assists, double plays, and unassisted double plays by an outfielder. He held the major league career record for putouts by a center fielder (6,592) until he was surpassed by Willie Mays in 1971. His fielding glove was known as "the place where triples go to die."

 

# 20 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Red Portrait) - HOF 1936

(x 4)

- Detroit Tigers (1905-1926)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1927-1928)

Tyrus Raymond Cobb (December 18, 1886[1] – July 17, 1961), nicknamed "the Georgia Peach", played center field.

He spent 22 years with the Tigers and served as the team's player/manager for the last six and finished his career with Philly.

In 1936, Cobb received the most votes of any player on the inaugural ballot for the Hall - receiving 222 out of a possible 226

votes (98.2%); no other player received a higher percentage of votes until Tom Seaver in 1992. In 1999, Sporting News ranked Cobb third on its list of "Baseball's 100 Greatest Players."

 

Cobb is credited with setting 90 MLB records throughout his career - He won more batting titles than any other player...

During his 24-year career, he hit .300 in a record 23 consecutive seasons, with the exception being his rookie season.

He also hit .400 in three different seasons, a record he shares with three other players. Cobb has more five-hit games (14) than any other player in major league history. He also holds the career record for stealing home (54 times) and for stealing second base, third base, and home in succession (4 times), and is still the youngest player to compile 4,000 hits and score 2,000 runs. His combined total of 4,065 runs scored and runs batted in (after adjusting for home runs) is still the highest ever produced by any major league player. Cobb also ranks first in games played by an outfielder in major league history (2,934). He retained many other records for almost a half century or more.

 

 

# 21 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Green Portrait) - HOF 1936

(x 2)

 

 

# 22 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Bat On Shoulder) - HOF

 

 

# 23 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Bat off Shoulder) - HOF 1936

(x 2)

 

 

# 24 - WALTER JOHNSON - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - HOF 1936 (Inaugural 5)

 

 

# 25 - WALTER JOHNSON - 1909 T206 (Hands at Chest) - HOF 1936 (Inaugural 5)

Walter Perry Johnson (November 6, 1887 – December 10, 1946), nicknamed "Barney" and "the Big Train", was a player and manager. He played his entire 21-year career as a right-handed pitcher for the Washington Senators (1907-1927), and served

as manager of the Senators from 1929 through 1932 and then the Cleveland Indians from 1933 through 1935.

Generally regarded as one of the greatest pitchers in baseball history, Johnson established several records, some of which remain unbroken: He remains by far the all-time career leader in shutouts with 110, second in wins with 417, and fourth in complete games with 531. He held the career record in K's from 1919, passing Christy Mathewson's mark of 2,507...until 1983, when three players...Steve Carlton, Nolan Ryan, and Gaylord Perry passed his career total of 3,508. On July 22, 1923, Johnson became the only pitcher to record 3,000 K's and remained as such until Bob Gibson matched the feat on July 17, 1974. Johnson led the league in strikeouts for 12 total seasons, 8 of which were consecutive, both all-time records. He is the only pitcher in Major League history to record more than 400 wins and strike out more than 3,500 batters.

 

 

# 26 - ZACK WHEAT - 1909 T206 - HOF 1959 (Veterans Committee)

(X 4)

Zachariah Davis Wheat (May 23, 1888 – March 11, 1972), nicknamed "Buck", played as a left fielder from 1909 to 1927, most notably as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers (known as the Robins at that time).

After 18 seasons in Brooklyn, he played his final season with the Philadelphia Athletics.

Although Wheat spent the first part of his career playing in the "Dead Ball Era", he hit over .300 in 13 seasons and won the NL Batting Title in 1918. He ended his career with a .317 career batting average and remains the Dodgers all-time franchise leader in games, at bats, plate appearances, hits, doubles, triples, and total bases.

 

 

# 27 - SHOELESS JOE JACKSON - 1914 CRACKER JACK

(X 3)

 

 

# 28 - CONNIE MACK - 1915 CRACKER JACK - HOF 1937

(x 2)

- Washington Nationals (1886-1889)

- Buffalo Bisons (1890)

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1891-1896)

Cornelius McGillicuddy (December 22, 1862 – February 8, 1956), better known as Connie Mack, was a catcher, manager, and finally a team owner. Mack holds records for the most wins (3,731), losses (3,948), ties (76), and games managed (7,755) in 

MLB history - He managed the Philadelphia Athletics for its first 50 seasons of play, starting in 1901; was at least part-owner from 1901 to 1954; and retired after the 1950 season at age 87.

EIGHTY-SEVEN?!?! THAT ALONE QUALIFIES HIM FOR THE HALL!

 

 

# 29 - LOU GEHRIG - 1933 DeLONG - HOF

-NY Yankees (1923-1939)

Henry Louis Gehrig (June 19, 1903 – June 2, 1941), born Heinrich Ludwig Gehrig, played first base for 17 seasons with the Yankees - He was renowned for his prowess as a hitter and for his durability, which earned him the nickname "the Iron Horse".

 

A native New Yorker, he signed with the Yankees on April 29, 1923, and quickly went to work accumulating records:

Regarded as one of the greatest players of all time, he was an All-Star 7 consecutive times, a Triple Crown winner once, and an AL MVP twice...not to mention a member of 6 World Series championship teams - Until Arod came along years later, he carried the career grand slam record for the Yanks (23), as well as most consecutive games player (2.130), a record that stood for 56-years and was considered unbreakable until another iron man (Cal Ripken Jr.) came along.

He had a career .340 batting average, with a .632 slugging average - a .447 on-base average - hit 493 dingers, 1,995 runs batted in, and was also one of only 21 players to hit four homers in a single game. 

 

The curtain fell as Gehrig's consecutive game streak ended on May 2, 1939, when he voluntarily took himself out of the lineup, stunning both players and fans, after his performance in the field had become hampered by an undiagnosed ailment; it was subsequently confirmed to be ALS,  an incurable neuromuscular illness that since then is sometimes referred to as "Lou Gehrig's disease".

 

Gehrig never played again and retired in 1939 at age 36. Two weeks later, the ball club held a Lou Gehrig Appreciation Day on July 4, 1939, at the close of which he delivered his speech declaring himself the "luckiest man on the face of the earth" at Yankees Stadium - Two years later, Gehrig died of complications from ALS.

 

 

# 30 - JIMMIE FOXX - 1933 DELONG - HOF 1951

(x 4)

- Philadelphia athletics (1925-1935)

- Boston Red Sox (1936-1942)

- Chicago Cubs (1942, 1944)

- Philadelphia Phillies (1945)

(James Emory Foxx (October 22, 1907 – July 21, 1967), nicknamed "Double X" and "the Beast", played 20 seasons.

A tremendous power hitter, Foxx retired with the second most homers, behind only Babe Ruth, and 5th most RBIs.  

Considered one of the greatest hitters in baseball history, Foxx became the ninth player to win a triple crown, and set a

then-record for most MVP awards with three. His 58 home runs hit in 1932 were third-most all-time in a season at the time,

his 438 total bases collected that same season are still fifth most all time, and he is one of only seven batters to accumulate

over 400 total bases in a season more than once. On September 24, 1940, Foxx became the second member of the 500

home run club. 

 

 

# 31 - CHARLIE GEHRINGER - 1933 DELONG - HOF 1949

Charles Leonard Gehringer (May 11, 1903 – January 21, 1993), nicknamed "the Mechanical Man", was a 2nd baseman who

played for the Detroit Tigers for 19 seasons from 1924 to 1942 - He compiled a .320 career batting average with 2,839 hits 

and 1,427 RBIs.

He had seven seasons with more than 200 hits and was the starting second baseman and played every inning of the first six All-Star games. He won the AL batting title in 1937 with a .371 average and won the AL MVP award. He helped lead the Tigers to three American League pennants (1934-1935, and 1940) - and the '35 World Series.

Gehringer was also one of the best fielding second basemen in history. At the time of his retirement, he ranked first in MLB 

history with 1,444 double plays turned at second base (now seventh in MLB history). He remains among MLB's all-time leaders with 7,068 assists at second base (second in MLB history) and 5,369 putouts (sixth in MLB history).

Gehringer later served as the Tigers general manager during the 1952 and 1953 seasons. After his playing career ended, he operated a company serving as an agent for manufacturers of automobile interior furnishings. In 1983 his jersey (No. 2) was

retired by the Tigers.

 

 

# 32 - LEFTY GROVE - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1947

(X 2)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1925-1933)

- Red Sox (1934-1941)

Robert Moses "LeftyGrove (March 6, 1900 – May 22, 1975) was one of the greatest pitchers in baseball history.

After having success in the minors during the early 1920s, Grove became a star in the Big Show, leading the American League

in wins in four separate seasons, in K's seven consecutive seasons, and had the league's lowest ERA a record 9 times. Over the course of the three years from 1929 to 1931, he twice won the pitcher's Triple Crown, leading the league in wins, strikeouts, and ERA, while amassing a 79–15 record and leading the Athletics to three straight AL championships. Overall, Grove won 300 games in his 17-year MLB career.

 

 

# 33 - BILLY HERMAN - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1975 (Veterans Committee)

(X 2)

- Cubs (1931-1941)

- Brooklyn (1941-1943, 1946)

- Boston Braves (1946)

- Pirates (1947)

William Jennings Bryan Herman (July 7, 1909 – September 5, 1992) was a 2nd baseman and manager during the 1930s and 1940s. He reached the World Series 4 times (1932, 1935, 1938, 1941) but lost each time. Known for his stellar defense and consistent batting, Herman still holds many NL defensive records for second basemen.

 

 

# 35 - CHUCK KLEIN - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1980 (Veterans Committee)

(x 4)

- Phillies (1928-1933)

- Cubs (1934-1936)

- Phillies (1936-1939)

- Pirates (1939)

- Phillies (1940-1944)

Charles Herbert Klein (October 7, 1904 – March 28, 1958), nicknamed "the Hoosier Hammer" because of his Indiana roots,

was an outfielder who led the NL in home runs four times and won the NL MVP Award in 1932. In 1933 he became one of

six (at the time) NL players to win a batting Triple Crown. In 1930 he set the NL record for extra-base hits with 107.

On July 10, 1936, he hit four home runs in a game, becoming the fourth player to do so - Klein was the first player to be

selected to the All-Star Game as a member of two different teams (Phillies and Cubs).

 

 

# 36 - HACK WILSON - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1979 (Veterans Committee)

- NY Giants (1923-1925)

- Cubs (1926-1931)

- Brooklyn Dodgers (1932-1934)

- Phillies (1934)

Lewis Robert "Hack" Wilson (April 26, 1900 – November 23, 1948)

Despite his diminutive stature, he was one of the most accomplished power hitters in the game during the late 1920s and

early 1930s - his 1930 season with the Cubs is widely considered one of the most memorable individual single-season hitting performances in baseball history. Highlights included 56 homers, the NL record for 68 years; and 191 RBI's a mark yet to be surpassed. "For a brief span of a few years," wrote a sportswriter of the day, "this hammered down little strongman actually rivaled the mighty Babe Ruth."

