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Lot # 266: Mickey Mantle & Roger Maris Signed Limited Edition Bat (PSA)

Starting Bid: $1,500.00

Bids: 16 (Bid History)

Time Left: Auction closed
Lot / Auction Closed




This lot is closed. Bidding is not allowed.

Item was in Auction "2019 Winter Classic",
which ran from 1/4/2019 9:00 AM to
2/1/2019 10:00 PM



One of the best pieces of "created" memorabilia ever...well...created. Killer Mickey Mantle & Roger Maris dual signed limited edition bat is #35 of only 115 made. Bat itself is an "M110" with "A92" stamped on knob. Plus, it is in excellent shape, except for one minor line that doesn't affect display quality. Authenticated by our friends at PSA/DNA with their LOA. Signatures rate a 7/10 condition wise. These bats were so great that Mickey Mantle himself kept one for each of his kids. Don't you or yours deserve the same?

My father Ed Kubina began going to card shows for autographs in the mid to late 1970s. The first one I remember was at Hofstra University in Long Island, NY, where Mickey Mantle was signing. My father brought my entire Girl Scout troop, paying their way, and gave them pictures for Mickey Mantle to sign. He told them if Mr. Mantle asked them who to personalize it to, tell him to sign “To Ed”. After eighteen Girl Scouts and I went through the line, Mickey looked up at my Dad when he finally made it through and said, “Hi Ed”. Over the years we went to every card show Mickey signed at in the Northeast. These were our family vacations. My dad went to well over 100 shows through the years in his quest for the signatures of players like Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio, Billy Martin, and Whitey Ford. We also went to Induction Weekend at Cooperstown every year beginning in the 1980s. This is where we met and got autographs from Roger Maris along with dozens of other retired players. After Mickey Mantle’s death, my dad took a trip with my brother to Commerce, Oklahoma, where Mickey Mantle was born, and took pictures. He even took a small piece off the side of the barn wall that Mantle used to practice hitting balls against when growing up. That was obsessive. - Deirdre Leary, November 2018

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