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#1
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This is a really bad look for the HOF. If they don't give Joe his bat, who would ever loan the HOF anything again? |
#2
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In general, players select bats and MLB teams pay for them, although some players may buy their own bats if they see a new type of bat they like and want to try it out. As long as a bat meets MLB specs ( Baseball bat ), it can be used in games.
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#3
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Need a lot more evidence.
We don't know the veracity of Pepitone's tale, or what exactly are his rights and ownership or his evidence. On the other hand, perhaps it's longstanding practice of museums and auctions houses to deal in stuff that wasn't originally obtained on the up-and-up. Big museums are very thorough and paper-work heavy about things they receive-- from who, ownership, rights, where it came from, expressed conditions, etc. Not enough info to form an opinion. Last edited by drcy; 07-11-2021 at 01:06 PM. |
#4
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I think that, from a legal standpoint, it will come down to whether a bat Pepitone ordered from H&B, that the team probably paid for, belonged (belongs) to Joe or the Yankees. As a GU collector, it brings up an interesting question. There are stories about valuable artwork that was stolen during the last World War, that has been claimed and returned to the original owners. Could a MLB team make the same type of claims? For example, could they sue to recover one of those million dollar Ruth jerseys, stating the garment belonged to the Yankees and was at some point taken by somebody without the Yankees consent? I wonder if there is a statute of limitations on the return of stolen property. I doubt any of my GU bats or jerseys were sold by the teams that originally owned them. |
#5
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If museums trafficked only in legitimately obtained items, their galleries would have significantly fewer items in them.
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#6
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In museum studies classes we debate these types of issues, but about ancient artifacts that crossed international lines generations ago. In many cases, it's debatable who is the rightful (however you wish to define rightful) owner, and sometimes the popular ethical view and the law differ.
Common international sentiment is that the British Museum should return the Elgin Marbles (giant Ancient Greek marble figures) to Greece, but according to international law the museum is the fair owner. It's also debated if returning everything to its original country is a good thing, and the British Museum argues that it is a "world museum," an international cultural center not simply a national musuem. If the only place you can see Ancient Greek artifacts is in Greece or Peruvian artifacts in Peru, is that a good thing? Last edited by drcy; 07-12-2021 at 12:18 AM. |
#7
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Suing 50 years after the fact? Low probability of winning.
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#8
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One of the archaeology shows about Egypt showed Hawas very happy about getting back a bunch of hawks in jars from somewhere.. The intern asked why they needed a few hundred more when they already had 5000+ ! Why? Because they're ours, and they belong here! Ok, so you'll return the stuff the Egyptians looted from Babylon? Boy did he get mad! |
#9
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Didn't Ted Williams in the Spring order a dozen or so custom-made, personalized bats to start the season. Wonder if the Red Sox paid for them.
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#10
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Anyhow, back to baseball. There are all sorts of questionable items out there in the memorabilia world in regards to ownership. It's my opinion that historically significant baseball items belong in the hands of a museum for all to enjoy. I get the legal aspect of ownership and obviously agree with that. So yeah, if you own something you are free to do with it what you wish, well to some degree. Luckily many items over the years have been graciously donated. I guess it circles back to ethical or legal views and both can be right. |
#11
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Anybody who got paperwork that Mr. Pepitone evidently did not get.
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#12
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Why would Joe Pepitone get paperwork for a bat taken without his consent? A player like Joe Pepitone would have signed an endorsement deal with the bat manufacturer. Part of that deal would be providing Joe bats to use in games.
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#13
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I can’t speak to modern times, signing players and whether or not they supply bats for free, or if the teams buy them. However, in the 1960’s players were approached in their first spring and asked to sign with Louisville Slugger in return for a set of golf clubs made by them or 125 dollars. When you ordered bats, you could get your name on them, but you paid for them. I am not sure if and when that changed and if it was different once you made the majors or if you were a star but I believe it was a one time thing whether you made it or not. It would not surprise me if it were vastly different today. . I think it likely that there was a difference in the procedures, pre and post about 1980 or so. No, I do not know this because I did it. I know it because several teammates did do it and I have seen the contracts they signed. They took the money by the way.
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#14
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The Brooklyn-born Pepitone, 80, claims in the suit that the bat, a “Joe Pepitone” model that includes a facsimile of his signature, was his through an endorsement deal with Louisville Slugger, and that Mantle borrowed it to make history on May 14, 1967. https://www.sportingnews.com/us/mlb/...k1bnhchdcefl50 Pepitone and the Hall are locked in a he-said-he-said conundrum, with no paperwork involved that landed the bat in Cooperstown, according to The Athletic. |
#15
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The question is will Joe wear his oversized wig to court?
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#16
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The Yankees should write a check to Joe for the value of the bat and re-donate it to the Hall.
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#17
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If I understand the article correctly, Pepitone claims that the HoF told him that he could get the bat back any time he asked and is now reneging. That seems just like the type of agreement that should have been memorialized in writing. Otherwise, you are left right where we are: competing claims regarding a decades old conversation with no documentary evidence one way or the other. Last edited by carlsonjok; 07-11-2021 at 05:36 PM. Reason: Cleaned up some poor wording |
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