While Wilson's combativeness and excessive alcohol consumption made him one of the most colorful sports personalities

of his era, his drinking and fighting undoubtedly contributed to a premature end to his athletic career and, ultimately, his

premature death.

 

 

# 37 - GABBY HARTNETT - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1955 (x2)

(x 2)

- Chicago Cubs (1922-1940)

- NY Giants (1941)

Charles Leo "Gabby" Hartnett (December 20, 1900 – December 20, 1972), also nicknamed "Old Tomato Face",[1] was a catcher

and a manager - He played almost his entire career with the Cubs, and spent the final season of his career as a player-coach 

with the Giants. After his playing career, Hartnett continued his involvement in baseball as a coach and as a minor league manager.

Hartnett was an all-around player, performing well both offensively and defensively. Known for his strong and accurate throwing arm, he routinely led the NL catchers in throwing out base stealers, and was the first catcher to hit more than 20 longballs in a season.[3] During the course of his career, Hartnett took part in some of the more memorable events in Major League Baseball history including: being behind the plate for Babe Ruth's "called shot" during the '32 World Series, Carl Hubbell's strike-out performance in the '34 All-Star Game, and Dizzy Dean's career-altering injury during the '37 All-Star Game. 

However, the greatest moment of Hartnett's career came with one week left in the 1938 season, when he hit a game-winning home run in the bottom of the ninth inning to put the Cubs in first place. The event, which occurred as darkness descended onto Wrigley Field, became immortalized as the "Homer in the Gloamin".

 

 

# 38 - MICKEY COCHRANE - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1947 (x 2)

(X 2)

Gordon Stanley "Mickey" Cochrane, nicknamed "Black Mike", was an American professional baseball player, manager and coach. He played in Major League Baseball as a catcher for the Philadelphia Athletics and Detroit Tigers. Cochrane was considered one of the best catchers in baseball history.

 

 

# 39 - EPPA RIXEY - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1963

(x 2)

- Phillies (1912-1917, 1919-1920)

- Reds (1921-1933)

Eppa Rixey Jr. (May 3, 1891 – February 28, 1963), was a pitcher nicknamed "Jephtha" - He was best known as the National Leagues leader in career victories for a leftie, with 266 wins...until Warren Spahn surpassed his toral in '59. 

 

 

# 40 - TRIS SPEAKER - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1937

(x 2)

 

 

# 41 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1933 GOUDEY- HOF 1937

(x 4)

- Phillies

- Cleveland Bronchos/Naps

- Indians

HOW POPULAR WAS LAJOIE DURING HIS TENURE IN CLEVELAND? FANS ELECTED TO CHANGE THE NAME OF THE TEAM TO "THE NAPS" IN HONOR OF HIM!

 

Lajoie was signed to the Phillies in 1896. By the beginning of the 20th century, however, the upstart American League was

looking to rival the supremacy of the NL - In 1901, Lajoie and dozens of former National League players joined the American League. National League clubs contested the legality of contracts signed by players who jumped to the other league, but eventually Lajoie was allowed to play for the Philadelphia Athletics. 

During the season, Lajoie set the all-time American League single-season mark for the highest batting average (.426) 

One year later, Lajoie went to the Cleveland Bronchos, where he would play until the 1915 season, when he returned to play for

the Athletics. While with Cleveland, Lajoie's popularity led to locals electing to change the club's team name from Bronchos to Napoleons ("Naps" for short), which remained until after Lajoie departed Cleveland and the name was changed to Indians (the team's name until 2021).

Lajoie led the AL in batting average five times in his career, and four times recorded the highest number of hits. During several of those years with the Naps, he and Ty Cobb dominated AL hitting categories and traded batting titles with each other, most notably in 1910, when the league's batting champion was not decided until well after the last game of the season.

In 1914 he joined Cap Anson & Honus Wagner as the only major league players to record 3,000 career hits.

He has been called "the best second baseman in the history of baseball" and "the most outstanding player to wear a Cleveland uniform."

 

 

# 42 - EARL COMBS - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1970 (Veterans Committee)

(X 3)

Earle Bryan Combs (May 14, 1899 – July 21, 1976) was a center fielder who played his entire career for the Yankees (1924–1935). Combs batted leadoff on the Yankees' fabled 1927 team (often referred to as Murderers' Row). 

Combs led the league in triples three times and was among the top ten in the category in several other seasons. He suffered a fractured skull and other injuries from a crash into an outfield wall in 1934, then retired after another injury the next season. Nicknamed "the Kentucky Colonel", Combs was known as a gentleman on and off the field. He remained in baseball as a coach for many years after his retirement as a player.

 

 

# 43 - TRAVIS JACKSON - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1982

(X 2)

- NY Giants (1922-1936)

Travis Calvin Jackson (November 2, 1903 – July 27, 1987) was a shortstop for the NY Giants for all of his 14-years...

and it was exceptional range in the field that led to his nickname of "Stonewall".

Jackson batted over .300 six times, including a career-high .339 in the 1930 season - considered one of the best fielders of his

era, he helped his team win the 1933 World Series, and he represented the Giants in the 1934 All-Star game. 

After his retirement as a player, Jackson managed in the minors through the 1960 season.

 

 

# 44 - WAITE HOYT - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1969 (Veterans Committee) 

(x 3)

- NY Giants (1918)

- Boston Red Sox (1919-1920)

- NY Yankees (1921-1930)

- Detroit Tigers (1930-1931)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1931)

- Brooklyn Dodgers (1932)

- NY Giants (1932)

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1933-1937)

- Brooklyn Dodgers (1937-1938)

Waite Charles Hoyt (September 9, 1899 – August 25, 1984) was a pitcher who played in for seven different teams during

1918–1938 and was one of the dominant pitchers of the 1920s.

 

 

# 45 - FRANKIE FRISCH - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1947

(X 3)

- NY Giants (1919-1926)

- St. Louis Cardinals (1927-1937)

Frank Francis Frisch (September 9, 1897—March 12, 1973), nicknamed "the Fordham Flash" or "the Old Flash", was a 2nd baseman and manager - He's tied with Yogi Berra for most World Series doubles (10), and holds the record for the most World Series hits at 58 for a player who never played for the Yankees...exceeded only by Berra and Mickey Mantle...who DID play for them. Weird stat, yes? You can't make this stuff up.

 

 

# 46 - JIM BOTTOMLEY - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1974 (Veterans Committee)

- St. Louis Cardinals (1922-1932)

- Reds (1933-1935)

- St. Louis Browns (1936-1937)

James Leroy Bottomley (April 23, 1900 – December 11, 1959) was a first baseman, scout, and manager.

As part of the St. Louis Cardinals, he helped lead the team to 4 NL pennants, and 2 World Series titles.

He became an integral member of the Cardinals batting order, driving in 100 or more runs batted in between 1924 and 1929

as the team's clean-up hitter - In 1924 he established a major league record for driving in 12 runs in a 9-inning game. In 1926

he led the NL in RBI's and total bases, helping the Cardinals win their first World Series championship.

Bottomley was named the NL's MVP in '28, after leading the league in homers, RBIs, and total bases. 

 

 

# 47 - EDDIE COLLINS - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1939

 

 

# 48 - AL SIMMONS - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1953

(x 2)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1924-1932)

- White Sox (1933-1935)

- Detroit (1936)

- Washington Senators (1937-1938)

- Boston Bees (1939)

- Reds (1939)

 

- Philadelphia Athletics (1940-1941)

- Boston Red Sox (1943)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1944)

Aloysius Harry Simmons (born Alois Szymanski;[1] May 22, 1902 – May 26, 1956) was an outfielder who played 20 seasons. Nicknamed "Bucketfoot AL", he had his best years with Connie Mack's Athletics in Philly and was a career .334 hitter. Not too shabby for a bucketfoot, eh? 

 

 

# 49 - TONY LAZZERI - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1991 (Veterans Committee)

- NY Yankees (1926-1937)

- Chicago Cubs (1938)

- Brooklyn Dodgers (1939)

- NY Giants (1939)

Anthony Michael Lazzeri (December 6, 1903 – August 6, 1946) was a 2nd baseman and was part of the famed Murderers' Row Yankee batting lineup of the late 1920s, along with Ruth, Gehrig, and Meusel.

 

 

# 50 - PAUL WANER - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1952

(x 4)

- Pirates (1926-1940)

- Brooklyn Dodgers (1941)

- Boston Braves (1941-1942)

- Brooklyn Dodgers (1943-1944)

- NY Yankees - (1944-1945) 

Paul Glee Waner (April 16, 1903 – August 29, 1965), nicknamed "Big Poison", was the greatest Pirate outfielder up to his retirement - He won the 1927 MVP Award in his second season, collecting a team-record 237 hits that year. Waner set the

team record for doubles in a season three times, including 1932 when he set the NL record for doubles in a season with 62.

In the only postseason appearance of his career, he hit .333 in the Pirates' '27 World Series loss against the Yankees. Waner won three (NL) batting titles, led the NL in hits twice, and collected over 200 hits eight times including four consecutive seasons from 1927 to 1930.

On June 19, 1942, Waner became the seventh member of the 3,000 Hit Club - He led the NL in putouts four times and holds the career record for most putouts by a right fielder. Waner's 191 triples are 10th all-time, and his 605 doubles are 14th all-time. A career .333 hitter.

 

 

# 54 - TED LYONS - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1955

(x 5)

- White Sox (1923-1942, 1946)

Theodore Amar Lyons (December 28, 1900 – July 25, 1986) was a starting pitcher, manager, and coach - He played in 21 MLB seasons, all with the White Sox, and is the franchise leader in wins. Lyons won 20 or more games 3 times (in '25, '27, and '30) and became a fan favorite in Chicago and logged the 4th-highest ERA among HOF pitchers.

 

 

# 55 - DAZZY VANCE - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1955

- Pittsburgh (1915)

- NY Yankees (1915, 1918)

- Brooklyn Robins/Dodgers (1922-1932)

- St. Louis Cardinals (1933)

- Cincinatti Reds (1934)

- St. Louis Cardinals (1934)

- Brooklyn (1935)

- Charles Arthur "Dazzy" Vance (March 4, 1891 – February 16, 1961)

Renowned for his blazing fastball, Dazzy Vance was the premier strikeout pitcher of the 1920s.

He led the National League in strikeouts for seven consecutive seasons from 1922-'28, and often he led by wide margins.

In 1924, he had more strikeouts than the second- and third-place pitchers combined.

"Dazzy Vance could throw a cream puff through a battleship," said former Brooklyn Dodgers teammate Johnny Frederick.

His best season was 1924, when he won the NL Most Valuable Player Award after leading the league in wins (28), ERA (2.16), complete games (30) and strikeouts (262). He beat out fellow Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby – who hit .424 that season – for the award - Vance's career is even more remarkable considering he did not break into the major leagues for good until the age of 31 in 1922. He had spent the previous decade pitching mostly in the minor leagues, though he made nine appearances between the Pirates and Yankees in 1915, and two more for the Yankees in 1918.

