A 1937 Brooklyn Dodgers Team Signed Baseball with the key signatures: Hassett, Manush, Phelps, Hoyt, and Grimes is worth about $300.-$500.
Value is based on average prices of recently closed auctions. Prices may vary based on condition, and the type of authenticity that accompanies the baseball. Prices may also vary based on the amount of signatures, and key signatures acquired. The more complete the baseball with key signatures the more valuable.
If the signatures are not properly authenticated the baseball could sell at half the market value or less. For more information on team signed baseballs, links to full team rosters, key signatures, and price guide see Related Links below.
no he went to another baseball team but another manager asked him but he didnt want to because he wanted managers that were black that's why lol = ]
Jackie Robinson's first year in professional ball was 1946 when he played for the Montreal Royals, the Brooklyn Dodgers Triple-A minor league team. He played one year for Montreal and then played for the Dodgers between 1947-1956. He retired after the 1956 season.
I highly doubt they found Brooklyn so important that they made a whole new word for it.
Italian guy + Brooklyn accent = perfect. It's just gorgeous to girls :) but in all fairness everyone has their own opinions... but as a whole, yes!
He was born in Brooklyn NY in 1940.
A guy who played for the LA Dodgers in the early 1990's. He struck out a whole bunch and hit an occasional home run.
yupyupyupyupyupyupyupyupyupyup. He is the best baseball player in the whole intire universe
anyone in the whole world....
The value of a multi signed baseball cannot be priced by the value of each signature added up. Multi signed baseballs are valued as a group of signatures, and how desired that group is as a whole. You have a great group of Brooklyn Doger players from the 1940's - 1950's. A 1950 Brooklyn Dodgers team signed baseball with the key signatures: Robinson, Reese, Newcombe, Snider, Hodges, Furillo, Campanella, Roe is worth about $800.-$1,200. You are missing two key signatures Snider, and Furillo, and using the value of the 1950 baseball as a yardstick your baseball might be worth in the $300.- $500. price range.
YES
Jackie Robinson has: Played himself in "Meet the Press" in 1947. Played Himself - Brooklyn Dodgers Second Baseman in "1947 World Series" in 1947. Played Himself - Brooklyn Dodgers First Baseman in "1947 World Series" in 1947. Played Batting Instructor in "Toast of the Town" in 1948. Played himself in "Toast of the Town" in 1948. Played himself in "Texaco Star Theater" in 1948. Played Himself - Interviewee in "Toast of the Town" in 1948. Played Himself - Brooklyn Dodgers Second Baseman in "1949 World Series" in 1949. Played Himself - NL Second Baseman in "1949 MLB All-Star Game" in 1949. Played Himself - NL Second Baseman in "1950 MLB All-Star Game" in 1950. Played Jackie Robinson in "The Jackie Robinson Story" in 1950. Played Himself - NL Second Baseman in "1951 MLB All-Star Game" in 1951. Played Himself - NL Second Baseman in "1952 MLB All-Star Game" in 1952. Played himself in "The Hoaxters" in 1952. Played Himself - Brooklyn Dodgers Second Baseman in "1952 World Series" in 1952. Played himself in "Person to Person" in 1953. Played Himself - NL Outfielder in "1953 MLB All-Star Game" in 1953. Played Himself - Brooklyn Dodgers Left Fielder in "1953 World Series" in 1953. Played Himself - NL Left Fielder in "1954 MLB All-Star Game" in 1954. Played Himself - Baseball Player in "Project XX" in 1954. Played Himself - Brooklyn Dodgers Third Baseman in "1955 World Series" in 1955. Played Himself - Brooklyn Dodgers Third Baseman in "1956 World Series" in 1956. Played himself in "Tonight Starring Jack Paar" in 1957. Played Himself - Guest in "Howard K. Smith" in 1962. Played himself in "The Merv Griffin Show" in 1962. Performed in "ABC Stage 67" in 1966. Played himself in "Sesame Street" in 1969. Played himself in "The David Frost Show" in 1969. Played himself in "When It Was a Game" in 1991. Played himself in "When It Was a Game 2" in 1992. Played himself in "Malcolm X" in 1992. Played himself in "Baseball" in 1994. Played himself in "Muhammad Ali: The Whole Story" in 1996. Played Himself - Running to First Base in "Ghosts of Mississippi" in 1996. Played himself in "Wide World of Sports 35th Anniversary Special" in 1996. Played himself in "The Journey of the African-American Athlete" in 1996. Played himself in "Scandalize My Name: Stories from the Blacklist" in 1998. Played himself in "The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg" in 1998. Played himself in "ESPN SportsCentury" in 1999. Played himself in "Crossing White Lines" in 1999. Played himself in "The 20th Century: A Moving Visual History" in 1999. Played himself in "Ali-Frazier I: One Nation... Divisible" in 2000. Played himself in "Kings of the Ring: Four Legends of Heavyweight Boxing" in 2000. Played Himself - Baseball Player in "ESPN Outside the Lines Weekly" in 2000. Played himself in "War Stories with Oliver North" in 2001. Played himself in "100 Years of the World Series" in 2003. Played himself in "Jim McKay: My World in My Words" in 2003. Played himself in "The Curse of the Bambino" in 2003. Played Himself - Baseball Player in "Costas Now" in 2005. Played himself in "The Harlem Globetrotters: The Team That Changed the World" in 2005. Played himself in "DHL Presents Major League Baseball Hometown Heroes" in 2006. Played himself in "Brooklyn Dodgers: The Ghosts of Flatbush" in 2007. Played himself in "Pride Against Prejudice: The Larry Doby Story" in 2007. Played himself in "Prime 9" in 2009. Played himself in "Sing Your Song" in 2011.
Lou gehrig