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  1. #1
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Posts
    1,093

    Two Hard To Find Yankee Bats Sell on ebay

    Now you don't see these bats very often........Bob Cerv and Marv Throneberry...........looks like Mears bought the Cerv and Zane Burns bought the Throneberry...........very cool stuff............

    http://cgi.ebay.com/BOB-ROBERT-CERV-...QQcmdZViewItem

    http://cgi.ebay.com/Marv-Throneberry...QQcmdZViewItem

  2. #2
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    4,256

    Re: Two Hard To Find Yankee Bats Sell on ebay

    Jim, funny enough I saw both of those and was considering on going after the Cerv. At the last minute I decided to let it pass.

  3. #3
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    1,342

    Re: Two Hard To Find Yankee Bats Sell on ebay

    Surprise, surprise.

  4. #4
    Moderator metsbats's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    3,658

    Re: Two Hard To Find Yankee Bats Sell on ebay

    http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...ksid=p3907.m29

    Seller has a Phil Linz bat on ebay now. One of the most funniest baseball stories I ever heard was the harmonica incident:

    "The Orioles regained first with a win on August 3, then the Yankees returned the favor on August 6. Another Orioles-Yankees series began the next day, with the Orioles taking three of four to send the Yankees spinning into third place. The White Sox came into Yankee Stadium August 11, and swept a doubleheader that day. With the Yankees down to 3.5 back and reeling, tensions boiled over. On the Yankee team bus, infielder Phil Linz sat in the back playing a harmonica. Incensed with an attitude he interpreted as taking defeat lightly, manager Yogi Berra told Linz to cut it out. Linz asked Mickey Mantle, sitting nearby, what Berra had said. Mantle replied, “He said ‘louder.’” Linz persisted, Berra confronted him, and Linz flipped the harmonica at Berra, who swatted it away, cutting another team member. This incident is often credited with bringing the Yankees together as a team, but a more important factor was probably the callup of Mel Stottlemyre, who began a terrific pitching run down the stretch and solidified the rotation, as well as a hitting tear by Mantle. The Yankees won the next two from Chicago, and the news broke that team owners Dan Topping and Del Webb had sold 80% interest in the team to the CBS television network, amid allegations that the corporate influence would ruin the game and guarantee the Yankee dynasty in perpetuity. The Yankees then traveled to Baltimore for a series with the Orioles. New York won two of three, and then went to Chicago."

    David
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