 

 

# 56 - ROGERS HORNSBY - 1933 GOUDEY # 119 - HOF 1942

- St. Louis Cardinals (1915-1926)

- NY Giants (1927)

- Boston Braves (1928)

- Cubs (1929-1932)

- St. Louis Browns (1933-1937 + 1952)

- Cincinatti Reds (1952-1953)

Rogers Hornsby (April 27, 1896 – January 5, 1963), nicknamed "the Rajah", was an infielder, manager, and coach who played 23 seasons - Hornsby played for several semi-professional and minor league teams, and in 1915 began his major league career with the St. Louis Cardinals and remained with the team for 12 seasons. During this period, Hornsby won his first MVP Award...and the Cardinals won the '26 World Series.

After that, he spent time with the Giants, the Braves, and landed in Chicago, where he won his second MVP Award before the team released him in 1932. Hornsby re-signed with the Cardinals in 1933, but was released partway through the season, effectively ending his career as a full-time player. He was picked up by the St. Louis Browns and remained there until his final season in 1937, though he made only 67 appearances for them as a player. From 1925 to 1937, Hornsby was intermittently a player/manager. After retiring as a player, he managed the Browns in 1952 and the Reds from 1952 to 1953.

 

Hornsby is regarded as one of the best hitters of all time - He had 2,930 hits, and 301 homers in his career, with a career batting average of .358 - third only to Ty Cobb & Oscar Charleston. He also won two Triple Crowns and batted .400 or more three times during his career. He is the only player to hit 40 home runs and bat .400 in the same year (1922).

 

His batting average for the 1924 season was .424, a mark that no player has matched since.

Hornsby was known as someone who was difficult to get along with - he was not well-liked by his fellow players.

 

 

# 58 - BABE RUTH - 1933 GOUDEY # 144 - HOF 1936 as 1 of the "Inaugural 5"

- Red Sox

- Yankees

George Herman "Babe" Ruth (February 6, 1895 – August 16, 1948) - what more can be said except (1) he played for the Red Sox...was traded to their arch enemy Yankees - worked out great for the Yanks...not so great for Boston, who many believe fell under a curse for doing the dirty deed. 

 

 

# 59 - BABE RUTH - 1933 GOUDEY # 149 - HOF 1936 as 1 of the "Inaugural 5"

(x 2)

 

 

# 60 - BABE RUTH - 1933 GOUDEY # 181 - HOF 1936 as 1 of the "Inaugural 5"

 

 

# 63 - MEL OTT - 1933 GOUDEY # 207 - HOF 1951

-NY Giants (1926-1947)

Melvin Thomas Ott (March 2, 1909 – November 21, 1958), nicknamed "Master Melvin", led the National League in

homeruns a then-record six times. He was an All-Star for 11-consecutive seasons and was the first NL player to surpass

500 career homers. 

 

 

# 64 - JIMMIE FOXX - 1933 GOUDEY # 29 - HOF 1951

 

 

# 65 - HEINIE MANUSH - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1964

(x 2)

- Detroit Tigers (1923-1927)

- St. Louis Browns (1928-1930)

- Washington Senators (1930-1935)

- Boston Braves (1936)

- Brooklyn Dodgers (1937-1938)

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1938-1939)

Henry Emmett Manush (July 20, 1901 – May 12, 1971), nicknamed "Heinie", played professional baseball for 20 years

from 1920 to 1939. After retiring as a player, Manush was a minor league manager from 1940 to 1945.

 

 

# 66 - LOU GEHRIG - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1939 (Special Election)

 

 

 

# 68 - EARL AVERILL - 1934-36 DIAMOND STARS - HOF 1975 (Veterans Committee)

(x 2)

- Cleveland Indians (1929-1939)

- Detroit Tigers (1939-1940)

- Boston Braves (1941)

Howard Earl Averill (May 21, 1902 – August 16, 1983) was a 6-time All-Star center fielder.

 

 

# 69 - MEL OTT - 1939 PLAY BALL - HOF 1951

 

 

# 70 - JOE DIMAGGIO - 1939 PLAY BALL - HOF 1955

- Yankees (1936-1942 / 1946-1951)

Joseph Paul DiMaggio (November 25, 1914 – March 8, 1999), nicknamed "Joltin' Joe", "the Yankee Clipper" and "Joe D.", was a

center fielder for the Yankees - born to Italian immigrant parents in California, he is considered to be one of the greatest baseball players of all time and set the record for the longest hitting streak (56 games from May 15 – July 16, 1941).

 

DiMaggio was a three-time AL MVP and an All-Star in each of his 13 seasons. During his tenure with the Yankees, the club won ten American League pennants and nine World titles. His nine career World Series rings are second only to fellow Yankee Yogi Berra, who won 10.

 

 

# 71 - TED WILLIAMS - 1939 PLAY BALL - HOF 1966

(x 2)

- Red Sox (1939-1942 / 1946-1960)

Theodore Samuel Williams (August 30, 1918 – July 5, 2002) played his entire 19-year career, primarily at left field, for the Red

Sox - his career was interrupted by military service during WW2 and the Korean War. Nicknamed "Teddy Ballgame", "the Kid",

"the Splendid Splinter", and "the Thumper", Williams is widely regarded as one of the greatest hitters in baseball history in

addition to being the last player to hit over .400 in a season.

Williams was a nineteen-time All-Star...two-time recipient of the AL MVP, a six-time AL batting champ, and a two-time Triple

Crown winner. He finished his playing career with a .344 average, 521 homers, and a 1.116 on-base plus slugging percentage,

the third highest of all time. His career batting average is the highest of any MLB player whose career was played primarily after World War 2 and ranks 11th all-time.

 

# 72 - GEORGE KELLY - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1973

(x 2)

- NY Giants (1915-1917)

- Pirates (1917)

- NY Giants (1919-1926)

- Reds (1927-1930)

- Cubs (1930)

- Brooklyn Dodgers (1932)

George Lange Kelly (September 10, 1895 – October 13, 1984), nicknamed "Long George" and "High Pockets", was a 2nd

baseman who played most of his career in New York.

Kelly was a two-time World Series champion - 1921-1922 - He led the NL in homers once (1921), RBIs twice (1920-1924), and

finally made it to the Hall in 1973.

A happy ending to his story? Not so fast - his selection is regarded as controversial, as many believe he was undeserving of the recognition and was only elected by the Committee because it consisted of his former teammates.

 

 

# 76 - JESSE HAINES - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1970 (Veterans Committe)

(Jesse Joseph Haines (July 22, 1893 – August 5, 1978), nicknamed "Pop", was a pitcher who received his nickname because he liked to whip up a frozen treat before games that became known as "Pop Sickles". 

Nahhhhh - just kidding - After a lengthy stint in minor league baseball, he played briefly in 1918, then from 1920 to 1937. He spent nearly his entire major league career with the Cardinals. Haines pitched on three World Series championship teams. Though he had a kind personality off the field, Haines was known as a fiery competitor during games.

 

 

# 77 - PIE TRAYNOR - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1948 

(x 4)

Harold Joseph "Pie" Traynor (November 11, 1898 – March 16, 1972) played his entire career between 1920 and 1937 as a 3rd baseman for the Pirates. Traynor had a .320 career batting average, batting over .300 ten times with seven seasons with over 100 RBIs. He batted .346 in the '25 World Series to help the Pirates take their first championship in 16 years.

Traynor led NL third basemen in putouts 7 times...in double plays 4 times...and in assists 3 times: his 41 double plays in 1925 were an NL record until 1950, and his 226 putouts that year remain the highest NL total since 1905. 

 

 

# 78 - BILL McKECHNIE - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1962 (Veterans Committee)

(x 2)

- Pirates (1907, 1910-1912)

- Boston Braves (1913)

- NY Yankees (1913)

- Indianapolis Hoosiers/Newark Peppers (1914-1915)

- NY Giants (1916)

- Cincinatti Reds (1916-1917)

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1918, 1920)

William Boyd McKechnie (August 7, 1886 – October 29, 1965) was a 3rd baseman during what's known as The Dead-Ball Era.

He was nicknamed "Deacon" because he sang in his church choir and generally lived a quiet life.

A utility infielder before he settled into 3rd base, he was one of those players who didn't seem to be a giant on his teams...

but was a vital player to have in the dugout - In 1913, McKechnie had his worst season as a full-time player, batting only

.134. - However, Yankees manager Frank Chance thought McKechnie had a keen baseball mind, and had him sit next to him

on the bench during games - which brought him to his true calling on the diamond.

After he retired as a player, he managed for a year in the minors before assuming the helm of the Pirates in 1922.

He managed the Pirates from 1922 to 1926, the St. Louis Cardinals in 1928 and '29.  the Boston Braves from 1930 to 1937,

and the Cincinnati Reds from 1938 to 1946. He compiled 1,896 wins and 1,723 losses for a .524 winning percentage over his managerial career. His teams won four NL pennants (1925-1928-1939-1940), and two World Series championships (1925

and 1940), and he remains the only manager to win National League pennants with three teams (Pittsburgh, St. Louis and Cincinnati).

 

 

# 79 - GEORGE SISLER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1939

- ST. Louis Browns (1915-1922 / 1924-1927)

- Washington Senators (1928)

- Boston Braves (1928-1930)

George Harold Sisler (March 24, 1893 – March 26, 1973), nicknamed "Gorgeous George", was a 1st baseman and player/manager. He won the AL batting title in 1920 and 1922. In 1920, he batted .407 and recorded 257 hits, a standing record until Ichiro Suzuki had 262 in 2004.

Sisler won the AL MVP Award in 1922, finishing with a batting average of .420, the third-highest batting average by AL or NL players after 1900. A two-time batting champion and career .340 hitter, Sisler led the league in hits twice, triples twice, and stolen bases four times. He collected 200 or more hits six times in his career and had a batting average of over .300 a total of 13 times throughout his career. 

 

 

# 80 - MAX CAREY - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1961 (Veterans Committee)

(X 2)

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1910-1926)

- Brooklyn Robins (1926-1929)

Maximillian George Carnarius (January 11, 1890 – May 30, 1976), also known as Max George Carey, was a center fielder and a manager following his playing days. During his 20-year career, he led the league in stolen bases 10 times,  and finished with 738 steals, a National League record until 1974...and still the 9th highest in major league history.

 

 

# 81 - HEINIE MANUSH - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1964

(x 2)

 

 

# 82 - TRAVIS JACKSON - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1982 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 84 - HARRY HEILMANN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1952

- Detroit Tigers (1914, 1916-1929)

- Cincinnati Reds (1930, 1932)

Harry Edwin Heilmann (August 3, 1894 – July 9, 1951), nicknamed "Slug", played professional baseball for 19 years between 1913 and 1932, including 17 seasons in with the Tigers, and then the Reds. After retirement, he was a play-by-play announcer for the Tigers for 17 years from 1934 to 1950.

