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cubman1941 02-26-2025 12:29 PM

Here you go - for serious bidders only
 
Back on the Block: T206 Honus Wagner Set for Auction in Mile High Auctions.
Mile High Card Company will list a copy of the Mona Lisa of baseball cards in its upcoming April catalog auction. MHCC also handled the last Wagner to be offered publicly in September 2023. In fact, the copy that will be on the block this spring is the same one that sold for a shade under $2 million then.

parkplace33 02-26-2025 01:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cubman1941 (Post 2499577)
Back on the Block: T206 Honus Wagner Set for Auction in Mile High Auctions.
Mile High Card Company will list a copy of the Mona Lisa of baseball cards in its upcoming April catalog auction. MHCC also handled the last Wagner to be offered publicly in September 2023. In fact, the copy that will be on the block this spring is the same one that sold for a shade under $2 million then.

What is the grade?

parkplace33 02-26-2025 01:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by parkplace33 (Post 2499592)
What is the grade?

https://www.milehighcardco.com/Downl...110.pdf?id=557

https://milehighcardco.com/Exception...-LOT95565.aspx

Found it, it was the restored version.

Interesting its coming back to auction in less than 2 years.

brunswickreeves 02-26-2025 01:47 PM

Announcement: https://www.auctionreport.com/t206-h...mpany-auction/

Jewish-collector 02-26-2025 01:54 PM

Oh hell yeah. Just what I was saving up for :D

Diamond Dave 02-26-2025 02:17 PM

Interesting its coming back to auction in less than 2 years.[/QUOTE]

Wife found out!

B O'Brien 02-26-2025 02:23 PM

Ha! Probably right about that wife comment!
Bob

JollyElm 02-26-2025 02:46 PM

Time to sell off a couple of my Gregg Jefferies rookie cards to raise enough money to land this bad boy!!

Arazi4442 02-26-2025 02:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 2499622)
Time to sell off a couple of my Gregg Jefferies rookie cards to raise enough money to land this bad boy!!

You can expect to see a number of my Ron Kittle RCs up for sale as well!

Brent G. 02-26-2025 02:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 2499622)
Time to sell off a couple of my Gregg Jefferies rookie cards to raise enough money to land this bad boy!!

Not that short-print '88 Donruss -- that thing's about ready to take off!

Brent G. 02-26-2025 02:53 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Arazi4442 (Post 2499624)
You can expect to see a number of my Ron Kittle RCs up for sale as well!

Things might not've worked out as hoped in '83, but this is still a badass card:

D. Bergin 02-26-2025 03:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brent G. (Post 2499629)
Things might not've worked out as hoped in '83, but this is still a badass card:

Haha, love that card. He was an Eastern League legend.Got one of his home run balls when he came into town to play the Bristol Red Sox around 81-82 or so.

Brent G. 02-26-2025 03:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by D. Bergin (Post 2499632)
Haha, love that card. He was an Eastern League legend.Got one of his home run balls when he came into town to play the Bristol Red Sox around 81-82 or so.

I hadn't thought about that dude in decades, so pulled up his Wiki page. This is insane:

The son of a steelworker, Kittle planned to work with his dad after high school, complete with being given his own ironworkers apprentice union card after graduating. However, he was enticed to seek out a tryout camp that was being held in La Porte, Indiana by the Los Angeles Dodgers. An ideal showing from the 18-year-old eventually led to scouts from the team signing him to a contract in 1976, and he would go to play with baseball in Clinton, Iowa. On his first baserunning play trying to score a run, he broke his neck when the catcher landed on him. For the rest of the year, he tried to play on what later diagnosed as a broken neck, complete with three crushed vertebrae and a cracked spinal cord. He had his discs fused while having his spine stabilized. For the next couple of years, he served as an ironworker while trying to build his body back up, trying to defy the expectations of his doctors that said he would never play baseball again (due to his injury, he could no longer hit from both sides of the plate).

