Negro Leaguers Win With Website

Gary witnessed the
first-ever signed cards!

He’s not black. He’s never played baseball. But Gary Crawford has been one of the best teammates a Negro Leaguer could ever imagine.

Five years ago, Gary founded http://www.negroleaguelegends.org/. He assists in booking player appearances and routing fan mail. He keeps the website active, adding touches such as photos of the home and office of Dr. J.B. Martin, owner of the Chicago American Giants.

His first contact with the world of Negro Leaguers came when he encountered Johnny “Lefty” Washington.

Gary was helping produce the March of Dimes Sports Awards Ceremony. Washington told Gary about how former players would travel together to events.

“He never mentioned Chicago,” Gary said. “I asked why. Johnny told me, ‘Nobody ever organized it right.’ That’s when I asked, ‘What can I do?’

Gary rents the P.O. Box as a clearinghouse for fan mail, when collectors write in for autographs via donations as indicated on the website.

“I hand them the mail, whether at an appearance or going to see them,” Gary explained. “I’m standing there when they read it.” His involvement often gets an immediate response to letters, as the retirees are pleased to see money included.

Previously, he saw that some overwhelmed Negro Leaguers would be storing their mail in boxes. “They intended to sign it,” he said. “They could have been throwing it out. The website offers a way to help the player and the collector. If a guy is ill or doesn’t want to sign for anyone, I’ll see the items get returned.” Likewise, when someone buys an autographed photo or other item through the website, Gary sees that the player gets the royalties.

Gary is a selfless booster of the Negro Leaguers. He sounded like a proud parent telling of the time when he went with Hank Presswood to a Denny’s. They chose the place where his friend Presswood autographed 100 Allen & Ginter inserts for a Topps representative. According to Gary, Presswood was so excited he didn’t realize until they were on the ride home that he never asked for a card for himself to show his wife. Gary called the company to get Presswood his own A&G cards.

Finding the right items for autograph collectors is one mission Gary continues. Seeking vintage photos to reproduce or creating appropriately-themed items to sign is key to pleasing fans and the Negro Leaguers.

Along with purchasing autographs of Negro Leaguers, knowing that profits will go directly to the families, the website helps book former players for appearances. Gary was proud to tell of getting a Negro Leaguer to an elementary school classroom less than a week after the teacher called.

“I try to get them out there,” he says. “They can keep their own legacy alive.

Just don’t call Gary an agent or promoter.

“They’re friends of mine. The fellas,” Gary explained. “I thank God for them.”

For more information, write to Gary at info@negroleaguelegends.org.

Negro Leaguers Set for March Chicago Show

Former players eager to please fans and
collectors. Meet Negro League history in
Chicago in March.
(Photo courtesy http://www.negroleaguelegends.org/)

“The Gray Cat” will be on the loose in Chicago soon.

I wrote about Lou Clarizio, one of only six white Negro Leaguers, in a previous blog post.

I learned from http://www.negroleaguelegends.org/ founder Gary Crawford that Lou is set to appear at the Negro League booth at the Chicago Sun-Times Sports Collectibles Convention Saturday, March 17. Admission to the show is $10.

Several Negro League veterans will be on hand throughout the day. The former players sell autographed items.

Gary assures me that while the men are signing for pay, the Negro Leaguers are willing to shake hands, pose for pictures and answer questions. In a sense, the retirees are self-employed dealers. They set their own rules and control their own profit, unlike the sometimes-hectic rush in which both signers and collectors are herded in and out of transactions at a breakneck pace by promoters and security staff.

The opportunities to interact with Negro Leaguers are slim and growing slimmer. If you’re able to attend the show, this might be one of the best time and money investments you could make.

For exact appearance times, costs and other details, e-mail info@NegroLeagueLegends.org.

Coming Wednesday: Keeping the Negro League legacy alive.

Happy 2nd Blog-iversary To Us!

Two years. Still in the game. Since Feb. 10, 2010, to be exact.

I couldn’t have done it without readers like you.

I’m thankful to you, as well as to Diana (my wife/best friend/muse).

Drinking and blogging isn’t allowed. However, I must ask for one sip of whine.

Year two hasn’t gotten easier. My response rate from retired players has dipped.