Heilmann won four AL batting championships, securing the honors in 1921, 1923, 1925 and 1927.

He appeared in 2,147 major league games, including 1,525 games as a right fielder and 448 as a 1st baseman, and compiled a career batting average of .342 - the 12th highest in major league history, and third highest among right-handed batters.

He remains one of only six players in American League history to hit .400 for a season, having accomplished the feat in 1923 with a .403 batting average. He also hit .394 in 1921.

 

 

# 86 - CASEY STENGEL - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1966 (Veterans Committee)

- Brooklyn Dodgers/Superbas/Robins (1912-1917)

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1918-1919)

- Philadelphia Phillies (1920-1921)

- NY Giants (1921-1923)

- Boston Braves (1924-1925)

- After retiring went on to manage Brooklyn Dodgers/Boston Braves/NY Yankees/NY Mets

Charles Dillon "Casey" Stengel (July 30, 1890 – September 29, 1975) was a right fielder and manager - best known as the manager of the championship Yankees of the 1950s and later, the expansion Mets. Nicknamed "the Ol' Professor".

 

 

# 87 - JOE CRONIN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1956

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1926-1927)

- Washington Senators (1928-1934)

- Boston Red Sox (1935-1945)

Joseph Edward Cronin (October 12, 1906 – September 7, 1984) was a shortstop, manager, and executive. Cronin spent

over 48 years in baseball, culminating with 14 years as president of the American League.

 

 

# 88 - BUCKY HARRIS - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1975 (Veterans Committee)

Stanley Raymond "Bucky" Harris (November 8, 1896 – November 8, 1977) was a 2nd baseman, manager, and executive.

While Harris played in the majors for the Senators and the Tigers, it was his long managerial career that led to his enshrinement

in the HOF in '75.

 

 

# 91 - WAITE HOYT - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1969 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 92 - LLOYD WANER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1967 (Veterans Committee) 

X 2

- Pirates (1927-1941)

- Boston Braves (1941)

- Reds (1941)

- Phillies (1942)

- Brooklyn Dodgers (1944)

- Pirates (1944-1945)

Lloyd James Waner (March 16, 1906 – July 22, 1982), nicknamed "Little Poison", was a center fielder - His small stature at five-

nine, made him one of the smallest players of his era. Along with his brother Paul, he anchored the Pirates outfield throughout 

the 1920s and 1930s. After brief stints with four other teams late in his career, Waner retired as a Pirate.

Waner finished with a batting average over .300 in ten seasons - He worked as a scout for the Pirates and the Orioles after retiring as a player.

 

 

# 96 - WALTER JOHNSON - 1940 PLAY BALL # 120 - HOF 1936 (The Inaugural 5) x 2

 

 

# 97 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1940 PLAY BALL # 173 - HOF 1937

 

 

# 98 - CONNIE MACK - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1937

 

 

# 100 - "SHOELESS" JOE JACKSON - 1940 PLAY BALL

Joseph Jefferson Jackson (July 16, 1887 – December 5, 1951), nicknamed "Shoeless Joe"

- Philadelphia Athletics (1908-1909)

- New Orleans Pelicans (Minor Leagues) + Cleveland Naps (1910-1915)

- Chicago White Sox (1911-1920)

 

His .356 career batting average is the fourth highest in MLB history. As the years have passed, he's primarily remembered by many for his association with the "Black Sox Scandal", in which eight members of the 1919 White Sox participated in a conspiracy to fix the World Series. As a result, the Commissioner permanently banned Jackson and the other seven players from professional baseball after the 1920 season. During the World Series in question, Jackson had led both teams in several statistical categories and set a World Series record with 12 base hits, including, during the last game, the only home run in that World Series. Jackson's role in the scandal, banishment from the game, and exclusion from the Baseball Hall of Fame, have been fiercely debated.

Following the scandal, Jackson played baseball under assumed names throughout the South.

 

In 2025, Commissioner Bob Manfred removed Jackson, Pete Rose, and other deceased players from the MLB's permanently ineligible list, thus lifting the ban. 

 

 

# 105 - LEFTY GOMEZ - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1972 (Veterans Committee)

Vernon Louis "Lefty" Gomez (November 26, 1908 – February 17, 1989) was a leftie-pitcher who played between 1930 and 1943

for the Yankees and Senators - He was a 5-time World Series champion with the Yankees. He was also known for his colorful personality and humor.

 

 

# 106 - BILL DICKEY - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1954

- Yankees (1928-1943, 1946)

William Malcolm Dickey (June 6, 1907 – November 12, 1993) was a catcher and manager. He played with the Yankees for

seventeen seasons - after serving in the Navy during World War II, Dickey returned to the Yankees in 1946 as a player and manager. He retired after the 1946 season, but returned in 1949 as a coach, in which capacity he taught fellow Hall of Famer

Yogi Berra the finer points of catching.

During Dickey's playing career, the Yankees went to the World Series nine times, winning eight championships, and was named

to 11 All-Star games. He went on to briefly manage the Yankees as a player-manager, then contribute to another six Yankee World Series titles as a coach. 

 

 

# 107 - MEL OTT - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1951

 

 

# 108 - JIMMIE FOXX - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1951

 

 

 

 

 

 

________________________________________________________________

TIER 2 / PRINT RUN = 400

__________________________________________________________________

 

 

 

# 6 - CY YOUNG - 1909 T206 (Glove Shows) - HOF 1937

(x 2)

 

 

# 7 - CY YOUNG - 1909 T206 (Bare Hands) - HOF

(x 2)

 

 

# 8 - EDDIE COLLINS - 1909 T206 - HOF 1939

(X 3)

 

 

# 9 - EDDIE PLANK - 1909 T206 - HOF 1946 (Old-timers Committee)

(x 3)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1901-1914)

- St. Louis Terriers (1915)

- St, Louis Browns (1916-1917)

Edward Stewart Plank (August 31, 1875 – February 24, 1926), nicknamed "Gettysburg Eddie", was the first left-handed pitcher

to win 200 games...and then 300...and today ranks 3rd all-time in wins among lefties, with 326 career victories (13th all time) and first all-time in career shutouts by a left-handed pitcher with 66.

Philadelphia went to the World Series 5 times while Plank played there, but he sat out the 1910 World Series due to an injury. Plank died of a stroke in 1926. 

 

 

# 10 - HOME RUN BAKER - 1909 T206 - HOF 1955 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 11 - HONUS WAGNER - 1909 T206 - HOF 1936

 

 

# 13 - JOE TINKER - 1909 T206 (Bat on Shoulder) - HOF 1946 (Old Timers Committee)

 

 

# 14 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1909 T206 (With Bat) - HOF 1937

 

 

# 15 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1909 T206 (Throwing) - HOF 1937

(X 2)

 

 

# 21 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Green Portrait) - HOF 1936

 

 

# 24 - WALTER JOHNSON - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - HOF 1936 (The Inaugural 5)

 

 

# 26 - ZACK WHEAT - 1909 T206 - HOF 1959 (Veterans Committee)

X 2

 

 

# 27 - "SHOELESS" JOE JACKSON - 1914 CRACKER JACK

 

 

# 28 - CONNIE MACK - 1915 CRACKER JACK - HOF 1937

(x 2)

 

 

# 29 - LOU GEHRIG - 1933 DELONG - HOF 1939 (Special Election)

(x 2)

 

 

# 43 - TRAVIS JACKSON - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1982 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 44 - WAITE HOYT - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1969 (Veterans Committee)

(X 2)

 

 

# 45 - FRANKIE FRISCH - 1933 GOODEY - HOF 1947

 

 

# 48 - AL SIMMONS - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1953

 

 

# 49 - TONY LAZZERI - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1991 (Veterans Committee)

# 50 - PAUL WANER - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1952

(x 2)

 

 

# 54 - TED LYONS - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1955

 

 

# 55 - DAZZY VANCE - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1955

(x2)

 

 

# 57 - MEL OTT - 1933 GOUDEY # 127 - HOF 1951

 

 

# 58 - BABE RUTH - 1933 GOUDEY # 144 - HOF 1936 as 1 of the "Inaugural 5"

 

 

# 61 - ROGERS HORNSBY - 1933 GOUDEY # 188 - HOF 

 

 

# 64 - JIMMIE FOXX - 1933 GOUDEY # 29 - HOF 1951

 

 

# 65 - HEINIE MANUSH - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1964

 

 

# 73 - GOOSE GOSLIN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1968 (Veterans Committee)

- Washington Senators (1920-1930, 1933, 1938)

- St. Louis Browns (1930-1932)

- Detroit Tigers (1934-1937)

Leon Allen "Goose" Goslin (October 16, 1900 – May 15, 1971) was a left fielder with a heavy, heavy bat...

He led the AL in triples two times and finished the season with a batting average of over .300 eleven times.

He won the AL batting title in 1928 with a .379 batting average which set a Senators record.

He led the AL in assists five times - putouts four times - and his 4,141 putouts and 181 assists as a left fielder are both

5th all time. His 173 triples are 22nd all time and his .316 batting average is 7th all time among left fielders with over

2,000 games played, and a two-time World Series winner.

 

 

# 76 - JESSE HAINES - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1970 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 81 - HEINIE MANUSH - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1964

(x 2)

 

 

# 82 - TRAVIS JACKSON - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1982

(X 2)

 

 

# 83 - FRANKIE FRISCH - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1947

(x 3)

 

 

# 84 - HARRY HEILMANN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1952

(x 5)

- Detroit Tigers (1914, 1916-1929)

- Cincinnati Reds (1930, 1932)

Harry Edwin Heilmann (August 3, 1894 – July 9, 1951), nicknamed "Slug", played professional baseball for 19 years between 1913 and 1932, including 17 seasons in with the Tigers, and then the Reds. After retirement, he was a play-by-play announcer for the Tigers for 17 years from 1934 to 1950.

Heilmann won four AL batting championships, securing the honors in 1921, 1923, 1925 and 1927.

He appeared in 2,147 major league games, including 1,525 games as a right fielder and 448 as a 1st baseman, and compiled a career batting average of .342 - the 12th highest in major league history, and third highest among right-handed batters.

He remains one of only six players in American League history to hit .400 for a season, having accomplished the feat in 1923 with a .403 batting average. He also hit .394 in 1921.

