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#1
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I picked up some interesting Lew Alcindor/Kareem Abdul-Jabbar tickets recently. A couple when he played for John Wooden at UCLA and a few where he played with Oscar Robertson.
1966-12-10 #7 Duke 87 (Bob Verga, Mike Lewis) at #1 UCLA 107 (Coach: John Wooden, Lew Alcindor, Lucius Allen) - Lew Alcindor scores 38 points - UCLA would go on to have a 30-0 Record, Winning the National Championship 1968 NCAA Finals 4th National Championship for UCLA who beat North Carolina 78–55 - Most Outstanding Player: Lew Alcindor scores 35 points 1970-11-27: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 33, Willis Reed 34 1971-12-04: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 41/23, Oscar Robertson 17, Bob Love 27 1971-12-19: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 34, Oscar Robertson 17, Wes Unseld 14 1972-02-17: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 34, Lucius Allen 23, Tiny Archibald 30 1973-11-07: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 21/22, Oscar Robertson 11, Pat Riley 18, Gail Goodrich 4 1973-11-22: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 20, Lucius Allen 27, Oscar Robertson 20, Walt Frazier 30 Game A (Game 2 of 1971 Finals) Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: 27 pts, 24 rebs -- Oscar Robertson: 22 pts, 6 rebs, 10 ast Wes Unseld: 13 pts, 20 rebs, 4 ast -- Earl Monroe: 11 pts, 2 rebs, 6 ast Game 6 (Game 1 of 1974 Finals) Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: 35 pts, 14 rebs -- Oscar Robertson: 6 pts, 6 rebs, 8 ast John Havlicek: 26 pts, 8 rebs, 4 ast -- Dave Cowens: 19 pts, 17 rebs, 7 ast |
#2
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Full ticket from May 28, 1996 when Cal Ripken Jr. homered three times in Seattle (only time in his career):
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#3
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Tommy John's last win before undergoing.....Tommy John Surgery
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Looking for Expos ticket home openers full or stubs 1982,89,92,95 |
#4
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Not a high price ticket, but a cool piece of baseball history Sept. 28th 1995 Expos pitcher Greg Harris beomes the 1st pitcher in the 20th Century to pitch both right-handed and left-handed in the same game, The last Pitcher before Greg was Tony Mullane in 1893.
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Looking for Expos ticket home openers full or stubs 1982,89,92,95 |
#5
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Many thanks to net54's David Shakir for finding this 1953 St. Louis Browns season pass for me.
In addition to this being the final year of the St. Louis Browns organization before their move to Baltimore, this also was the year that Bobo Holloman pitched a no-hitter in his 1st ML start. Bobo Holloman's no-hitter IMHO ranks as the most unlikely to ever have been pitched. Holloman won only 3 games in 1953 before being assigned to Toronto, never to return to the ML. Only a miserly 2,473 fans attended this game due to nasty weather. The weather was actually so bad that Bill Veeck, master promoter and owner of the Brownie's, offered to let the fans that braved the weather to attend any other 1953 Browns game for free. I suspect that in order to attend this bonus game, that a fan would have had to surrender their ticket to Holloman's no-hitter on May 6th as proof that they were actually there. In any case, Holloman's no-hitter ticket has been ever-elusive in my quest to find every no-hit ticket post WWII. This pass in of itself is rare, and will provide a nice placeholder in my no-hit ticket collection until I can find an actual ticket to this game. Last edited by Scott Garner; 03-23-2021 at 08:18 AM. |
#6
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What am I missing here?
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The GIF of me making the gesture seen 'round the world has been viewed over 425 million times! ![]() |
#7
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I'm assuming that the pass was issued as a complimentary pass (friend of the owner, etc.) but legally certain taxes/fees still needed to be collected. BTW, complimentary annual passes are not super unusual as I have seen others from other teams as well. |
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