The number of collectors
contacting me for help in
identifying autographs on a
baseball has been progressively
growing every year. After I
published the 2017 newsletter
on this subject, the numbers
increased greater.
Here are some tips on
identifying illegible autographs.
it has been suggested that
players should start printing
their name on the opposite side
of the baseball. Some players
do inscribe their uniform
number with the autograph. This
can be a useful tool, but If
you can't make out any of the
letters, it would be a tough,
tedious, and time consuming task
to find the player.
If you know the team, the
beginning letters of the first
or and last name it will be a
little easier. If the number is
in question, it will add to
your research time. Baseball-Reference.com has a
great
Uniform Search resource
where you could find all
players to wear a particular
number, listed in alphabetical
order, and can be narrowed down
by years, and team.
Autographs with inscriptions
can quicken your quest.
Inscriptions that include dated
player milestones are a breeze.
Examples: "HOF '73" - Cy Young
NL 1995 - Triple Crown '67" -
GG (Gold Glove award) "No
Hitter with full date"
career stats, etc...
The autograph pictured here
with the inscription "1985 AL
ROY" is a slam dunk, 1985
American League Rookie of the
Year, Ozzie Guillen.
Some players add Christian Bible verses. This could be useful, but there
are a number of players that do
it. If you search "autograph
baseball" with the Bible verse
such as "John 3:16" you might
find the player that signed the
baseball. There are also
players that are known to add
smiley faces. :-)
A
Player might add a nickname to
his autograph. Lee Mazzilli "The Italian
stallion" - Don Mattingly
"Hit Man" - Andre Dawson "The
Hawk" - Ernie Banks "Mr. Cub"
and so on... Willie Mays often
signs "Say Hey" or "Say Hey
Kid" -
Baseball-Reference.com also has
a list of
major and minor league
nicknames, that might
help you identify your
autograph.
Then there is the autograph
that has no hope of
Identifying. Autographs that
resemble a toddler's Crayon
scribbling on a wall. No clues,
no letters that are legible, or inscription. A
total mess that can only be
identified by a collector that
is familiar with the signature.
This is why I created a facebook group dedicated to to
help identify baseball related
autographs.
The
"BASEBALL AUTOGRAPH
IDENTIFICATION GUIDE" was
also added to the website
serving as a database to help
identify autographs, so you
don't have to be a member of
facebook. But it helps.