 

 

# 85 - TRIS SPEAKER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1937

 

 

# 89 - EARL COMBS - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1970

(x 2)

 

 

# 90 - GROVER CLEVELAND ALEXANDER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1938

(x 2)

- Phillies (1911-1917)

- Cubs (1918-1926)

- Cardinals (1926-1929)

- Phillies (1930)

Grover Cleveland Alexander (February 26, 1887 – November 4, 1950), nicknamed "Old Pete" and "Alexander the Great", was a pitcher - In his rookie year in Philadelphia, Alexander led the league with 28 wins (a modern-day rookie record), 31 complete games, 367 innings pitched, and seven shutouts, while finishing second in strikeouts and fourth in ERA.  From 1912 to 1921, Alexander led the league in ERA four times (1915–16, 1919, and 1920), wins five times (1914–17, 1920), innings six times (1912, 1914–17, 1920), strikeouts six times (1912, 1914–1917, 1920), complete games five times (1914–1917, 1920), and shutouts five times (1915, 1916 [a single-season record 16], 1917, 1919, 1921).  He won the National League pitching Triple Crown in 1915, 1916, and 1920, and is often credited with a fourth in 1917. In 1915, he was instrumental in leading the Phillies to their first pennant, pitching a record five one-hitters and winning his only Major League triple crown. Along the way, Alexander began to have problems with alcohol, a struggle that would plague him the rest of his life. In 1915, he won his first World Series game (the opening game of that series), for the Phillies. It would be 65 years before the Phillies won another World Series game.

 

 

# 91 - WAITE HOYT - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1969 (Veterans Committee)

(x 2)

 

 

# 92 - LLOYD WANER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1967 (Veterans Committee)

(x 2)

 

 

# 93 - PAUL WANER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1952

 

 

# 94 - CHUCK KLEIN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1980 (Veterans Committee)

(x 2)

 

 

# 95 - CHRISTY MATHEWSON - 1940 PLAY BALL # 175 - HOF 1936

 

 

# 102 - CARL HUBBELL - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1947

Carl Owen Hubbell (June 22, 1903 – November 21, 1988), nicknamed "the Meal Ticket" and "King Carl", was a pitcher for the NY Giants from 1928 to 1943, and remained on the team's payroll for the rest of his life, long after their move to San Francisco.

Twice voted the National League's MVP, and during 1936 and 1937, Hubbell set the major league record for consecutive wins by

a pitcher with 24. A master of the screwball, he is perhaps best remembered for his performance in the '34 All-Star Game when he struck out five future Hall of Famers – Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmie Foss, Al Simmons, and Joe Cronin - in succession.

 

 

# 103 - HANK GREENBERG - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1956

(x2)

- Detroit Tigers (1930 - 1933 thru 1941 - 1945 thru 1946)

- Pirates (1947)

Henry Benjamin Greenberg (January 1, 1911 – September 4, 1986), nicknamed "Hammerin' Hank", "Hankus Pankus", and "the Hebrew Hammer", played in the 1930s and 1940s, was one of the premier power hitters of his generation, and is widely

considered one of the greatest sluggers in baseball history.

 

When the United States joined WW2, Greenberg was the first major leaguer to join the armed forces; he spent 47 months in military service, more than any other major league player, all of which took place during what would have been prime years in his major league career. Like many players who served in WWII, his career statistics suffered because of the war and would have certainly been higher had he not served in the armed services during wartime. In 1947, Greenberg signed a contract for a record $85,000 salary before being sold to the Pirates - he played his final MLB season that year.

 

Greenberg was the first Jewish superstar in American team sports. He attracted national attention in 1934 in the middle of a pennant race when he grappled with the decision of whether or not to play baseball on the Jewish High Holy Days - after consultation with his rabbi, he decided to play on Rosh Hashanah, but not Yom Kippur, instead spending the day at the synagogue. Having endured his share of antisemitic abuse in his career, Greenberg was one of the few opposing players to publicly welcome African American player Jackie Robinson to the major leagues in 1947.

 

 

# 104 - PEE WEE REESE - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1984 (Veterans Committee)

(X 3)

 

 

# 105 - LEFTY GOMEZ - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1972

(x 2)

 

 

# 108 - JIMMIE FOXX - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1951

 

 

# 109 - TED WILLIAMS - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1966

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

___________________________________________________________

TIER 3 - (Print Run of 200)

____________________________________________________________

 

 

# 16 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - HOF 1937

(x 2)

 

 

# 19 - TRIS SPEAKER - 1909 T206 - HOF 1937

 

 

# 20 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Red Portrait) - HOF 1936

 

 

# 21 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Green Portrait) - HOF 1936

 

 

# 22 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Bat On Shoulder) - HOF 1936

 

 

# 25 - WALTER JOHNSON - 1909 T206 (Hands at Chest) - HOF 1936

 

 

# 26 - ZACK WHEAT - 1909 T206 - HOF 1959 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 27 - "SHOELESS" JOE JACKSON - 1914 CRACKER JACK

 

 

# 33 - BILLY HERMAN - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1975

 

 

# 40 - TRIS SPEAKER - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1937

 

 

# 43 - TRAVIS JACKSON - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1982

 

 

# 44 - WAITE HOYT - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1969

 

 

# 45 - FRANKIE FRISCH - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1947

(x 2)

 

 

# 46 - JIM BOTTOMLEY - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1974 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 47 - EDDIE COLLINS - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1939

 

 

# 60 - BABE RUTH - 1933 GOUDEY # 181 - HOF 1936

 

 

# 65 - HEINIE MANUSH - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1964

 

 

# 66 - LOU GEHRIG - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1939 (Special Election)

 

 

# 70 - JOE DIMAGGIO - 1939 PLAY BALL - HOF 1955

 

 

# 75 - JOHN MCGRAW - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1937 (Centennial Committee)

- Baltimore Orioles/AA-NL (1891-1899)

- St. Louis Cardinals (1900)

- Baltimore Orioles (1901-1902)

- NY Giants (1902-1906)

John Joseph McGraw (April 7, 1873 – February 25, 1934) was the 3rd baseman of the pennant-winning 1890's Baltimore

Orioles teams, noted for their innovative, aggressive play. He was also the manager of the NY Giants for nearly 30 years.

The instability in MLB at the turn of the 20th century led to McGraw becoming manager of the Orioles at age 26 in 1899, and

he was lauded for his leadership. The National League Orioles were dissolved after 1899, and McGraw spent one season with the Cardinals before returning to Baltimore as player/manager of the new Orioles of the American League. 

 

 

# 81 - HEINIE MANUSH - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1964

 

 

# 83 - FRANKIE FRISCH - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1947

(x 2)

 

 

# 84 - HARRY HEILMANN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1952

(x 2)

 

 

# 87 - JOE CRONIN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1956

 

 

# 90 - GROVER CLEVELAND ALEXANDER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1938

 

 

# 91 - WAITE HOYT - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1969

 

 

# 92 - LLOYD WANER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1967

 

 

# 93 - PAUL WANER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1952

 

 

# 95 - CHRISTY MATHEWSON - 1940 PLAY BALL # 175 - HOF 1936

 

 

# 96 - WALTER JOHNSON - 1940 PLAY BALL # 120 - HOF 1936 (The Inaugural 5) x 2

 

 

# 98 - CONNIE MACK - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1937

 

 

# 99 - HONUS WAGNER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1936

 

 

# 105 - LEFTY GOMEZ - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1972 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 107 - MEL OTT - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1951

 

 

# 108 - JIMMIE FOXX - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1951 

 

 

# 110 - JOE DIMAGGIO - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1955

 

 

 

 

 

________________________________________________________________

TIER 4 - PRINT RUN = 150 

_________________________________________________________________

 

 

 

# 14 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1909 T206 (With Bat) - HOF 1937

 

 

# 17 - SAM CRAWFORD - 1909 T206 (With Bat) - HOF 1957

 

 

# 21 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Green Portrait) - HOF 1936

 

 

# 22 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Bat on Shoulder) - HOF1936

 

 

# 27 - SHOELESS JOE JACKSON - 1914 CRACKER JACK

(x 2)

 

 

# 31 - CHARLIE GEHRINGER - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1949

 

 

# 36 - HACK WILSON - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1979

 

 

# 37 - GABBY HARTNETT - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1955

 

 

# 38 - MICKEY COCHRANE - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1947

 

 

# 41 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1933 GOODEY - HOF 1937

 

 

# 43 - TRAVIS JACKSON - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1982

 

 

# 45 - FRANKIE FRISCH - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1947

# 46 - JIM BOTTOMLEY - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1974

 

 

# 48 - AL SIMMONS - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1953

 

 

# 49 - TONY LAZZERI - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1991 (Veterans Committee)

# 52 - PIE TRAYNOR - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1948

 

 

# 53 - BILL DICKEY - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1954

 

 

# 56 - ROGERS HORNSBY - 1933 GOUDEY # 119 - HOF 1942

 

 

# 58 - BABE RUTH - 1933 GOUDEY # 144 - HOF 1936

 

 

# 59 - BABE RUTH - 1933 GOUDEY # 149 - HOF 1936 as 1 of the Inaugural 5

 

 

# 63 - MEL OTT - 1933 GOUDEY # 207 - HOF 1951

 

 

# 64 - JIMMIE FOXX - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1951

 

 

# 68 - EARL AVERILL - 1934-36 (Diamond Stars) - HOF 1975 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 71 - TED WILLIAMS - 1939 PLAY BALL - HOF 1966

 

 

# 73 - GOOSE GOSLIN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1968 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 74 - JIM BOTTOMLEY - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1974

 

 

# 76 - JESSE HAINES - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1970

 

 

# 78 - BILL McKECHNIE - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1962 (Veterans Committee)

# 79 - GEORGE SISLER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1939

 

 

# 80 - MAX CAREY - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1961 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 82 - TRAVIS JACKSON - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1982 (Veterans Committee)

- NY Giants (1922-1936)

Travis Calvin Jackson (November 2, 1903 – July 27, 1987) was a shortstop who played for the Giants.

 

 

# 87 - JOE CRONIN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1956

 

 

# 88 - BUCKY HARRIS - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1975 (Veterans Committee)

# 100 - SHOELESS JOE JACKSON - 1940 PLAY BALL

 

 

# 104 - PEE WEE REESE - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1984 (Veterans Committee) (x 2)

- Brooklyn/LA Dodgers (1940-1942, 1946-1954)

Harold Peter Henry "Pee WeeReese (July 23, 1918 – August 14, 1999) was a shortstop...

He picked up the nickname "Pee Wee" in his childhood, as he was a champion marbles player (a "pee wee" is a small marble). 

Like many players of his era, he missed three seasons due to military service. Reese enlisted in the Navy in 1943, and shipped

out to fight in the Pacific theater. 

