The Niagara Falls Review

Historic baseball with signatures of 11 greats sets record at auction

Hall of Fame opening in June 1939 brought out legends

- ANDREW DALTON

LOS ANGELES — How could a baseball artifact possibly top a ball signed by both Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig?

How about a ball signed by Ruth, Honus Wagner, Ty Cobb, Cy Young, Tris Speaker, George Sisler, Walter Johnson, Connie Mack, Nap Lajoie, Eddie Collins and Pete Alexander, on the day they all entered the Baseball Hall of Fame?

Such a ball just sold for US$623,369, SCP auctions said. That crushes the record of $345,000 for a signed baseball, set in 2013 for a Ruth-Gehrig ball.

The seller was not identified, and the winner who outbid 28 other prospectiv­e buyers for the ball was identified only as a Southern California collector.

The only living original inductee who didn’t sign the ball was Gehrig, who on that day was headed to the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota where he’d be diagnosed with ALS, the disease that would end his career, take his life and unofficial­ly bear his name.

It was on June 12, 1939, that the Baseball Hall of Fame first opened its doors, though it had been choosing members for three years by then. Most were already dead.

Marv Owen, the former Detroit Tigers third baseman then playing for the Chicago White Sox, was in Cooperstow­n, N.Y., to play in an exhibition marking the occasion. His former teammate Hank Greenberg was also there, and had brought along two balls for the inductees to sign, but was too bashful to approach them. Owen wasn’t, and got all 11 to sign. He kept one for himself and gave the other to Greenberg.

“With autographe­d balls, very few can you trace to the point of origin, the point of signing, where you know the circumstan­ces of where it was acquired,” said Dan Imler, vicepresid­ent of SCP Auctions. “It’s incredible. It almost puts you in that moment, which is very, very rare for a ball.”

Several signed balls have survived from that day, but most have signatures from other players or dignitarie­s that diminish their value.

The names weren’t haphazardl­y scrawled all over the ball, either. It was as though Owen had future collectors in mind when he collected the signatures in dark, lasting ink. And their placement doesn’t seem random, either. On one panel of the ball, stacked atop each other, are

Cobb, Ruth and Wagner — at the time considered the three greatest players of all time, with Walter Johnson, then considered the greatest pitcher of all time, hovering above them.

“Ultimately, that panel of Cobb, Ruth, Wagner is what puts it over the top,” said Kevin Keating of Profession­al Sports Authentica­tor, who verified the ball’s legitimacy. “Those are the elite of the elite. The fact that he got those guys the way he did, in that perfect order on one panel, it’s almost as if it’s by design.”

Owen put his ball in a safedeposi­t box, and his family kept it until 1997, when it sold for $55,000.

Greenberg’s ball has been lost to history.

 ?? SCP AUCTIONS ?? This baseball with the signatures of Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner and eight other legends of baseball has sold for more than US$623,000, says SCP Auctions. That crushes the previous record of $345,000, set in 2013 for a ball signed by Ruth and Lou Gehrig.
SCP AUCTIONS This baseball with the signatures of Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner and eight other legends of baseball has sold for more than US$623,000, says SCP Auctions. That crushes the previous record of $345,000, set in 2013 for a ball signed by Ruth and Lou Gehrig.

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