The Buckner Ball

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  • Eric
    Senior Member
    • Jan 1970
    • 2848

    The Buckner Ball

    Here's an article about collector and forum member Seth Swirsky and the infamous Buckner Ball


    The Buckner Ball
    After getting by Buckner, it eventually was snared by fan who grew up
    on LI

    BY STEVE ZIPAY
    Newsday Staff Writer

    August 16, 2006

    Bill Buckner flubbed it. Ed Montague didn't.

    Montague, the rightfield umpire who picked up what many consider the
    most famous baseball in Mets history on an October night at Shea
    Stadium 20 years ago, started a journey that has come almost full
    circle. Today, the treasured, tobacco-stained horsehide is firmly in
    the hands of a worthy caretaker: a devoted Mets fan who grew up in
    Great Neck.

    "That ball and the one that Reggie hit for his third home run of the
    game in the 1977 World Series are two of my favorite pieces," said Seth
    Swirsky, 46, a songwriter, author and memorabilia collector now living
    in Beverly Hills. "When you think of it, I guess it's kind of cool that
    they both ended up with a guy from Long Island."

    To be sure, the ball that left Red Sox reliever Bob Stanley's hand
    toward batter Mookie Wilson in the 10th inning of Game 6 of the 1986
    World Series has had a circuitous route for two decades.

    When the ball scooted under first baseman Buckner's glove and Ray
    Knight scored the winning run, it was pocketed by Montague, who
    inscribed it with a small "X" near a seam to identify it. He then gave
    the ball to Arthur Richman, the Mets' traveling secretary. "He thought
    I would appreciate having it more than he would," Richman wrote in an
    authentication letter in May 1992.

    In the crazed clubhouse after the game, Richman presented the ball to
    Wilson and the jubilant centerfielder autographed it: "To Arthur. The
    ball won it for us. Mookie Wilson 10/25/86".

    Players passed it around and kissed it; some tobacco stains remain.

    Richman held the memento until 1992, when actor Charlie Sheen submitted
    an $85,000 bid by telephone during a live auction of sports memorabilia
    conducted by Leland's at the Southgate Tower Hotel in Manhattan. That
    far surpassed the expected price of about $10,000. With the Leland's
    premium, Sheen paid $93,500 for the ball.

    Enter Swirsky, an aspiring songwriter working in Manhattan in 1986. "My
    first Mets game was Game 4 of the World Series in 1969. I was 9," he
    recalled in a telephone interview this week. "Then I kind of drifted
    away in the '70s, fell in love with the Islanders in the early '80s,
    then got excited about the Mets again in 1984, '85, with Gooden and
    Hernandez and Carter and Dykstra, and I thought, this is not that
    different than in 1969. I could still love the Mets. I watched Game 6
    dumbfounded like everyone else."

    Eventually his songwriting talents paid off. He wrote two pop hits for
    Taylor Dayne, a Long Island singer, and other performers, and began
    acquiring memorabilia in 1995, including a baseball signed by the
    Beatles on the day of their concert at Shea in August 1965. When Sheen
    put his collection up for auction in 2000, Swirsky bid $63,500 for the
    ball.

    Swirsky will fly here with the "Mookie ball" for the 1986 Mets reunion
    Saturday. He and Wilson have exchanged letters and they met in a radio
    studio in 2003. Swirsky met Buckner for only the first time about two
    weeks ago at Wrigley Field, but didn't mention the baseball that has
    haunted the former player. "I just couldn't bring it up to him,"
    Swirsky said.

    Could there be some New York magic left in the ball? Swirsky thinks so.
    In the 2003 ALCS, when the Yankees were down 4-0 in Game 7 and on the
    brink of playoff elimination by the Red Sox, he and his son were
    watching the broadcast. The youngster had counted the Yankees out. "I
    went downstairs and brought out the 'Mookie ball' and another signed by
    Babe Ruth and three members of the Yankees' Murderers' Row in 1927 and
    put them next to the TV," Swirsky said. "The game starts to turn a
    little, and then up comes Aaron Boone and we all know what happened.
    I'm saying this with a wink, but I'm convinced that it was kind of a
    Red Sox 'curse' moment."
    Always looking for game used San Diego Chargers items...
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