A 10-time All-Star, he contributed to seven NL championships for the Dodgers, is also famous for his support of his teammate Jackie Robinson...especially in Robinson's difficult first years, most notably when he put his arm around Robinson during a pre-game warmup in front of a heckling crowd.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

___________________________________________________________

TIER 5 (Print Run of 100):

____________________________________________________________

 

 

 

# 2 - CHRISTY MATHEWSON - 1909 T206 (White Cap) - HOF 1936

(x 2)

 

 

# 5 - CY YOUNG - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - HOF 1937

(X 2)

 

 

# 14 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1909 T206 (With Bat) - HOF 1937

 

 

# 24 - WALTER JOHNSON - 1909 T206 PORTRAIT - HOF 1936 (Inaugural 5)

(x 2)

 

 

# 30 - JIMMIE FOXX - 1933 DELONG - HOF 1951

 

 

# 36 - HACK WILSON - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1979

 

 

# 41 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1937

 

 

# 45 - FRANKIE FRISCH - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1947

 

 

# 55 - DAZZY VANCE - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1955

 

 

# 59 - BABE RUTH - 1933 GOUDEY # 149 - HOF 1936 (1 of the Inaugural 5)

 

 

# 80 - MAX CAREY - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1961

 

 

# 81 - HEINIE MANUSH - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1964

 

 

# 86 - CASEY STENGEL - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1966 (Veterans Committee) 

(x 2)

 

 

# 98 - CONNIE MACK - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1935

 

 

# 104 - PEE WEE REESE - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1984 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 107 - MEL OTT - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1951

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

________________________________________________________

TIER 6 - PRINT RUN 75

________________________________________________________

 

 

 

# 2 - CHRISTY MATHEWSON - 1909 T206 (White Cap) - HOF 1936

 

 

# 4 - CHRISTY MATHEWSON - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - NY GIANTS - HOF 1936

 

 

# 5 - CY YOUNG - 1909 T206 (Portrait) - HOF 1937

 

 

# 6 - CY YOUNG - 1909 T206 (Glove Shows) - HOF 1937

(X 2)

 

 

# 9 - EDDIE PLANK - 1909 T206 - HOF 1946 (Old-timers Committee)

 

 

# 21 - TY COBB - 1909 T206 (Green Portrait) - HOF 1936

 

 

# 27 - SHOELESS JOE JACKSON - 1914 CRACKER JACK

 

 

# 33 - BILLY HERMAN - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1975 (Veterans Committee)

(x 2)

 

# 72 - GEORGE KELLY - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1973 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 73 - GOOSE GOSLIN - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1968 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 82 - TRAVIS JACKSON - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1982

 

 

# 93 - PAUL WANER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1952

 

 

# 97 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1940 PLAY BALL # 173 - HOF 1937

 

 

 

 

 

 

__________________________________________________________

TIER 7 - (Print Run = 50):

___________________________________________________________

# 16 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1909 T206 (Portrait) HOF 1937

# 38 - MICKEY COCHRANE - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1947

 

 

# 56 - ROGERS HORNSBY - 1933 GOUDEY # 119 - HOF 1942

 

 

# 69 - MEL OTT - 1939 PLAY BALL - HOF 1951

 

 

# 72 - GEORGE KELLY - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1973 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

# 74 - JIM BOTTOMLEY - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1974

 

 

# 77 - PIE TRAYNOR - 1940 PLAY BALL - Pittsburgh PiratesHOF 1948

 

 

# 79 - GEORGE SISLER - 1940 PLAY BALL - HOF 1939

 

 

# 102 - CARL HUBBELL - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1947

(X 2)

 

 

# 107 - MEL OTT - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1951

 

 

# 109 - TED WILLIAMS - 1941 PLAY BALL - HOF 1966

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

__________________________________________________________

TIER 8 - (Print Run = 25):

__________________________________________________________

 

 

 

# 6 - CY YOUNG - 1909 T206 (Glove Shows) - HOF 1937

# 31 - CHARLIE GEHRINGER - 1933 DeLONG - HOF 1949

# 35 - CHUCK KLEIN - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1980 (Veterans Committee)

 

 

 

 

 

 

__________________________________________________

SPECIAL INSERTS:

___________________________________________________

 

 

BLACK PRINTING PLATES:

# 89 - EARL COMBS - HOF 1970 (Veterans Committee)

NUMBERED 1 of 1

Earle Bryan Combs (May 14, 1899 – July 21, 1976) was a center fielder who played his entire career for the Yankees (1924–1935). Combs batted leadoff on the Yankees' fabled 1927 team (often referred to as Murderers' Row). 

Combs led the league in triples three times and was among the top ten in the category in several other seasons. He suffered a fractured skull and other injuries from a crash into an outfield wall in 1934, then retired after another injury the next season. Nicknamed "the Kentucky Colonel", Combs was known as a gentleman on and off the field. He remained in baseball as a coach for many years after his retirement as a player.

# 94 - CHUCK KLEIN - HOF 1980 (Veterans Committee) 

NUMBERED 1 OF 1

- Phillies (1928-1933)

- Cubs (1934-1936)

- Phillies (1936-1939)

- Pirates (1939)

- Phillies (1940-1944)

Charles Herbert Klein (October 7, 1904 – March 28, 1958), nicknamed "the Hoosier Hammer" because of his Indiana roots,

was an outfielder who led the NL in home runs four times and won the NL MVP Award in 1932. In 1933 he became one of

six (at the time) NL players to win a batting Triple Crown. In 1930 he set the NL record for extra-base hits with 107.

On July 10, 1936, he hit four home runs in a game, becoming the fourth player to do so - Klein was the first player to be

selected to the All-Star Game as a member of two different teams (Phillies and Cubs).

 

 

CYAN PRINTING PLATE:

# 98 - CONNIE MACK - HOF 1937

NUMBERED 1 OF 1

- Washington Nationals (1886-1889)

- Buffalo Bisons (1890)

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1891-1896)

Cornelius McGillicuddy (December 22, 1862 – February 8, 1956), better known as Connie Mack, was a catcher, manager, and finally a team owner. Mack holds records for the most wins (3,731), losses (3,948), ties (76), and games managed (7,755) in 

MLB history - He managed the Philadelphia Athletics for its first 50 seasons of play, starting in 1901; was at least part-owner from 1901 to 1954; and retired after the 1950 season at age 87.

EIGHTY-SEVEN?!?! THAT ALONE QUALIFIES HIM FOR THE HALL!

 

 

PARALLELS:

# 14 - NAPOLEON LAJOIE - 1909 T206 (With Bat) HOF 1937

NUMBERED 1 OF 1

- Phillies

- Cleveland Bronchos/Naps

- Indians

Lajoie was signed to the Phillies in 1896. By the beginning of the 20th century, however, the upstart American League was

looking to rival the supremacy of the NL - In 1901, Lajoie and dozens of former National League players joined the American League. National League clubs contested the legality of contracts signed by players who jumped to the other league, but eventually Lajoie was allowed to play for the Philadelphia Athletics. 

During the season, Lajoie set the all-time American League single-season mark for the highest batting average (.426) 

One year later, Lajoie went to the Cleveland Bronchos, where he would play until the 1915 season, when he returned to play for

the Athletics. While with Cleveland, Lajoie's popularity led to locals electing to change the club's team name from Bronchos to Napoleons ("Naps" for short), which remained until after Lajoie departed Cleveland and the name was changed to Indians (the team's name until 2021).

Lajoie led the AL in batting average five times in his career, and four times recorded the highest number of hits. During several of those years with the Naps, he and Ty Cobb dominated AL hitting categories and traded batting titles with each other, most notably in 1910, when the league's batting champion was not decided until well after the last game of the season.

In 1914 he joined Cap Anson & Honus Wagner as the only major league players to record 3,000 career hits.

He has been called "the best second baseman in the history of baseball" and "the most outstanding player to wear a Cleveland uniform."

 

 

CRACKED ICE # 48 - AL SIMMONS - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF

Numbered 4 of 4 Made

 

 

#98 - CONNIE MACK - HOF 1937

NUMBERED 1 of 1

 

 

STAINED GLASS:

# 28 - CONNIE MACK - HOF 1937

Numbered 10 of 15 Made 

 

 

# 22 - TY COBB - (Old Mill Cigarettes - Bat on Shoulder) HOF 1936

NUMBERED 13 of 15

- Detroit Tigers (1905-1926)

- Philadelphia Athletics (1927-1928)

Tyrus Raymond Cobb (December 18, 1886[1] – July 17, 1961), nicknamed "the Georgia Peach", played center field.

He spent 22 years with the Tigers and served as the team's player/manager for the last six and finished his career with Philly.

In 1936, Cobb received the most votes of any player on the inaugural ballot for the Hall - receiving 222 out of a possible 226

votes (98.2%); no other player received a higher percentage of votes until Tom Seaver in 1992. In 1999, Sporting News ranked Cobb third on its list of "Baseball's 100 Greatest Players."

 

Cobb is credited with setting 90 MLB records throughout his career - He won more batting titles than any other player...

During his 24-year career, he hit .300 in a record 23 consecutive seasons, with the exception being his rookie season.

He also hit .400 in three different seasons, a record he shares with three other players. Cobb has more five-hit games (14) than any other player in major league history. He also holds the career record for stealing home (54 times) and for stealing second base, third base, and home in succession (4 times), and is still the youngest player to compile 4,000 hits and score 2,000 runs. His combined total of 4,065 runs scored and runs batted in (after adjusting for home runs) is still the highest ever produced by any major league player. Cobb also ranks first in games played by an outfielder in major league history (2,934). He retained many other records for almost a half century or more.

 

 

 

__________________________________________________________________________

ALL-TIME SETS - AUTHENTIC CUT SIGNATURES:

___________________________________________________________________________

ROGER PECKINPAUGH - 1914 CRACKER JACK - # 1 of 3 Made

 

Roger Thorpe Peckinpaugh (February 5, 1891 – November 17, 1977) was a shortstop and manager...

He played from 1910 through 1927 for the Cleveland Naps, the NY Yankees, the Washington Senators, and the Chicago

White Sox - also managing the Yankees during his active years! Peckinpaugh was considered an excellent defensive shortstop

and strong leader. When he managed the Yankees, he became the youngest manager in MLB history. 

He was named AL MVP in 1925 and played in the World Series 3 times...finally winning the '24 Series with the Senators.

 

After his playing career, Peckinpaugh managed the Indians from 1928 through 1933 and in 1941.

 

 

 

ZACK TAYLOR - 1933 GOUDEY - # 8 of 10 Made

 

 

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________

HISTORIC AUTOGRAPHS 2025 ALL-TIME SETS - HANDWRITING SAMPLES:

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DICK BARTELL - 1933 GOUDEY - Numbered to 72 Made

- Pittsburgh Pirates (1927-1930)

- Phillies (1931-1934)

- NY Giants (1935-1938)

- Cubs (1939)

- Tigers (1940-1941)

- NY Giants (1941-1943, 1946)

Richard William Bartell (November 22, 1907 – August 4, 1995), nicknamed "Rowdy Richard", played in the majors as a shortstop from 1927 to 1946. He was one of the most ferocious competitors of his era, winning both admirers and critics at each stop during a career which saw him traded every few seasons, often under acrimonious circumstances. 

 

MICKEY COCHRANE - 1933 GOUDEY - HOF 1947

Gordon Stanley "Mickey" Cochrane (April 6, 1903 – June 28, 1962), nicknamed "Black Mike", was a catcher, manager, and coach...He was, and is, considered one of the best catchers in baseball history.

 

 

 

 

2025 NATIONAL SPORTS COLLECTOR'S CONVENTION - CHICAGO:

HUMONGOUS HOARD

This up-and-coming company that took their show on the road to the National Convention this year.

