Last week, I was on my annual trip to Ashland, Oregon when I heard the news that Willie Mays passed away. It was one of those moments where it felt like everything around me paused to allow me to soak in the news.
Mays was literally one of the greatest to ever play the game, but he played his final MLB game a little over a week after I turned one. In other words, I never had the opportunity to watch him play in person. Even if I had, I wouldn't remember it. Thankfully there are enough interviews, documentaries, statistical data, and highlight films out there to cement The Say Hey Kid's legacy. Plus he has been a Bay Area resident and fan favorite since the Giants left New York and moved to San Francisco in 1958.
I've never considered myself a Giants fan. However I am a baseball fan and a collector who likes collect just about anything related to the sport. Over the years, I've added a few of his cards and collectibles to my collection and today I wanted to show off twenty-four of them as a tribute to him.
Most of the stuff are cards, but there are a couple of other items included. Originally, I was going to rank them... but that was easier said than done. Instead... I've just put them in chronological order.
Here we go...
Yeah, I know. Many of you aren't into slabbed cards. But when it comes to vintage, it gives me a little peace of mind. The ranking thing might not have happened, but I guarantee this card would have been in the Top 5, along with this card:
1956 Topps #130
The 1956 Topps baseball set is my favorite baseball card set design of all-time, so you know this card is going to be one of my favorite cards of Mays.
1956 Topps #31
If you're wondering why I included Hank Aaron's card in this post, it's because the painting of him sliding into home was actually based on a photograph of Willie.
1963 Topps #3
1964 Topps #9
San Francisico Giants fans must have been pretty excited to see three of the top four home run hitters in the NL hitting for them. They led the National League with 197 home runs that year. The Atlanta Braves were a distant second with 139.
1964 Topps Giants #51
I absolutely love this oddball issue. In fact, it's one of my favorite baseball sets from the 1960's.
1962-65 Jay Publishing Photo
This is one of those non-card items I was referring to at the beginning of the post. This photo is printed on super thin paper... almost like newsprint. I'm guessing they were mass produced, because they sell for a fraction of what vintage baseball cards sell for.
1966 Topps #1
I'm guessing a kid who pulled Willie's 1966 Topps card would have been pretty stoked back in the day. He was coming off his MVP Award winning season in which he led the National League in a bunch of different categories including home runs, slugging percentage, and on base percentage.
1966 Topps #215
How could I not include this card? My only complaint about this card is the photo selection. It would have been so much cooler had they all been looking in the same direction.
1967 Topps #423
This is one of those cards, I had seen hundreds of times over the years and in the back of my mind I knew I'd eventually buy it. I'm just embarrassed to admit that it took me almost forty years to do it.
1967 Topps Posters #12
There was a time (before the Hobby Boom) when late 60's and early 70's Topps insert sets were pretty affordable. This poster insert and the game card are both part of complete sets I purchased during that time.
1968 Topps Game #8
This card is part of a thirty-three card set... in which only eleven cards allowed a player to reach base safely. Topps honored Mays with the best card in the set.
We've reached the halfway mark... and we're entering the 70's:
1970 Kellogg's #12
This Kellogg's card is another favorite of mine. Like many other collectors out there, I'm a big fan of the Kellogg's lenticular sets of the 70's and 80's. The 1970 baseball design is my favorite.
Up next is another collectible that doesn't fall into the baseball card category:
1971 Mattel Instant Replay #NNO
Eighteen years before Topps and LJN teamed up to release their Topps Talk Player and cards, Mattel did something similar with their Instant Replay player and records. Unfortunately, I don't have own the player and I didn't find a recording of the Mays on YouTube. However, there are several examples of other sports on there.
1972 Kellogg's #54 (RBI 1855)
1972 Kellogg's #54 (RBI 1856)
Your eyes aren't deceiving you. I'm showing off two copies of Willie's 1972 Kellogg's card. The one on the left is considered the "error" card with his incorrect MLB career RBI totals with the one on the right being the "corrected" version.
This set is littered with error/corrected versions. Based on the PSA Pop Report, the corrected cards are slightly more common.
1982 Topps Kmart #8
Back in the 80's the Kmart my parents shopped at had hundreds of these box sets that sat there on the display for what seemed like years. At the time, I wasn't a fan of anything Kmart related... including this set. But over the years, I've grown to appreciate this set.
1987 Topps Traded Bronze Premiums #5
This metal medallion replica of Willie's 1953 Topps card was once awarded to a dealer who purchased a case of the 1987 Topps Traded sets. I included it in this post, because it's an oddball issue you don't see around every day. If you're interested in seeing the other Topps Traded Bronze Premiums that Topps produced, click here.
1989 Kenner SLU Baseball Greats #NNO
While digging through scans and binders looking for items for this post, I picked this card because it has his nickname on the front of the card. I also liked how Kenner listed his full MLB career stats on the back.
1995 Topps Legends of the 60's Medallions #1
Here's another Mays medallion. Like the Topps Traded Bronze Premiums, this is one of those oddball issues that fly under the radar of many collectors. However this medallion is much bigger and heavier.
I've written about this set before, but in short... there were twelve medallions produced by Topps that were released on a monthly basis to Stadium Club members for $39.95 each.
1995 Upper Deck Autograph #AC2
2003 Topps Gallery HOF Currency Connection #CC-WM
I reserved a spot for this "coin" card, because like a few other cards in this post... it's different.
The last two items are signed memorabilia that are undated:
Say Hey Authenticated
I've got a pair of signed Mays photos depicting "The Catch". One is 8x10 and the other is a 16x20. Both are certified by Say Hey Authenticated which was his company. I've heard mixed reviews on whether or not these signatures are legit.
Rumor has it that some unscrupulous people forged the Say Hey Authenticated holograms and used them on photos with fake signatures. Since I wasn't there to witness him signing either of the photos, I guess I'll never know.
PSA/DNA Authenticated
Unfortunately, I didn't witness him signing this baseball either. I bought this ball at the Branham Flea Market back in 2015 for $8 and had my buddy submit it to PSA to see if it was legit. It passed, but with any third party authenticators... who knows if it's actually legit.
Well there you go... twenty-four Mays collectibles in honor of #24. Rest in peace Mr. Mays.
Happy Tuesday and sayonara!