Happy Birthday To My ‘Belle of the Ballpark,’ Author/Fan/Best Friend Diana Star Helmer

Do me a favor, please. Before you read the rest of this blog, before you check the baseball standings or search for more stamps and envelopes, say thanks.

Not to me. Thank your hobby MVP. There’s someone near you who’s made a difference in your life as a baseball fan and autograph collector. Whether it’s a child, parent, sibling, spouse or even pet, someone has been patient with you. Despite all those baseball games and trips to the mailbox, they still love you.

My hobby MVP is my wife, Diana Star Helmer.

She’s learned to love the sport, because she loves me. Diana even wrote a sensational book about baseball (the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League), Belles of the Ballpark. This out-of-print title is worth being searched for, in libraries or used bookstores.

Her work is even more stunning, considering that she corresponded with and interviewed worried old women. The production company responsible for the movie A League of Their Own intimidated former players, warning them that doing interviews of any kind before the movie’s release would jeopardize the film’s success. (In other words, director Penny Marshall’s gang wanted an exclusive.)

Hollywood couldn’t stop Diana, who won over the AAGPBL alums one by one, all due to her knowledge and passion for their history.

Diana owns one of the greatest autographed items ever. At a reunion, former players passed around Diana’s book. They autographed pages where their names were mentioned. They wrote in margins. They spotted their names in the index and signed there.

She’s earned my gratitude, admiration and love. Happy birthday!

Andrew ‘Baseball Historian’ Martin Knows The Power of a Well-Researched Letter

A new baseball blog is on my radar.

Andrew Martin is of the most helpful members of the http://www.sportscollectors.net/ community. When I saw him share news of letters and even phone calls from retired players, I knew we spoke the same language. He’s used his autograph collecting prowess to build relationships with former players. The result is “The Baseball Historian,” a blog sharing his well-researched, finely-written profiles of names from baseball past, along with the classic stories they’re still eager to share.

Andrew offered his take on baseball history from an autograph collector’s point of view.

Q: Once, you got only autographs. Now, you’re collecting memories, getting phone calls. How?

A: I always have my mailing address, email address, and phone number on all of my letters. Additionally, I just finished a graduate program in history and did my thesis on a baseball historical topic. As a result I started putting a postscript in my letters letting the people I wrote know of my interest in baseball history and asking them if they had any interest in chatting with me for 10-15 minutes about their experiences in baseball.

I have done about 65 phone calls and I would estimate that they average about 20 minutes each. In a couple of instances, the players have continued calling me back on a regular basis and we have developed personal friendships.

In other instances I have also had players call me just because they enjoyed my letter. I found that taking my time in researching a person’s career and writing a thoughtful and detailed letter got a lot of positive responses,  agreements to do interviews, and phone calls that way. A favorite example of one of my interviews was with Carl Erskine. We ended up chatting for almost an hour and was appreciative not only on my knowledge of his career, but of also knowing other things that were important to him such as the Special Olympics.

I have recorded as many of the telephone interviews as possible, with the player’s permission. I currently have the audio files on my computer, but am thinking up new ways to utilize them, such as writing/blogging and possibly putting up a website to share with others.

Andrew’s research adventures have included
an encounter with ESPN Baseball Insider
Buster Olney

Q: What address sources do you use?

A:  I mainly utilize the Harvey address lists and information found on http://www.sportscollectors.net/.  I also do some independent research when tracking down harder to find people.

Q: What are your baseball-related autograph goals?

A: I would love to get to 50,000 autographs one day. Not because of value or impressing others, but because that would mean that I had done a ton of research and had a lot of great experiences with my requests and fellow collectors. I see autograph collecting as a lot like fishing. I put out a lot of lines, do a lot of waiting, and love the surprise of seeing what I get.

Q: Advice to new collectors?

A: Don’t be afraid to do the work or take chances. Even though other people may not have success with a person doesn’t mean the same will happen to you. Just this past week I had a success from Jim Rice and at the same time I know of other people who were getting their cards back unsigned.

Q: Would you preview what your blog might offer in coming weeks?

A: I hope to post more summaries of my interviews, write up commentaries on baseball stories and personalities; and post articles I am researching on different aspects of baseball history. Currently I am working on a piece for a magazine about a “tryout” the inventor Thomas Edison had with the Philadelphia Athletics in 1926.