A few years later, he took a suggestion to play summer ball, doing so with the American Hellinic Educational Progressive Association. One of his towering home runs went far enough from the park to land on Interstate 294, "500-plus feet away". Bill Veeck, then owner of the White Sox, heard about the home run and gave him a tryout. He signed with the White Sox in September 1978.

Kutcher55 02-26-2025 03:10 PM

Sweet Kittle. That guy could stone cold mash for a few years there.

vintagebaseballcardguy 02-26-2025 04:37 PM

That Kittle is cool. I haven't thought about him in a while. It's amazing that even after all these years of collecting cards from the late 40s to the 60s, my head can still apparently be turned by cards from the 80s, my childhood years.

ASF123 02-26-2025 05:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brent G. (Post 2499636)
I hadn't thought about that dude in decades, so pulled up his Wiki page. This is insane:

The son of a steelworker, Kittle planned to work with his dad after high school, complete with being given his own ironworkers apprentice union card after graduating. However, he was enticed to seek out a tryout camp that was being held in La Porte, Indiana by the Los Angeles Dodgers. An ideal showing from the 18-year-old eventually led to scouts from the team signing him to a contract in 1976, and he would go to play with baseball in Clinton, Iowa. On his first baserunning play trying to score a run, he broke his neck when the catcher landed on him. For the rest of the year, he tried to play on what later diagnosed as a broken neck, complete with three crushed vertebrae and a cracked spinal cord. He had his discs fused while having his spine stabilized. For the next couple of years, he served as an ironworker while trying to build his body back up, trying to defy the expectations of his doctors that said he would never play baseball again (due to his injury, he could no longer hit from both sides of the plate).

A few years later, he took a suggestion to play summer ball, doing so with the American Hellinic Educational Progressive Association. One of his towering home runs went far enough from the park to land on Interstate 294, "500-plus feet away". Bill Veeck, then owner of the White Sox, heard about the home run and gave him a tryout. He signed with the White Sox in September 1978.

Huh, I never knew all of that back story - I started collecting as a kid in 1986, after his flash in the pan had ended but he was still playing.

Surprised that wasn’t turned into a very hastily made TV movie in ‘83-‘84.

Eric72 02-26-2025 05:59 PM

I'm literally laughing out loud.

A thread about a T206 Honus Wagner quickly shifted to a discussion about Ron Kittle.

I certainly did not have that on my bingo card.

Brent G. 02-27-2025 06:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eric72 (Post 2499677)
I'm literally laughing out loud.

A thread about a T206 Honus Wagner quickly shifted to a discussion about Ron Kittle.

I certainly did not have that on my bingo card.

Agreed! But the Kittle talk could go on another 75 posts and still make more sense than where that B/S/T Etiquette thread ended up (and started, for that matter).

D. Bergin 02-27-2025 07:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eric72 (Post 2499677)
I'm literally laughing out loud.

A thread about a T206 Honus Wagner quickly shifted to a discussion about Ron Kittle.

I certainly did not have that on my bingo card.


Hey, if you can't afford to be in the original conversation, make it so you can. ;)

D. Bergin 02-27-2025 07:50 AM

2 Attachment(s)
Ron Kittle's 1981-82 stat line between AA and AAA. Pretty crazy. Not just the power numbers, but check out the batting average. Sadly, it didn't quite translate to the major league level past his Rookie year.

You wonder what he could have done if he hadn't had that horrific injury in his early years. He was obviously not a very mobile player. He WAS 2nd in the league in Outfield Assists in 1984...but his Range Factor was pretty non-existent.

I do like that he had 10 triples at AAA though, LOL.

Brent G. 02-27-2025 03:23 PM

This is from Ron's website. The part about who was in the car he hit CAN'T be true ... RIGHT???

I Hated The World. But, because I was the son of a no-excuses ironworker, my dad told me I could either sit on my mommy's lap and cry the rest of my life or I could go back to work and be something in life (that's the cleaned up version). So, I went back to ironworking. Because I was so angry about losing a baseball career, I worked even harder. Looking back on it, it was like I was punishing myself for being hurt. But before I realized it, I got strong, real strong. So you know what I had to do... once again, I had to do what people said I couldn't do. I started playing for a local semipro baseball team.