"We’re card collectors and memorabilia enthusiasts just like you and we were concerned with the shortage in trading card storage solutions. Correcting this problem became our mission, along with creating higher quality, easy to use, archival storage solutions - Today, we’ve got millions of high-quality holders, loaders and sleeves in production – all at affordable prices and ready to ship out today. We are hoarders of all memorabilia. Collecting is our passion, and our primary goal is to become your trusted supplier of safe storage for all your collectibles."

 

As part of their "introduction" to the Sportscard community, they made these cards available, illustrated by artist Brian Kong.

BASEBALL:

# NSCC 2 - Trecor Hoffman

# NSCC 3 - Rollie Fingers

# NSCC 7 - Wade Boggs

# NSCC 15 - Scott Rolen

 

FOOTBALL:

# NSCC 8 - Earl Campbell

# NSCC 18 - Ricky Williams

 

 

L E A F

Also, well-represented was Leaf with VIP Promo Packs - Sadly, only one baseball player was included - pretty good one tho!

# VIP 1 - Aaron Judge - Yankees (Have 2)

 

 

 

 

PANINI - CRUSADE:

2025 Panini Crusade is a 200-card set scheduled for release, exclusively to retail outlets, in August.

B L U E:

# 1 - Colt Emerson - Mariners

# 2 - Sebastian Walcott - Rangers

# 35 - Leo De Vries - Padres

# 52 - Colson Montgomery - White Sox

 

 

 

BLUE CRACKED ICE:

# 7 - Cole Young - Mariners

# 8 - Travis Bazzana - Guardians

# 25 - Ken Griffey Jr. - Mariners

# 28 - Carson Benge - Mets

# 49 - Kash Mayfield - Padres

# 67 - Ethan Holliday - Rockies DP

# 89 - Spencer Jones - Yankees

 

 

RED PRIZM:

# 10 - Dante Nori - Phillies

# 78 - James Wood - Nationals

 

 

 

 

 

 

TOPPS:

___________________________________

SERIES 1 & 2 BASE PARALLELS:

___________________________________

BLACK:

# 501 - Numbered 59/74 - Elias Diaz - Padres

 

 

GOLD:

73 - Numbered 659/2025 - Luis Castillo - Mariners

525 - Numbered 833/2025 - TJ Friedl - Reds

 

 

EASTER TIN - PASTEL:

# 118 - Justin Verlander - Astros

 

 

EASTER TIN - GREENS:

# 45 - Brice Turang - Brewers

# 208 - Jacob DeGrom - Rangers

 

 

HOLIDAY HOT DOG:

# 614 - Lucas Giolito - Red Sox

 

 

PURPLE HOLO # 533 - Numbered 83/250 - Tyler O'Neill - Orioles

 

 

RAINBOW FOIL:

100 - Bobby Witt Jr. - Royals

200 - Mike Trout - Angels

204 - Justin Wrobleski - Dodgers (RC)

224 - Reese Olson - Tigers

242 - Logan Webb - Giants

280 - Ky Bush - White Sox (RC)

289 - Micharl Siani - Cardinals

341 - Roniel Blanco - Astros

468 - George Kirby - Mariners

518 - Ronny Mauricio - Mets

522 - Spencer Arrighetti - Astros

532 - Ben Lively - Guardians

582 - Michael Mercado - Phillies (RC)

603 - Cal Raleigh - Mariners

677 - Pittsburgh Pirates

 

PURPLE # 165 - Joey Ortiz - Brewers

 

 

 

SANDGLITTER:

# 409 - Texas Taters: Great 8 Take Their Cuts (Gunnar Henderson etc...)

# 502 - Taylor Walls - D'Rays

# 529 - Miguel Andujar - A's

 

 

"SUNSHINE":

# 481 - Michael Massey - Royals

# 484 - Jorge Mateo - Orioles

# 489 - Edmundo Sosa - Phillies

# 520 - Jordan Hicks - Giants

# 543 - Kerry Carpenter - Tigers

# 561 - Paul Goldschmidt - Yankees

# 669 - Jose Soriano - Angels

 

 

 

I N S E R T S:

_____________________________________________________

1990 SERIES - TOPPS BASEBALL:

_____________________________________________________

    T90 - 2 - Mike Schmidt - Phillies

    T90 - 4 - Corey Seager - Rangers

    T90 - 5 - Yadier Molina - Cardinals

    T90 - 11 - Jackie Robinson - Dodgers

    T90 - 17 - Christian Yelich - Brewers

    T90 - 22 - Justyn-Henry Malloy - Tigers (RC)

    T90 - 23 - Bobby Witt Jr. - Royals

    T90 - 25 (RC) - Orelvis Martinez - Blue Jays

    T90 - 27 - Roberto Clemente - Pirates

    T90 - 35 - Larry Walker - Expos

    T90 - 43 - Trea Turner - Phillies

    T90 - 48 - Vladimir Guerrero - Expos

    T90 - 50 - Frank Thomas

    T90 - 71 - Ryne Sandberg - Cubs

    T90 - 74 - Zebby Matthews - Twins (RC x 2)

    T90 - 99 - Jazz Chisholm - Yankees

     

    SERIES 2:

    90B2 1 - Royce Lewis - Twins

    90B2 10 - Alex Bregman - Red Sox

    90B2 22 - Luisangel Acuna - Mets (RC)

    90B2 27 - Cody Bellinger - Yankees

    90B2 28 - Caden Dana - Angels (RC)

    90B2 30 - Thomas Saggese - Cardinals (RC)

    90B2 36 - Lawrence Butler - A's

    90B2 48 - Ezequiel Tovar - Rockies

    90B2 49 - Teoscar Hernandez - Dodgers

     

     

    1990 SERIES - ALL STARS:

    90AS 1 - Tarik Skubal - Tigers - (2024 AL Leaders - ERA)

    90AS 13 - Corbin Carroll - D'Backs (2024 NL Leaders - Triples)

    90AS 22 - Derek Jeter - Yankees (2012 AL Leaders - Hits)

    90AS 26 - Bo Jackson - Royals (1989 AL Leaders - Slugging Percentage)

    90AS 46 - Sandy Koufax - Dodgers (1965 NL Leaders - Strikeouts)

     

     

    T-90C SET - SILVER PACK CHROME REFRACTORS:

    Similar to previous year's promotions, 1990 Topps Baseball Chrome Refractors is a 100-card set distributed as premiums

    at participating Hobby stores - Each card is a Chrome "Tire Tread" MOJO-Refractor done in the style of the 1990 Topps set,

    but it is NOT a parallel of the 1990 inserts seeded in packs.

     

    Collectors who purchased a full Hobby box receive a four-card pack and those buying a Jumbo box will receive two packs. Randomly seeded in packs are "colored" Refractors and autographs, also done in the "Tire Tread" pattern

    T90C - 28 - Nacho Alvarez Jr. - Braves (RC)

    T90C - 33 - Hayden Birdsong - Giants (RC)

    T90C - 47 - Seiya Suzuki - Cubs

    T90C - 48 - Nolan Arenado - Cardinals

    T90C - 51 - Yordan Alvarez - Astros

    T90C - 53 - Justyn-Henry Malloy - Tigers (RC)

    T90C -55 - James Wood - Nationals (RC)

    T90C-59 - Chayce McDermott - Orioles (RC)

    T90C - 67 - Vladimir Guerrero - Expos

    T90C - 83 - Pete Alonso - Mets

    T90C - 101 - Caden Dana - Angels (RC)

    T90C - 106 - Lawrence Butler - A's

    T90C - 130 - Anthony Volpe - Yankees

    T90C - 148 - Jace Jung - Tigers

     

     

    ALL-STAR SILVER PACK CHROME MOJO REFRACTOR SET:

    90ASC 10 - Mike Trout - Angels (2019 AL Leaders - Slugging Percentage)

    90ASC 13 - Corbin Carroll - D'Backs (2024 NL Leaders - Triples)

    90ASC 20 - Nolan Ryan - Rangers (1989 AL Leaders - Strikeouts)

    90ASC 40 - Gunnar Henderson - Orioles (2024 AL Leaders - XBH)

     

     

    2024 ALL TOPPS TEAM:

    ATT 5 - Bryce Harper - Phillies

    ATT 6 - William Contreras - Brewers

    ATT 11 - Bobby Witt Jr. - Royals

     

     

    CALL TO THE HALL:

    CTH 15 - Mickey Mantle - Yankees

    CTH 24 - Ichiro - Mariners (Just Enshrined in '25!)

     

     

    DYNAMIC DUOS:

    # DD 11 - Carlos Correa // Royce Lewis - Twins

     

     

    FIRST PITCH:

    FP-2 - Masanori Murakami - Giants (Oracle Park)

     

    SERIES 2:

    FP2-3 - Rickey Henderson (Oakland Coliseum - 9/26/24)

    FP2-4 - Jenn Tran (Fenway Park - 9/07/24)

     

     

    GREATEST HITS:

    GH 1 - Aaron Judge - Yankees

    GH 7 - Corbin Carroll - D'Backs

    GH 14 - Jazz Chisholm Jr. - Yankees

     

    BLUE # GH 10 - Numbered 74/150 - Freddie Freeman - Dodgers

     

     

    HOMEFIELD ADVANTAGE SET:

    HA 20 - Ketel Marte - D'Backs

    HA 22 - Jacob Wilson - A's (RC)

     

     

    OPS LEADERS:

    # OPS 3 - Juan Soto - Yankees (.988)

    # OPS 4 - Bobby Witt Jr. - Royals (.097)

    # OPS 5 - Yordan Alvarez - Astros (.959)

    # OPS 21 - Jurickson Profar - Padres (.839)

     

     

     

    STARS OF MLB:

    4 - Fernando Tatis Jr. - Padres

    7 - Vladimir Guerrero Jr. - Blue Jays

    9 - Yordan Alvarez - Astros

    13 - Elly De La Cruz - Reds

    18 - James Wood - Nationals

    23 - Coby Mayo - Orioles

    26 - Shoto Imanaga - Cubs

    27 - Paul Skenes - Pirates

    31 - Jacob Wilson - A's (RC)

    38 - Kevin Alcantara - Cubs (RC)

    39 - Rhett Lowder - Reds

    41 - Jackson Jobe - Tigers (RC)

    42 - Freddie Freeman - Dodgers

    43 - Yoshinobu Yamamoto - Dodgers

    45 - Royce Lewis - Twins

    47 - Luisangel Acuna - Mets (RC x 2)

    49 - Trea Turner - Phillies

    51 - Manny Machado - Padres

    52 - Blake Snell - Dodgers

    53 - Roki Sasaki - Dodgers (RC)

    57 - Paul Goldschmidt - Yankees

    59 - Ketel Marte - D'Backs

     

     

    SUMMER SUPERSTARS:

    SS 2 - Ketel Marte - D'Backs

    SS 4 - Ronald Acuna Jr. - Braves

    SS 6 - Adley Rutschman - Orioles

    SS 18 - Salvador Perez - Royals

    SS 26 - Pete Alonso - Mets

    SS 31 - Bryce Harper - Phillies

    SS 38 - Vladimir Guerrero - Blue Jays

    SS 42 - Nolan Arenado - Cardinals

     

    TRAINING GROUNDS:

    TG 2 - Aaron Judge - Yankees (Grapefruit League - Florida)

    TG 6 - Bobby Witt Jr. - Royals (Cactus League - Arizona)

    TG 7 - Vladimir Guerrero Jr. - Blue Jays (Grapefruit League - Florida)

    TG 15 - Corbin Carroll - D'Backs (Cactus League - Arizona)

     

     

    ___________________________________

    MEMORABILIA LANE:

    ____________________________________

    1990 TOPPS BASEBALL AUTOGRAPHS - SERIES 1:

    # AA - Numbered 174/299 - Adael Amador - Rockies (RC)

    # BLE - Numbered 6/139 - Brooks Lee - Twins (RC)

     

     

    1990 TOPPS BASEBALL AUTOGRAPHS - SERIES 2:

    # 90B2-GM - Grant McCray - Giants (RC)

    # 90B2-SW - Shay Whitcomb - Astros (RC)

     

     

    1990 TOPPS BASEBALL RELICS:

    DC - Numbered 51/150 - Dylan Crews - Nationals (RC)

     

     

    CITY CONNECT SWATCH COLLECTION:

    BLUE RELIC # CC-JP - Numbered 47/150 - Jeremy Pena - Astros (Uniform)

     

     

    REAL ONE AUTOGRAPHS:

    Estimated 150 copies of each Real One Autograph were produced.