I’ll stay tuned to “The Baseball Historian.” I hope you do, too. These profiled men are more than mere autograph signers. They’re links to baseball history, wanting us to keep their connections to the past alive.

Tomorrow: Who is your hobby MVP?

Brownie Babe Martin Compares Two Homers

For years, Martin has signed
with both names for this card!

Boris “Babe” Martin proved my theory.

If you want to get a rise out of a former player, go deep.

Getting deep is another story. I’m talking long-balls, dingers…homers!

Martin had two in his career. He wrote:

Homer off Allen Gettel was a home run right on the line and off the handle of my bat, only about 295 feet.

Homer #2 was really a long one in left center field just ot the left of the bullpen, and I would say close to 400 feet. I forgot the name of the pitcher. Thanks for asking.

Sincerely,
Babe Martin”

Thankfully, http://www.retrosheet.org/ remembers. Good job, guys! Martin connected off Hank Borowy, who won 21 games that year. Both homers were off Yankee hurlers in Yankee Stadium in 1945.

Enjoy this superb SABR biography of Martin by noted researcher Bill Nowlin.

Witnessing Casey Blake’s Greatest Moment

(Courtesy of Mark Langill &
Los Angeles Dodgers)

I want to go to bat for Casey Blake.

The Wall Street Journal did a snarky study, creating an opportunity to downplay Blake’s offensive stats. He wound up getting dubbed “The Most Perfectly Ordinary Hitter.”

Not fair. I fear a fan might think the numbers-crunching reflects Blake The Person. I spent an hour with Casey Blake once. I saw him come through in the clutch.

Years ago, when Blake was a Cleveland mainstay, he returned to his native Indianola (Iowa) for an elementary school PTA reading night. As a children’s author with some baseball non-fiction titles, I got invited to share a classroom with the third baseman and Cubbie Bear, the Iowa Cubs mascot.

We took turns reading Casey at the Bat while Cubbie mimed the action.

I watched as a guy in his late 20s with his son appeared. Did Casey remember playing high school baseball against the guy? Qualifying for a best actor nomination, Blake smiled and nodded. The guy mentioned that he thought Casey and his school lost. I was guessing that half the people in Iowa were eager to claim that they struck out a future major leaguer.

After our poetry performance, the son of the high school acquaintance raised his hand for a question.

“Casey, who was the toughest pitcher you’ve ever seen?”

Automatically, Casey spun a tale about submariner Chad Bradford, saying that the hurler’s knuckles dragged on the ground after pitches.

“But in high school,” Casey added, “it was your Dad.”

The boy gasped. He looked anew at his father, someone clad in a worn T-shirt after a day at the factory. A son looked at his dad with new eyes. I watched as the man’s lip quivered. He choked back tears.

The pair lined up for an autograph after the session.

“Thanks, Casey,” the boy chimed. He handed the ball to his dad, then looked like he might ask his father to autograph the ball, too.

The man whispered a second thanks. Two lives were changed in Blake’s single sentence.

Casey Blake refused my praise when the classroom cleared. I pointed out the heroic act, but he’d hear none of it. He shrugged, chuckled and excused himself to sign more autographs for shouting kids down the hall.

Let’s see the Wall Street Journal and other doubting media create a stat to reflect fans befriended. If so, Casey Blake would be a league leader. That’s the play I want to see on a highlights reel.

Tom Seaver Screams, ‘Not Chris Bando!’

Donruss featured both
Bandos in the 1982 set.
Why not a card of
the brothers together?

Faith and humility. They served catcher Chris Bando through the 1980s as a major leaguer.

Today, the devout believer embraces the same values as head coach of the San Diego Christian College Hawks.

I asked for memories of his older brother Sal Bando. Chris Bando replied:

“I was never 1/2 the player my brother was. I only had vision in one eye which paralyzed me at times, but no one knew this.”

Bando blossomed in 1984, posting career highs for the Indians. How?

“Tom, I received a chance to play every day, which allowed me to not worry, knowing I’d be in there the next game if I didn’t hit.”

Future Hall of Famer Tom Seaver became a meal ticket for Bando. The catcher batted .714 off “Tom Terrific.” Admirably, Bando downplayed his mastery of the veteran, explaining:

“Tom Seaver was on his way out and he threw high ’80s and FB was straight. He threw a lot of FB and I was a FB hitter.”

The San Diego Christian College website offers a detailed biography of Chris Bando and a look at the coach today.


Coming Wednesday: Witnessing Casey Blake’s big heart.