I’m not talking Hall of Famers, either.

Fine. Be that way! I’m digging in. I’m choking up on the bat. I’ll get my swings. To translate, I’ll make every opportunity count.

I saw Chef Thomas Keller interviewed once. The sign on his
restaurant kitchen wall read:

A Sense of Urgency

The Chef speaks my language. Baseball doesn’t have a time clock. Writing to former baseball players does.

Obituaries. New non-signers. Retirees hiring fan mail “services” to handle letters while charging for each signature.

The challenges are there, possibly growing by the day.

That’s no reason to give up. Part of my game plan for dealing with the new opposition will be in spotlighting the hopeful elements of the hobby. If I find a collector finding creative ways to reclaim the hobby, I’ll share that hope. Likewise, I’ll blow the whistle if I find any examples of fan mail misbehavior.

Meanwhile, thanks for sticking with Baseball By The Letters. Your posted blog comments and e-mails are appreciated. When I vowed two years ago to chase stories, not signatures, I meant OUR stories, too. My friend Kohei Nirengi calls it “the beautiful game.” Indeed! Good fans and sincere collectors are what keep it that way.

Coming Tuesday: An update on Negro Leaguer Louis “The Gray Cat” Clarizio.

Billy Sample Samples Reunion 108

Billy Knows eBay!

Former players often take well-marked off ramps on their retirement journeys. Coach. Broadcaster.


That’s what makes Billy Sample’s off-road adventure the stuff movies are made of. You see, the well-traveled announcer has written a baseball movie called Reunion 108. His credits, “Screenwriter, producer, co-director,” may not fit onto one baseball card.

In a free-wheeling e-mail interview that gives a great glimpse into moviemaking and life after baseball, Sample wrote: “I was selected Most Versatile of my senior class in high school, I’m trying to live up to it.”

Here’s other hits from our e-conversation.

Q: Were you standing in an outfield one game thinking, “Soon as I retire, I’ll write a movie about my baseball experiences”? When did this idea find you? How much time did you spend writing the screenplay?

A: My first game in the outfield was at old Arlington Stadium and I was overcome with fear because anything hit to me in left field would travel into the lights. That stadium and old Memorial Stadium in Baltimore were the worse and naturally I would lose a ball in each stadium that would costs the team a ballgame, and I also broke my wrist because of the large, low row of lights (in Arlington).

However, you asked about the script-screenplay-movie, and no, though I enjoy writing, I never thought about chronicling my baseball experiences while playing. I had written a ‘book’ about twenty three years ago, and though it was received well by an editor at one of the large publishing companies, when the script was sent upstairs, the conclusion was that I didn’t have enough name recognition. I thought I could make up their investment in my hometown alone, but I didn’t get the chance to present that rebuttal. About the screenplay, I had notes around the house for quite some time, so when it was time to put it together, it didn’t take long.

Q: How much time during your playing and announcing career have you spent watching TV and movies? What’s been your opinion of baseball films…seeing that REUNION 108 makes mention of BULL DURHAM in its synopsis?

A: Well, the screenplay Reunion 108 is an edgy, satirical, R-rated comedy with parody (a lot like me). It was nominated and took home top honors at the Hoboken Film Festival this past summer in the unproduced screenplay category.

My top baseball movies are: League of Their Own, Eight Men Out, Bull Durham, Pride of the Yankees and 61* … I appreciate authenticity

Q: How many teammates and foes know about the movie to be? What’s your answer for the former players curious about whether you’ll be basing any of the movie around their own adventures on or off the field?

A: My former teammates, who know me at all, know that I’ll take bigger secrets to the grave than anything they’ve done. I used the entire landscape of major and minor league ball as my mosaic, and if the stories aren’t universal, then the specific ones are traceable to no one but me, and I’m not talking (well, aside from the screenplay:-) Word may have filtered out to a couple of former mates, but it would be just a few … I most often thought of my Double-A Tulsa team when honing the logistics and makeup of the script, though very little, if any, involved their exploits.

Q: When will the movie be cast? What’s the timeline for production, until us eager fans of yours get a look?

