by Cowboy7130 » December 10th, 2007, 1:38 pm
I have some pseudo-psychological-emotional issues for collecting my gloves. When I was a kid, my parents knew nothing of modern gloves, and were fiscally conservative to the point of stinginess. Daddy had a pre-war beater that he played softball with; he tried to make me play Little League with it in the 70's! Although I did talk him out of that embarrassing situation, I was not able to convince him to buy me a decent Rawlings, Spalding or Wilson. My glove came from the S and H Green Stamp store. I hated it (although I still have it). When I was old enough to earn my own money with odd jobs around the neighborhood, one of my first purchases was a modern Rawlings. (Wish I still had THAT one!) Now, years later, I am collecting those gloves that I could not have in my youth, but nevertheless they connect me to my youth. (And, because I did not have the glove I needed when I played, I tend to overdo the gloves for my kids. They both have more gloves than they need!)
I am on the "low" end of the collectors' totem pole. I have yet to spend over $60 for a glove, and that was for a modern gamer, not a collectible. Most of my "collectibles" were 20 bucks or less. My favorite gloves are endorsed by my baseball heroes: George Brett, Nolan Ryan, Cal Ripken, Don Mattingly, and Dale Murphy. I want every glove I own to be functional; no shelf-sitters for me! Because the gloves are not expensive, I can fix them up a little and customize them if I want, and then, if I kid I know needs to borrow a glove, I don't get a stomach-ache watching him use my gloves ...
However ... I am beginning to be interested, thanks to this forum, in vintage gloves. Again, I am not going to spend a lot of money on a glove I can't use, but I am thinking of buying a good, smooth old split finger to play some catch with, and to use to educate my players about some of the history of the game.
Yes, I still have my first glove.