Saturday, September 28, 2024

The Last Game at the Coliseum

Leading up to Thursday's final A's home game at the Oakland Coliseum... I was feeling both anxious and excited.  I left physically and emotionally exhausted.

This is one of those posts that I sat down, wrote and rewrote several times... only to revise it one final time by completely starting over.  As a result, I'm torn between posting this in a timely manner... and capturing how I feel and what I want to write accurately.  The result is a quick (actually not so quick) post documenting a key moment in my Oakland A's fanfare.


It started off with me leaving my house at 6:41 am and arriving at the Berryessa BART station forty minutes later.


My brother and his wife met me there and we hopped on the next train.  Thirty-five minutes later we were across the street from the Coliseum.  Part of the anxiety I had leading up to the game involved being crammed into the train... but there was plenty of seats available on the way up there.


I knew the game was sold out and I wanted to make sure that we were early enough to receive a voucher for the stadium giveaway.  It's a good thing we arrived over three hours before the game, because the line we waited in wrapped around a quarter of the Coliseum.


My nephew and his girlfriend were coming from Alameda and joined us a few minutes later.  We didn't have to wait too long for them to open the gates.  And as the line started to move... I quickly captured the backside of the Coliseum scoreboard that features the Rickey Henderson Field and Oakland Athletics logos.

Once inside... the five of us walked around the entire ballpark to soak everything in (but mainly to see what kind of food we were going to eat).  Our first stop was the stamp station.  As we walked into the stadium, we were handed these commemorative tickets:


We thought it would be cool to get them stamped.  Unfortunately, the guy wouldn't do it because they already have the game date on them, so I whipped out my wallet card and had him stamp the back:


When I left my house, I had one of my 2019 Topps Oakland Coliseum cards that I had hoped to get stamped as well... but I dropped it somewhere along the way.

Afterwards... we walked by the wall of fame featuring athletes from a variety of sports:


If you look closely, you'll even see plaques for Willie Stargell and Curt Flood who both attended high school in the East Bay.

2019 Topps #126

I really wanted to get a photograph of the Coliseum from behind home plate (because that's the same angle featured on the 2019 Topps card), but we had walked too far and I didn't want to hold everyone up.


At least I was able to capture a photo of our seats from across the stadium.

As we headed back to our section, there was this crazy guy making a lot of noise:


We would run into him again, but not before standing in line for 30 minutes for some nachos:


They were pretty good.  But honestly when it comes to nachos, I prefer to keep things simple: chips, cheese, and jalapeƱos.  The only reason I went for the "super" version is because of the souvenir helmet.  I got about 70% into these before tossing in the white flag and setting it under my seat.

We got to our seats a little over an hour before the game.  According to my phone the temperature was only in the the low 70's, but sitting in direct sunlight I could feel the burn by the time Henderson and Stewart tossed out the first pitch:


I figured Rickey was going to get the call... but Smoke was a nice bonus.  A few minutes later Barry Zito started singing the Star Spangled Banner and right before he wrapped it up this soared above the stadium:


Can't see anything?  Sorry... I'll zoom in a little:


After a little research and a quick text to SumoMenkoMan... I confirmed that this is a Lockheed U-2Two MLB games this year... and two USAF flyovers.  Pretty darn cool.

Once the game started, I put the phone away to focus on the game.  But I did pull it out in time to catch Krazy George storming by:


The game itself was awesome.  There weren't any home runs, but there were two fantastic defensive plays made by Zach Gelof and JJ Bleday, lots of Let's Go Oakland chants, several attempts to get the wave started, and of course an A's win in their final game at the Coliseum:


We stuck around twenty to thirty minutes after the final out... long enough to hear Mark Kotsay's speech.  Then headed to the exit to exchange our vouchers for the stadium giveaway:



It's a nice trinket to cap off forty-six years of attending games at the Oakland Coliseum.  I'm glad I was able to experience it with the same brother who took me to my very first A's game back in 1978.

As for my A's fanfare... I'm still not sure which direction it's headed.  I know that I will always be an Oakland A's fan, but after tomorrow they won't be representing Oakland or the Bay Area on the field anymore.  So we'll see.  I will say that I am leaning towards supporting them as a franchise... but will likely boycott buying any gear until John Fisher sells the team.

If you've made it this far... I appreciate you taking the time to check out this post.  I hope I was able to capture the event well enough, so that years from now I can read it again and relive this happy, sad, anxious, and mad experience.

Happy Saturday and sayonara!

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Affordable Treasures


Back in
August, I went to the mall show and managed to spend a little less than the price of your average blaster.  I originally scheduled this post for the end of August, but I'm a little behind in regards to blogging.

Enough chit chat... let's check out the affordable treasures I found at the show...