    # 192 - Tyler Locklear - Mariners

     

     

     

     

    TOPPS - FLAGSHIP COLLECTION:

    Flagship Collection is a 100-card set exclusive to specially marked Series One Super Boxes sold exclusively to Costco stores.

    Each box contained seven packs of 2025 Topps Series 1, 5 packs of 2025 Topps Heritage, an Oversized card, a Companion card, and three, five-card "Flagship Collection" packs.

    Each Flagship Collection card is printed on 60pt cardstock.

    BASE:

    # 27 - Mike Trout - Angels

    # 34 - Anthony Santander - Orioles

    # 75 - Anthony Rizzo - Yankees

    # 78 - Yoshinobu Yamamoto - Dodgers

    # 87 - Elly De La Cruz - Reds

    # 90 - Bobby Witt Jr, - Royals

    # 99 - Aaron Judge - Yankees

     

     

    OVERSIZED:

    # OTC-16 - Mike Trout - Angels

     

    COMPANION CARD:

    # CTB 5 - SP - Aaron Judge - Yankees

    PENDING TRADE W/JACK PALLEN - 9/27/25

     

     

     

     

    TOPPS - ALL STAR GAME 2025:

    HH 1 - Ronald Acuna Jr.

    HH 3 - Chipper Jones

    HH 4 - Austin Riley

    HH 5 - Dale Murphy

    HH 6 - Tom Glavine

    HH 7 - John Smoltz

    HH 8 - Ozzie Albies

    HH 9 - Matt Olson

    HH 10 - Spencer Strider

    HH 11 - David Justice

    HH 12 - Michael Harris II

    HH 13 - Andruw Jones

    HH 14 - Tim Hudson

    HH 15 - Spencer Schwellenbach

    HH 16 - Fred McGriff

    HH 17 - Sean Murphy

    HH 18 - Rafael Furcal 

    HH 19 - Joe Torre

    HH 20 - Drake Baldwin

    HH 21 - Hurston Waldrep

    HH 22 - Warren Spahn

    HH 23 - Phil Niekro

    HH 24 - Eddie Matthews

    HH 25 - Hank Aaron

     

    ALL-STAR GAME GREATS # ASGG-29 - Ken Griffey Jr. - Mariners ('92 All-Star MVP)

     

     

     

     

    TOPPS - HERITAGE:

    (BASED ON THE 1976 TOPPS SET)

    _______________________

    BASE + PARALLELS:

    _______________________

    # 56 - Jose Altuve - Astros

    # 61 (RC) - Adael Amador - Rockies

    # 130 (RC) - Dillon Dingler - Tigers

    # 180 (RC) - Edgardo Henriquez - Dodgers

    # 181 (RC) - Rhett Lowder - Reds

    # 219 (RC) - Cade Povich - Orioles

    # 224 (RC) - Roki Sasaki - Dodgers

    # 231 (RC) - James Wood - Nationals

    # 290 (RC) - J.T. Ginn - A's

    # 309 (RC) - Zebby Matthews - Twins

    # 324 (RC) - Hayden Birdsong - Giants

    # 362 (RC) - Shay Whitcomb - Astros

     

     

    C H R O M E:

    # 48 - Trea Turner - Phillies (NL All-Star)

    # 60 - Paul Skenes - Pirates (NL All-Star)

    # 77 - Andrew Benintendi - White Sox

    # 82 - Vidal Brujan - Marlins

    # 110 - Christian Walker - Astros

    # 137 - Tobias Myers - Brewers

    # 169 - Jose Ramirez - Guardians (AL All-Star)

    # 199 - Chris Sale/Braves - Zack Wheeler/Phillies - Shota Imanaga/Cubs (NL 2024 Victory Leaders)

    # 234 - Brooks Baldwin - White Sox (RC)

    # 275 - Ryan Weathers - Marlins

    # 315 - Nick Castellanos - Phillies

    # 324 - Hayden Birdsong - Giants (RC)

    # 388 - Sonny Gray - Cardinals

     

     

    R E F R A C T O R:

    # 275 - Ryan Weathers - Marlins

    # 341 - Willie Mays - Giants (All-Time All-Stars)

    # 386 - Drew Romo - Rockies

     

     

    SP:

    # 451 - Jordan Walker - Cardinals

    # 478 - Jesus Luzardo - Phillies

    # 488 - Brandon Lowe - D'Rays

     

     

     

    DARK GREEN PARALLEL (Blasters Only):

    # 165 - Vladimir Guerrero Jr. - Blue Jays

    # 272 - Ha-Seong Kim - Padres

    # 298 - Taj Bradley - D'Rays

    # 381 - Bryan Ramos - White Sox

    DARK GREEN SP # 480 - Kyle Schwarber - Phillies

     

     

    PINK SPARKLE REFRACTORS (Blaster Only):

    # 51 (RC) - Blake Dunn - Reds

    # 62 - Lucas Erceg - Royals

    # 91 - Robert Suarez - Padres

    # 357 - Yariel Rodriguez - Blue Jays

    # 400 - Marcus Semien - Rangers

    PINK SP # 452 (RC) - Carlos Rodriguez - Brewers

     

     

    RED PARALLELS (Mega Boxes Only):

    # 59 - Blake Snell - Dodgers

    # 74 - Jhoan Duran - Twins

    # 116 - Tarik Skubal - Tigers

    # 170 - Zack Gelof - A's

    # 289 - DJ Herz - Nationals (RC)

    # 315 - Nick Castellanos - Phillies

    # 326 - Curtis Mead - D'Rays

    # 338 - Angel Martinez - Guardians (RC)

    # 342 - Bob Gibson - Cardinals (The Topps News: All-Time All-Stars)

    # 372 - Yilber Diaz - D'Backs (RC)

    RED SP:

    # 459 - Tyler Anderson - Angels

    # 464 - Gavin Sheets - White Sox

     

     

    SILVER SPARKLE CHROME REFRACTORS:

    # 166 - Sean Manaea - Mets

    # 179 - Kumar Rocker - Rangers (RC)

    # 260 - Eric Wagaman - Angels (RC)

    # 278 - Mark Vientos - Mets

    # 283 - Brandon Drury - Angels

    # 355 - Josh Jung - Rangers

    # 398 - Jaden Hill - Rockies (RC)

    SP:

    # 403 - Justin Steele - Cubs

    # 437 - Austin Gomber - Rockies

    # 461 - Yankees/Dodgers (AL & NL Championships: Yankees Win AL Pennant - Dodgers Knock Off Mets in 6)

    # 469 - Andrew Abbott - Reds

    # 473 - Jake McCarthy - D'Backs

     

     

    BASE SHORT PRINTS:

    # 401 - David Bednar - Pirates

    # 406 (RC) - Ben Rice - Yankees

    # 407 - Cristopher Sanchez - Phillies

    # 414 - Albert Suarez - Orioles

    # 416 - Walker Buehler - Red Sox

    # 420 - Ketel Marte - D'Backs (NL All-Star)

    # 441 - Austin Wells - Yankees

    # 442 - Luis Severino - A's

    # 450 - Zac Gallen - D'Backs

    # 454 - Spencer Arrighetti - Astros

    # 455 - Jesus Sanchez - Marlins

    # 458 - Travis D'Arnaud - Angels

    # 464 - Gavin Sheets - White Sox

    # 466 - Freddy Fermin - Royals

    # 469 - Andrew Abbott - Reds

    # 471 - Richard Fitts - Red Sox (RC)

    # 480 - Kyle Schwarber - Phillies

    # 486 - Alek Manoah - Blue Jays

    # 498 - Gabriel Moreno - D'Backs

    # 499 - Nolan Arenado - Cardinals

     

    CHROME SP:

    # 410 - Michael Harris II - Braves

     

    CHROME SP REFRACTOR:

    # 437 - Austin Gomber - Rockies

     

     

    _____________

    INSERTS:

    _____________

    25th ANNIVERSARY:

    NOTE: This entire set is an uncorrected error as 2025 is the 24th anniversary of the first Heritage set (2001 Heritage).

    You didn't celebrate your first birthday on the day you were born, did you?

    H 25 SET:

    # 5 - Paul Skenes - Pirates

    # 18 - Austin Wells - Yankees

     

    1976 REFEDINED:

    # 76R 4 - Mike Schmidt - Phillies

    # 76R 14 - Aaron Judge - Yankees

     

    REDEFINED - HOLOGRAPHIC SET:

    # 76R 2 - Nolan Ryan - Angels

    # 76R 6 - Jackson Chourio - Brewers

     

     

    1976 PLAYER ICONS:

    76PI 11 - Aaron Judge - Yankees

    76PI 19 - Chris Sale - Braves

     

     

    NOTABLE AMERICANS:

    # NS 1 - George Washington (President)

    # NS 7 - James Madison (Founding Father)

    # NS 43 - Frank Lloyd Wright (Architect)

    # NS 44 - John James Audubon (Naturalist & Artist)

    # NS 58 - Stephen Foster (Father of American Music)

    # NS 100 - Horace Mann (Father of American Education)

     

     

    THROUGH THE YEARS:

    # TTY 18 - Jeff Bagwell - Astros

    # TTY 23 - Aaron Judge - Yankees

     

    HOLOGRAPHIC # TTY 19 - Albert Pujols - Cardinals

     

     

    _________________________

    MEMORABILIA LANE:

    _________________________

    REAL ONE AUTOGRAPHS:

    # ROA RFI (RC) - Richard Fitts - Red Sox

     

     

    CLUBHOUSE COLLECTION - GAME USED MEMORABILIA:

    # CCR WS - Will Smith - Dodgers