‘Baseball Hall of Shame’ Author Allan Zullo Dishes Diamond Dirt From “Blooperstown” Discoveries

The first volume in the series, now
out of print, is being hawked at $137 by
a dealer on Amazon.Com.

It would have been a shame to let the “Baseball Hall of Shame” authors sneak off without answering any questions. My thanks to author Allan Zullo, who provided the following e-interview…

Q: The “Baseball Hall of Shame” series debuted in 1985, gracing  four volumes. Now, “The Best of Blooperstown” is a fifth! What’s new here?

A: We have taken the best of the previous four books and added about 40 percent new material.
Unfortunately, we don’t have any examples of players sending us letters.  We interviewed many of them by phone or in person; the older stories were based on old newspaper accounts, chronicles and memoirs that we found at the library of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Q: Speaking of baseball “shame,” what’s your current assessment of autograph signing?

A: You’re the expert on autographs, Tom.  You already know what we’ve discovered: Too many of today’s players hate signing autographs because they don’t have the time or feel that fans are profiting off of them. If you’re not a grade schooler or a beautiful woman, chances are not very good that you will get an autograph in person at the ballpark.  You might have some luck by the players’ entrance hours before the game or in the front row during BP.  The best place is the signing booth where two or three players at a time are required by the club to sign autographs.  Obviously, your chances increase if you send a SASE to the player with a polite letter.  The better the player, the less likely you are to get an autograph.  To increase your chances, ask for autographs from players before they become superstars.

Q: If someone wants to get an autograph from two fun authors like yourselves, any tips?

A: Why anyone would want an autograph from us is beyond our understanding.   If so, they can write to Bruce at Nash Entertainment, Sunset Gower Studios, 1438 N. Gower St.  Box 10, Hollywood,  CA 90028; for Allan, it’s c/o The Wordsellers, Inc., 9 Poplar Forest, Fairview, NC 28730. [Be sure to enclose a SASE, return postage…some appropriate way to get your book returned. Thanks!]

Q: Last question: you two want to create a “Blooperstown” exhibit, pursuing some of the memorabilia you’re writing about. How’s the hunt?

A: We’re not having much luck because the really good things we want are from an earlier era and are nowhere to be found. Families of deceased players got rid of their things.  However, we’re still trying.  We’re hoping to get the army helmet that Steve Dahl wore at Disco Demolition Night. We believe the hat Jose Canseco wore when a flyball bounced off  his head for a homer is too expensive for us.
**************

Allan, as one of those unlucky collectors who isn’t a grade schooler or a beautiful woman, I hope you’ll pen an “Adventures in Autographing” someday. The stories we could tell!

Coming Monday: Honoring “Baseball Passings,” one of Facebook’s greatest sites!

“The Baseball Hall of Shame” Reopens With “The Best of Blooperstown” — Strange, But True FUN!

One cool fact: 86-year-old
sports artist Jack Davis,
illustrator of previous editions,
came out of retirement
to adorn this cover, too!

Major League Baseball can laugh at itself!

Authors Bruce Nash and Allan Zullo are back again. (Take that, Simon and Garfunkel!) The pair have revived their “Baseball Hall of Fame” series with a fifth title called The Best of Blooperstown.

This offbeat book combines a “best of” format, while adding 40 percent new stories.

In tales as recent as 2011, the five newest inductees include Orlando Hudson, Denard Span, John Lindsey, Lastings Milledge and Chris Coughlan.

My favorite tales? Nash and Zullo uncover a pair of gems for autograph collectors. Once, Will McEnany substituted his uniformed twin brother in the Pirates bullpen. Not only did he fool skipper Chuck Tanner, the reliever’s kin signed autographs for fans. Talk about a rare variation to collect?

Also, readers discover why outfielder Al Smith once signed autographs only for fans who claimed to have the same last name.

This book is fun reading for a full nine innings. Each story may run one or two pages. Read it during the commercial breaks for your next televised baseball game viewing.