A: At the moment, our tentative schedule is to hold a casting session in New York later in February and start shooting in mid March … we will show clips on the website as we move along in the shooting … I conducted a casting session in my hometown of Salem, Virginia in December. The movie will be shot there and in the NYC area.
 
Q: One of the coolest parts of this story is that you’re doing this movie with your son’s involvement. Tell me about him, please!

A: My oldest son, Ian, who has spent the last five years in Japan playing football (yeah, right, who knew they played football in Japan?) is working on his third screenplay. He has penned a beautifully creative romantic comedy titled, Wingman, that we’re hoping to package in the near future. Anyway, he helped me immensely in structuring my script into proper screenwriter’s form and is co-producing with me. We have formed a production company, Carms Production, ostensibly to warehouse our scripts.

On his way from Chiba to Ireland to meet his mother for the mother-son vacation he had always wanted to share with her, he stopped in Switzerland to research William Tell at museums outside of Zurich for a reference in one of his scripts. No, he is not shooting an apple off my head.
 
If I make any significant money off Reunion 108, I hope to make this my next project. Mrs. Harmon just turned 98, after that, then the Reunion sequel … fingers crossed.

[Sample’s first grade teacher, now 98, was a student of George Washington Carver, offering a unique window to the Civil Rights movement.]

Q: How can collectors spread the word or help?

A: If anyone wants to own a non-management piece of the movie, I’ll leave that avenue open (thousand dollar minimum). I’m trying to shoehorn an ambitious shooting schedule into a SAG ultra low budget (everything, including cast, crew and post production under two hundred thousand dollars) We are shooting on a red camera or red epic camera, which I had to have after watching more independent films over the past few years than I’d care to admit, and our co-director, cinematographer, James Suttles has grown up capturing the beauty of his home area in western North Carolina, near Asheville, thus, it should have the quality of a major motion picture on an independent film’s budget.
 
Q: Movie or not, people still write for your autograph?

A: I’m twenty-six years from the last time I grounded to short, and yet, I still get about five to seven autograph requests per week sent to the house. It doesn’t take long to know who is sincere with their comments and who is just reciting stats. I generally respond according to the theme of the request, and though not particularly prompt, I will almost always return the requests with a signature. Sometimes requests, especially if it’s involved, may get lost in my dungeon for years. I found one once that was over seven years old, I sent it anyway, not my fault that the person moved within those seven years:-)

I considered signing autographs as part of the entertainment package, but would never admonish a player for not signing, generally people have their reasons, plus I think it’d be a tad boring if we all were alike:-) Oops, an addendum, I hate signing something for free and then see someone selling it on eBay, though I have to keep in mind that often at card shows, in which I’m getting paid, I might have signed extra cards/pictures to a promoter, who may in turn, try to recoup his or her costs by selling them online.

Q: Thank you. People read my blog are collecting fans. Yes, they like autographs. However, they’d gasp if you called them DEALERS. Your thoughts?

A: I think most are like this, but I recognize some of the ‘dealers’ and occasionally, I’ll let them know that I know they are dealers.

A huge standing ovation to Gregg Kersey for suggesting this feature. Most of all, I’m grateful to one Billy Sample. I hope we’ll see likenesses of him on the silver screen soon, as well as his witty insights on team broadcasts even sooner. The Mets called dibbies on him. Some team is bound to shine if Sample is mikeside in 2012.

Meanwhile, enjoy pre-movie coverage from Sample’s hometown newspaper!

Seeking 10 More Billy Samples

Past teammates Sample
and Darwin both have been
signing more than 90%
of requests, says
http://www.sportscollectors.net/

I’m excited about sharing Billy Sample’s behind-the-scenes look at his baseball movie, Reunion 108, Friday.

Billy Sample is insightful, humble and FUNNY! Any team should dash to get him in their broadcast booth.
I know his movie will be the same.

I looked at the list of his first Texas teammates this week to choose who’d get my next 10 letters. My latest mailing includes questions to:

Dave Chalk
Steve Comer
Danny Darwin
Adrian Devine
Jerry Don Gleaton
Jim Kern
Jim Mason
Jon Matlack
Paul Mirabella
Mike Richardt

Coming Friday: From baseball to movies…Billy Sample’s winning game plan.