Purchase #1Shiny Topps Chrome  $5

The first dealer I stopped at had four or five 3,200ct. boxes filled with sleeved rookies, inserts, and parallels from a variety of sports.  I only flipped through the box with dollar baseball and it was loaded with shiny treasures.

2024 Topps Chrome All-Etch #CAE-14

This was the first card that caught my eye... and essentially motivated me to flip through the rest if the row.  I'm a huge fan of etched Chrome refractors from the 90's and this card reminds me of something from that era.

He had a few different players from the set, but Soto was the biggest name and the only one I deemed worthy of the one dollar price tag.

2024 Topps Chrome 1989 Baseball #89-CB1

2024 Topps Chrome Refractor #250

2024 Topps Chrome Strokes #S-1

2024 Topps Chrome Refractor #110

In the moment, I was pretty excited about finding all of these for a buck each.  Figured $5 was about how much I'd have to pay for a retail pack and at least I was getting cards that I wanted.

Sadly based on COMC prices... I overpaid.  But a buck a piece is still affordable.


Purchase #2Grab Bags  $2


Next up was a gentleman with dollar grab bags.  Most of them contained newer stuff, but there were two vintage ones sitting off to the side.  I grabbed them both:


Here's a peek at grab bag #1:


Here are my favorites:

1979 Topps #411
1979 Topps #416

Ichiro broke Sisler's single season record in 2004Pete broke Cobb's record in 1985.  But Jack and Cy still have a grasp on their records.

1979 Topps #215
1979 Topps #201
1979 Topps #95

The whole lot was
low grade vintage with some decent names sprinkled in there.  My favorite was this oddball Reggie:

1980 Topps Burger King Pitch, Hit, & Run #17

The second box was even cooler.  Here's the contents:


Although most of the cards are well loved... at less than each... this might just be my best bargain of the year.

1977 Topps #120
1977 Topps #580

There were a bunch of vintage hall of famers and perennial all-stars in this batch of cards.

Plus some Oakland A's:

1975 Topps #45
1975 Topps #461
1975 Topps #535

But my favorites were the league leader cards:

1973 Topps #67

1963 Topps #6

1970 Topps #61

These are the affordable treasures I dream of finding every time I walk around the flea market or card show.  Not sure if this dealer is a regular or not... but I'll definitely be on the lookout for him at next month's show.


Purchase #3Another Dollar Bin  $5

Grab bag guy also had a dollar bin.  Pulled these from it...

2022 Topps Platinum Anniversary Fuchsia Refractor #121 (#'d 028/100)

Beltre is one of those guys I grew to love over the course of his career.  It wasn't just the fact that he had hall of fame numbers.  It had to do with his personality, his relationship with Elvis Andrus, and his shenanigans on the field.

1963 Topps #126

As much as I loved those two vintage grab bags, this card was the highlight of the day.  It's damaged (paper loss on the right side of the card), but it's a sixty-one year old card of Bob Uecker for a buck!  This is the epitome of an affordable treasure.

2022 Topps Platinum Anniversary Blue Prism Refractor #24

A shiny Mays for a buck?  I'd buy that for a dollar!

2019 Bowman Platinum Purple Foil #74 (#'d 191/250)

A serial numbered Betts?  I'll take that too.

2019-20 Panini Hoops Premium Stock Green Prizm #59

I may or may not already have this card from one of Xavier's care packages, but for I'll grab multiples of shiny Curry cards if they're a buck each.


Purchase #4The Quarter Bin  $5

The final purchase of the day was from a friend of mine who recently purchased a bunch of 5,000ct. boxes filled with baseball and football.  They were quarter boxes, so I didn't find anything too crazy.  But it kept me engaged for close to an hour.

His boxes were semi-sorted by teams... and as you'll soon see the Reds, Tigers, and Phillies were the ones I was able to look through before my back started hurting.

Here's what I pulled:


Joey Votto is one of those guys who never failed to entertain... which is why I have a small collection of his cards.  I missed out on a lot of his early cards... so I grabbed these three and the nice color-matched 2014 parallel.  Sadly... none of these are his true rookie cards.

But I did find a rookie card of Eric the Red:

1985 Topps #627

Let's move on to another famous Cincinnati Reds player:


Love him or hate him... he's the MLB all-time hits leader and an all-time great.

Next up are some 70's affordable treasures...


And some 80's affordable treasures...


Most of these cards were scanned back in August and I'm only now getting a chance to reflect on my purchases.  The first purchase is the only one I really regret.  However... it's nice to see current inserts and parallels finally returning to dollar bins.

Overall... the affordable vintage saved the day.  Hopefully I'll find some more affordable treasures at next month's show.

Happy Tuesday and sayonara!