Best of all, the infamous wrong-doers in this book share a laugh with the authors. There’s no denials or finger-pointing over what went wrong on the field. I could imagine the highlighted subjects signing autographs for a collector who wrote them about their diamond misdeeds. The players seem to appreciate the recognition. After all, they won’t be forgotten, as long as Nash and Zullo are the keepers of the game’s hilarious history. I’m glad they’re back and on my bookshelf again.

Pitcher Pat Neshek Talks Autographs

Collector Neshek likes
this hard-to-get card best!

I awoke to find that the Baltimore Orioles had the best record in the American League this morning.

Is that good news for pitcher Pat Neshek? The hurler awaits at AAA Norfolk. No O’s fan wants to mess with success. However, I know is that Neshek’s stellar spring training stats prove he deserves to be back in the bigs…somewhere.

No matter where he’s at, Neshek remains the hobby’s best friend in baseball. He’s more than a signing machine. He takes pride in being a collector, too. He answered some questions when I wrote him c/o the Tide.

Q: Besides the SASE, what tips do you have for collectors by mail?

A: Keep it short and simple. Include a SASE and research which players sign TTM.

Q: Your website rocks. I’ve enjoyed your great card set reviews. What’s been your favorite Pat Neshek cards so far — and why?

A: 2007 Topps Heritage. It’s a tough SP to find.

Q: Bless you for your penmanship. What’s kept you from a “P— N—,” the standard abbreviated scribble so many players succumb to?

A: I enjoy signing and like a nice signature people can read.

Coming Thursday: A review of ‘The Baseball Hall of Shame: The Best of Blooperstown.’

‘Got Balz?’ Update + Cuban Baseball Autographs

(Photo copyright and courtesy of Patchworks Films)

I’m pleased to say that last week’s appeal to help fund Got Balz? made a difference. Patchworks Films met their $40,000 fundraising goal, thanks to you.

Part of my fascination in the upcoming documentary is in Cuban baseball. The team’s roster is filled with major league-quality talent. Ironically, few people in America might know who these gifted players are.

I asked filmmaker Marcia Jarmel about one picture on their website, as well as what autographing she saw in Cuba.

“Our boys are Jaden Jarmel-Schneider (the 11 year old) and Mica Jarmel-Schneider (the 15 year old).  The player [signing] is Yonder Martinez, one of Cuba’s best pitchers.

“From what I observed as we filmed in the dugout before the playoff game, the players seemed to see our boys as fans, not American fans. They were happy to sign and accept “buen suerte” (good luck!).”

Also, I wanted to know if we’d see any known baseball faces in the documentary.

“The film itself features Cuban greats, but not any U.S. players, but we are hoping we might still get some U.S. players involved with the project.  We shall see if any of the irons we have in the fire pan out.

With the funding we’ve garnered so far, Ken [husband and partner Ken Schneider] and I will be able to finish editing the film this summer. There is still a need for support to cover the final lab work and to pay for music rights for the fabulous sound track we’re planning. So absolutely, people can still get involved.  For anyone interested, the can go directly to our website and donate there: www.gotbalzfilm.info.”

Coming Wednesday: Pitcher Pat Neshek talks autographs and cards!

“Once A Cub…” Blog Hobby’s Rookie of Year?

Why read a team blog? Why read a blogger who likes a team that’s not MINE?

Good question. Here’s a great answer:

FOCUS.

Learn how someone hones in on one subject. Too many hobbyists flame out, trying to collect everything. Or, even though collectors may live forever, former players don’t. While you might think you have enough money to collect one of everything and every player, you may not have enough time.

I’m intrigued by the debut of Matt Major’s “Once A Cub, Always a Cub” blog. He’s having fun building a team collection, making great friends in the hobby and creating some stunning custom cards (fronts AND backs). Thanks to Matt, who provides his hobby and team fandom story in this fun e-interview:

Q: Super blog! What’s your background as a Cubs fan and collector?

A: I used to collect anything and everything I could get but have pared down my collection since re-entering the hobby. While my overarching focus has a Cubs theme, the two biggest sub-collections involve my favorite player growing up, Ryne Sandberg, and autographed books (not just Cubs books). That is why my username on many websites (eBay, SCN, SCF, etc) is rynobooks. I have thousands of Sandberg cards (hundreds that are different) as well as many different kinds of memorabilia (pennants, programs, magazines, bobbleheads, McFarlanes, stadium giveaways, autographs, etc). After such a long break, I’m finding it difficult to remember what I have so I’m beginning to inventory everything slowly but surely (and will update that part of the collection on Sandberg Sundays).

