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#1
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The day after he broke Willie Keelers Record of 44 games.
Last edited by Batter67up; 01-04-2013 at 06:42 PM. |
#2
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Likely shot pre-season though;
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#3
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the final picture does not belong to 1941 but is a great piece I got from Steiner Sports. Steiner sports acquired the diary at auction and made great displays from each page.
Last edited by sports-rings; 01-05-2013 at 02:08 PM. |
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Not sure I agree with your sentiment, but your wording is accurate. They did indeed destroy a "collectible" in order to turn it into "product".
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there were a hundred or two hundred pages in the diary. so instead of one person obtaining a diary, Steiner made a lot of great looking pieces that collectors can proudly display.
I do agree with you, it's awful when they cut down bats and Jerseys for those silly premium sports cards. |
#6
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![]() Quote:
I really should read up on these things before I start ranting: "Unlike most people who begin diaries, DiMaggio did not buy a notebook; instead, he wrote on random pieces of paper, often loose sheets of paper with hotel logos. Approximately 2,500 sheets of paper (most held in a protective sleeve), filling 29 binders, have been collected and are now for sale by Steiner Sports." So it appears that Joe was too cheap to even buy a notebook, let alone an actual diary, so the pages were already separated. I stand by my evaluation of Steiner's motivations ($), but the comparison to hacking up jerseys and bats doesn't fit in this case since the "diaries" really did start out as individual pages of Joe's musings. ![]() I did like The Onion's story regarding the diaries though: Joe DiMaggio's Diary Just A List Of Things, People He Hated NEW YORK—Upon closer examination, a 2,400-page, 29-volume diary kept by New York Yankees centerfielder Joe DiMaggio from 1982 to 1993 is merely a listing of all the things and people the Hall of Famer hated, archivists charged with determining the diary's authenticity reported Monday. "Jukeboxes, dollar stores, Paul Simon, Washington, D.C., speaking, Garth Brooks, myself, and automobiles. Also sore throats, Yogi Berra, films, Lee Iacocca, coffeemakers, anyone who has ever referred to me as 'Joltin',' sandals, baseball," read the entry dated July 14, 1992. "I hate all of that. Plus my neighbor Janet, who is another one of those hateful attractive blondes." In an entry from Nov. 15, 1987, DiMaggio wrote that last names that include two capital letters were "frustrating" and "something I hate." Last edited by thecatspajamas; 01-05-2013 at 08:48 PM. |
#7
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Here we see Joe D with Eddie Smith of the White Sox. Joe and Eddie pose in the dugout at Comiskey after the Yankees beat the Sox 5-4.
Eddie Smith had given up hit number one to start the streak and hit number 32 to extend the streak. Hit number 55 came the night this photo was captured. Love this photo. ![]()
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Cur Last edited by horzverti; 02-05-2013 at 07:38 AM. |
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