Autograph U Yearbook: Don’t Miss It!

From 2011: Non-signing Red Sox hurler Josh Beckett (right)
still found time for collector Matt Raymond.
(Courtesy Matt Raymond & Autograph University)

Matt Raymond is the Dean of Autograph University.

That’s Matt’s blog/website, the one I raved about at the start of 2011.

Matt has a deadline of March 31 for his first annual Autograph U Yearbook, which he promises will be a free, downloadable e-book. He’s inviting collector stories with photos.

When we share our stories in the hobby, we share our knowledge. As we look at who we are, we can see who we can be.

Everyone will rave about the idea of the e-book after it appears in May. Send in your story now. You’ll be glad you did later. Let me be the first to applause Matt’s kind gesture. I’ll be sending him my story this month. I hope you’ll add your own hobby tale, too.

Firefighter Jeff Schultz Talks Autographs

A message with cards?

Ever wonder what kind of letter grade a player might give your letter?

Often, it’s just a “pass or fail” situation for collectors. As long as he signed. If there’s an extra or a personalization, that’s extra credit.

Well, Jeff Schultz shared this story in January on www.sportscollectors.net. He wrote to Jose Morales, asking for three cards to be autographed. He included two for Morales to keep.

Just two of the cards came back. The back of the envelope had the message: “Only because you are on the Fire Dept. God Bless you and your boys.”
I started thinking about the types of people who write for autographs. Jeff may never be on a trading card. He may never sign an autograph. But Morales pointed out that the retired players might admire him as much as Jeff does them. I asked Jeff about his hobby background. I’m thankful for his reply, which includes:

Q: What’s your current job title? Where do you serve? How many years service do you have?

A: I am a captain. I’ve been in public service since 1987.

Q: What’s life like for home vs. firehouse, days on and off? I ask because of whiny collectors
like me who complain about a lack of time. Your free time might be far more uncertain!

A: Home? Days off? I work 12 hours shifts plus respond on calls after my shift is over.

Q: How long have you collected? How much is TTM vs. in person? Who was your first autograph?
Do you have a specialty (sets, favorite team, etc.)

A: On and off since the 80’s. I do the MWL IP and may do AAA this year. First auto? Willie Hernandez, Steve Dillard and Mick Kelleher. I’ve talked to Dillard and Kelleher about it.

Q: What are letters you send like? Do you tell about your career?

(By the way, I think you SHOULD. I think it helps to be personal in a letter. Helps the guy understand WHY the autograph is meaningful to you.) Do you ask questions about someone’s career?

A: My letters are the same format I’ve always used, just updated my job and age. For tougher ones I send a personal letter, but it hasn’t helped.

Q:. I mentioned Frank Tepedino, who became a firefighter after baseball. Have you written to other retired players who are firefighters? Any special responses about the connection?

A: There are a lot of ballplayers who come from firefighting backgrounds. Had a 20 minute conversation with Chuck Crim before a game. No real special responses.

Q: Autograph goals?

A: Complete the 1983 Topps baseball set.

Thanks, Jeff, for all you do. I hope other humble heroes from daily life aren’t shy about mentioning their careers in letters. Players invent so many reasons not to sign. Let them know who they might be turning down.

Thanking Tracy Jones & WLW

Those hopeful Reds fans at
www.omgreds.com covered the
Jones Autograph Promise
from the start. They got theirs, too!

Even this blogger saw Tracy Jones deliver in the clutch.

My mailbox had an autograph 1987 Topps Wednesday. Just like he promised to everyone who e-mailed.

What impressed me most?

No WLW advertising. A blank white envelope addressed by hand.
No worry that my address has been entered into an advertiser’s database
and will be on mailing labels for eternity.

I would have understood if TJ had included a note asking for
listeners. Or, “I hope you like the card. If you can, donate to ____.”

This was a pure gift. A promise fulfilled.

It’s time for another e-mail from me. This was the e-mail address he shared when he first made the offer:

tracy@700wlw.com

Thank him for the autograph. It seems that most people in the states who wrote him should have their autographed card in the next few days. Even the plentiful 1987 cards aren’t free. Postage sure isn’t. This gesture took plenty of time, as well as money.

Tracy came through for us. Let’s look good, too. Represent the hobby well.

Coming Friday: Meet Jeff Schultz, autograph collector and firefighter. 

Don Mincher’s Autograph Legacy

Rejoining his old team…

Slugging Don Mincher died Sunday at age 73.

How will he be remembered? There’s lots of choices:

  • 1965 A.L. champion Minnesota Twin
  • 1969 Seattle Pilots all-star
  • Minor league mogul…including Huntsville Stars owner and Southern League president

I might add something else to the list: autograph admission fee pioneer.

I scoured the success board on www.sportscollectors.net. Since 2002, Mincher was charging a fee for his autograph by mail. He started out working through a broker, a fan mail clearinghouse. Soon, he was handling his own mail. A shrewd businessman, Mincher must have learned that it wasn’t that tough to keep all the profit.

Reading the results more closely, I see that Mincher was willing to add notations such as “1969 Seattle Pilots.” Several people, such as my friends at www.autographaddict.com, got questions answered.

I’m guessing that Mincher may have given freely to anyone buying a ticket to his Huntsville Stars. Likewise, I think he wasn’t selling individual autographs as much as he was judging the sincerity of each request.

The late Phil Rizzuto was famous for doing this. The check would be returned with a “No Charge!” announcement penned by The Scooter. He’d include an extended personalized inscription (seeing how many words would fit atop a Hall of Fame plaque postcard).

Not that Mincher sent out freebies. Nevertheless, he was one of a breed of autograph signers who seemed to use the fee as a bouncer and velvet rope. The request for money lessens the fan mail load while scaring off casual collectors.

Thanks to men like Mincher, I ask two questions about signing policies: how much and WHY.

Breaking News: Tracy Jones Delivers?!?

The website www.omgreds.com shared these specimens in
December, but reported on 12/15 that Jones wanted to
cancel his free autograph offer. Why did he go through with it?
By the way, this website looks like a great resource
for Reds autograph possibilities!

Tonight’s menu includes crow and humble pie.

I waved the red (Cincinnati Reds?) flag back in January over concerns that Tracy Jones might be toying with the affections of WLW listeners. I didn’t throw stones or call names. However, I did address that I hoped collectors wouldn’t be teased with empty promises.

Jeff Schultz reported on www.sportscollectors.net that he may be the first to find that the former outfielder came through on his promise for a postage-paid autographed card to anyone who e-mailed. Thanks to Jeff, who scored a signed 1987 Topps.

There could be good news at your door soon, too. It may not be that Publisher’s Clearinghouse guy with the balloons and the giant cardboard check. I’ll take TJ as my consolation prize.

People who keep their word get my applause. There’s a new reason for wanting a Tracy Jones autograph!

Coming Wednesday: What did the late Don Mincher teach us?