I was already doing the impossible by just walking up to the plate. I should have been satisfied with that alone. I was hitting balls further than anyone had seen at all of the fields we played. On one particular day in Midlothian, Illinois, at the field off I-294, I hit a towering home run out of the park on to I-294. I'm told it took a shot hitting the ball about 550 feet to do that. As it turned out, the car that the ball hit got off at the next exit and came to the field looking for the guy who hit the ball. Of course, I wanted to hide, because I thought it was someone looking for me to pay for a new windshield or something. But who would have imagined, it was Billy Pierce and Bill Veeck on their way to some baseball banquet. Before I knew it, I was being invited to a tryout for the White Sox organization. That was on a Tuesday.

commishbob 02-27-2025 03:56 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Kittle is a friend of a friend who sent along some cards and other things he had signed. The bobblehead is one of only three non-Orioles in my collection.

Attachment 652911

ASF123 02-27-2025 05:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brent G. (Post 2499851)
This is from Ron's website. The part about who was in the car he hit CAN'T be true ... RIGHT???

I Hated The World. But, because I was the son of a no-excuses ironworker, my dad told me I could either sit on my mommy's lap and cry the rest of my life or I could go back to work and be something in life (that's the cleaned up version). So, I went back to ironworking. Because I was so angry about losing a baseball career, I worked even harder. Looking back on it, it was like I was punishing myself for being hurt. But before I realized it, I got strong, real strong. So you know what I had to do... once again, I had to do what people said I couldn't do. I started playing for a local semipro baseball team.


I was already doing the impossible by just walking up to the plate. I should have been satisfied with that alone. I was hitting balls further than anyone had seen at all of the fields we played. On one particular day in Midlothian, Illinois, at the field off I-294, I hit a towering home run out of the park on to I-294. I'm told it took a shot hitting the ball about 550 feet to do that. As it turned out, the car that the ball hit got off at the next exit and came to the field looking for the guy who hit the ball. Of course, I wanted to hide, because I thought it was someone looking for me to pay for a new windshield or something. But who would have imagined, it was Billy Pierce and Bill Veeck on their way to some baseball banquet. Before I knew it, I was being invited to a tryout for the White Sox organization. That was on a Tuesday.

Yeah, that absolutely didn’t happen that way. That’s some Grade A, Glory of Their Times-level BS lol.

D. Bergin 02-27-2025 06:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASF123 (Post 2499883)
Yeah, that absolutely didn’t happen that way. That’s some Grade A, Glory of Their Times-level BS lol.

……but you WANT it to be true…..don’t you?

Ron Kittle is only a bat carved from a lightning struck tree and a girl in a white dress rooting him on, away from being Roy Hobbs.

timn1 02-27-2025 08:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by D. Bergin (Post 2499749)
Hey, if you can't afford to be in the original conversation, make it so you can. ;)

Nice!, I saw Ron Kittle give a talk on his baseball experiences at Indiana state university about fifteen years ago. He was very knowledgeable and articulate- obviously a bright guy, and he had a great attitude about his career, feeling like whatever he accomplished was worth the struggle.

D. Bergin 02-28-2025 08:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by timn1 (Post 2499911)
Nice!, I saw Ron Kittle give a talk on his baseball experiences at Indiana state university about fifteen years ago. He was very knowledgeable and articulate- obviously a bright guy, and he had a great attitude about his career, feeling like whatever he accomplished was worth the struggle.


That's awesome. That HR ball I chased down that I mentioned earlier. Turns out that would have been 1981, and I would have been 10 years old.

I was at Muzzy Field with my Cub Scout Pack to watch that game between the Bristol Red Sox and the Glens Falls White Sox. I remember racing my whole Pack to get to that ball. It landed in what was essentially a grove of trees.