Also, I have worked and/or volunteered at bookstores and libraries for most of my adult life. That has given me to the opportunity to build my autographed book collection quite a bit. I was lucky enough to work at one particular store for a little while that must have been considered one of the key stops on a book tour because numerous bestselling authors came through in addition to celebrity authors like Leonard Nimoy (Spock), Jamie Lee Curtis, Bruce Campbell and Joe Gibbs. I’ve also noticed during in-person situations, many celebrities/athletes are more personable when presented with their book to be signed. I try to read it before hand and find a conversation point to bring up during the encounter.

I grew up collecting cards but didn’t get into autographs until much later. My first IP Cubs autograph was Kerry Wood when the Cubs came to play an interleague series against the Orioles. My oldest son was about 3 at the time and we went with a friend of mine to get some autographs as the players were coming in the stadium. I had a McFarlane figure base and gave my son a ball I had brought to try to do a team signed ball. Wood got out of the cab and started walking towards the entrance. We had thought there were only a handful of ‘graphers there that day but once a player showed up, people seemingly came out of the woodwork and rushed over. I was one of the first and got the base signed, but I was afraid my son would get trampled so I picked him up and got out of the crowd. Wood kept signing as he walked and when he got to the entrance, he said “Where’d that little boy go, I didn’t get his ball.” So I put my son down and he walked over to Wood and got his ball signed right across the sweetspot. I’ve stopped collecting signed baseballs because they don’t seem to age well, but that’s one we’ll keep forever. My first Cubs TTM was Mark Grace in the early 90’s. I had read about writing to players for autographs in Beckett or SCD or something like that and gave it a try. I think I mailed out the whole 1989 team set but only got back 4-5.

Q: How have you fared collecting autographs, by mail and in person?

A: I haven’t been real big on sending items TTM since coming back to the hobby although I have sent out a few. And going forward with my ATCRCS, I’ll be more active soon. My first idea for a custom was a 3×5 of the Cubs “W” win flag (it’s my avatar on SCN if you’re not familiar with it). I sent a bunch of them out and asked for an inscription like “Go Cubs!” or “Cubs Win!” to players who had 90% success rates on SCN. I did include a few questionnaires that some players answered but I felt a little guilty they weren’t as personal as they could have been. I threw in some generic questions like if they were a Cubs fan (especially if they played for other teams in their career), if they followed the current game at all, the last time they went to Wrigley Field, etc. I feel that with the research I’ve done for each custom card I can ask some more pertinent questions. Quality over quantity is my new motto. And yes, I know I just mentioned Cubs and quality together, haha.

Q: Are you a Chicago person?

A: I am not from or in the Chicago area. I was a military brat and constantly moved as a kid. When I was in 1st grade in 1984, we lived near Moline, IL. So I became a bandwagon Cubs fan and felt the heartbreak from the get go. After 30 years though I can probably drop the bandwagon part. Luckily, even though we moved around a lot, I could always follow the Cubs on WGN. Never made it Wrigley while we were there but later when I was in high school we lived just outside Detroit. My dad bought the tickets at the beginning of the season for a game in September 1993. It was against the Marlins in their first season and it was billed as Ryne Sandberg day (perfect!). The game was on his birthday and they were giving away a Sandberg pennant. By the time the game rolled around, Sandberg was on the disabled list with a season ending broken wrist he got sliding into home the series before. Still got to see him as he was honored pregame, and I still have my pennant too!

Q: How did you dream up those cool custom cards?
:
A:       I have taken my kids to a local minor league stadium several times and they expressed interest in getting some autographs. Unfortunately, a lot of these younger, Single-A ballplayers don’t have any cards yet so we have a bunch of team signed batting practice balls and programs. I had seen some great looking custom cards on SCN & SCF and thought it would be fun to try. After a bit of trial and error, I came up with a few designs, posted them on SCN for critique and made some more changes. I took them for a test drive on the minor leaguers, who all seemed to like them a lot. Encouraged by the positive reactions, I decided to make the All-Time Cubs Roster Custom Set (ATCRCS). There was a lot more trial and error, trying to find the right balance in a template that would work for both retired and current players. Even with the template, each card is very time consuming. I tend to work on them in spurts, whether it’s cutting the players out of the background of their photo, compiling the statistics for the backs of the cards or doing the research for the blurb I write on each one. As of right now, I have not sent a single one TTM for an autograph request. I have about 15-20 of them signed but they’ve all been sent out to private signings or someone I had help from at Spring Training. But even from those paid signings, I feel like I’ve gotten a good response and some have asked for copies. I have done about 100 different fronts and about 50 backs which are more time consuming. Now that baseball season has rolled around again, I see myself knocking out some more while watching some games on WGN.

Q: What are your blogging goals?

A:        One of my goals (self-imposed, although highly recommended by my wife) when I got back into the hobby was to be more organized with it. Most of my collection has been relegated to one of the smallest rooms in my house. My wife tolerates it and even helps sometimes with getting autographs but doesn’t quite appreciate it like I think fellow collectors would. As I am organizing, stories of how I obtained a specific item or autograph have come flooding back and I thought it would be fun to document that for others. Writing up a daily blog post keeps me focused on attacking the organization battle a little at a time to keep from getting discouraged. I put together a couple of fallback themes the other day in case I’m ever stuck for a topic but so far it’s a smooth 20 minutes or so for each post. My original theme was just going to be the ATCRCS, hence the title and header photo. But as I’ve gotten organized, I realized there was much more to my collection I wanted to share. I hope people who read it are entertained even if they aren’t necessarily a Cubs fan. I aim to post daily, sometime before noon.

Q: Have you gotten any of your awesome “First Pitch” cards autographed yet?

A: I have not sent out any of the First Pitch customs yet. I made the Hope Solo one in anticipation of a public signing event but ultimately couldn’t pull the trigger on the fee. When looking for photos to use for the ATCRCS, I found a bunch of celebrities making the first pitch. I thought it would make for a great subset and like the regular set, it will continue to grow in size. I have thought about the 7th inning stretch too but many times it is the same person who throws out the first pitch. Also, the photos I’ve found of the sing-along aren’t as good as the first pitch. I haven’t ruled it out, but it’s on indefinite hold.

Q: How are current Cubs as signers?

A:       All of the autographs from current Cubs I have are from the generous folks at SCN who have offered help. I live in Northern Virginia so the opportunity doesn’t come up to often. The Cubs usually play the Nationals once a season and we’ve only tried to graph them once inside the stadium. None of the current players came over but former players (coaches at the time) Ivan DeJesus and Bob Dernier came over and signed at our request. I was definitely more excited about that than my kids were who pretty much only know current players. Eventually they’ll come back to Baltimore for interleague play too. My focus has been organizing and making the customs but now that I’m back in the hobby, I will be looking for more opportunities to get autographs in person. I’m debating on whether to make a trip to Chicago in January for the annual Cubs Convention (full of current and former players) or spending a week out in AZ for Spring Training. Hmmm, Chicago in the middle of winter or AZ in the Spring???

Q: Your hobby goals?

A: The way I value my collection has certainly changed during the years I took a break from the hobby. Early on, I think I considered it an investment, only getting baseballs or photographs signed. Now, it’s definitely just a hobby with no thought to resale value. Players have signed hundreds if not thousands of baseballs and cards and photos in their careers but I love the uniqueness of custom cards. My customs were designed in the offseason and my first real go of it came in Spring Training and some private signings in the beginning of the year. Long term goal is to have a card made and signed by everybody who has played for the Cubs. The Cubs have had almost 2000 players in their history, of which about half are still alive. For the players that are deceased, I’d like to find a cut signature to use. Short term goal is to have all the cards made within the next 2 years and 100 of them signed by the end of 2012. I am also looking to fill in any holes in my collection of mainstream Cubs cards.

Thanks again, Matt. I’ll be a weekly reader.

Coming Monday: A “Got Balz?” update, with Cuban baseball autograph insights.