After the game my Mom took that ball and burst into the Glen Falls dressing room to get it signed by Kittle. If you knew my mother, that would not have been unusual behavior for her, LOL. She said he couldn't have been nicer...even back then at 22-23 years old or so. I saved it for a little while, and then I ended up smacking that ball around in my backyard, after I had lost all my other extra baseballs in the woods behind the house I grew up in.

Wouldn't have been worth anything now, but I still always kind of regretted that. :(

Part of the reason I love that Rookie card with Kittle, is the glasses. I played Little League ball at the time, and I wore wrap-around prescription glasses when I played ball, so I kind of related to him in a way.

Brent G. 02-28-2025 08:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by D. Bergin (Post 2499959)
That's awesome. That HR ball I chased down that I mentioned earlier. Turns out that would have been 1981, and I would have been 10 years old.

I was at Muzzy Field with my Cub Scout Pack to watch that game between the Bristol Red Sox and the Glens Falls White Sox. I remember racing my whole Pack to get to that ball. It landed in what was essentially a grove of trees.

After the game my Mom took that ball and burst into the Glen Falls dressing room to get it signed by Kittle. If you knew my mother, that would not have been unusual behavior for her, LOL. She said he couldn't have been nicer...even back then at 22-23 years old or so. I saved it for a little while, and then I ended up smacking that ball around in my backyard, after I had lost all my other extra baseballs in the woods behind the house I grew up in.

Wouldn't have been worth anything now, but I still always kind of regretted that. :(

Part of the reason I love that Rookie card with Kittle, is the glasses. I played Little League ball at the time, and I wore wrap-around prescription glasses when I played ball, so I kind of related to him in a way.

AWESOME, Dave, and yeah, that card is ALL about the gold wire-rimmed glasses. It's one of the best cards of the decade.

I just reached out to Ron through his website to see if he'd sign through the mail. I'd like to find a '77 Clinton Dodgers for him to sign.

ASF123 02-28-2025 08:12 AM

Hipster kids wear that type of glasses ironically now.

Brent G. 03-11-2025 03:31 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I connected with Ron through his website to see if he'd sign by mail -- he said yes, except for the 1984 Topps. Apparently he finds something about this card objectionable. I mean, the corner pic isn't THAT bad ...

Eric72 03-11-2025 04:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brent G. (Post 2499851)
This is from Ron's website. The part about who was in the car he hit CAN'T be true ... RIGHT???

I Hated The World. But, because I was the son of a no-excuses ironworker, my dad told me I could either sit on my mommy's lap and cry the rest of my life or I could go back to work and be something in life (that's the cleaned up version). So, I went back to ironworking. Because I was so angry about losing a baseball career, I worked even harder. Looking back on it, it was like I was punishing myself for being hurt. But before I realized it, I got strong, real strong. So you know what I had to do... once again, I had to do what people said I couldn't do. I started playing for a local semipro baseball team.


I was already doing the impossible by just walking up to the plate. I should have been satisfied with that alone. I was hitting balls further than anyone had seen at all of the fields we played. On one particular day in Midlothian, Illinois, at the field off I-294, I hit a towering home run out of the park on to I-294. I'm told it took a shot hitting the ball about 550 feet to do that. As it turned out, the car that the ball hit got off at the next exit and came to the field looking for the guy who hit the ball. Of course, I wanted to hide, because I thought it was someone looking for me to pay for a new windshield or something. But who would have imagined, it was Billy Pierce and Bill Veeck on their way to some baseball banquet. Before I knew it, I was being invited to a tryout for the White Sox organization. That was on a Tuesday.

That last bit reminds me of something out of Forrest Gump.

vintagebaseballcardguy 03-11-2025 04:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brent G. (Post 2502591)
I connected with Ron through his website to see if he'd sign by mail -- he said yes, except for the 1984 Topps. Apparently he finds something about this card objectionable. I mean, the corner pic isn't THAT bad ...

Napoleon Dynamite....

Brent G. 03-11-2025 04:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by vintagebaseballcardguy (Post 2502606)
Napoleon Dynamite....

Wow … you nailed it.


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