Killed a few rainy hours yesterday talking gloves with some friends and an interesting topic came up… rarity of basemitts endorsed by pre-war (WWII, not Gulf War) first sackers. We came to the conclusion that despite having the longest (perhaps second to only Ted Williams) glove endorsing career, George Sisler is one of the toughest names to acquire.
Let’s discount Chance, we all have better odds of finding a Cap Anson mitt! Gehrig is tough, but they’re out there and pop up a few times a year. Terry, Mize and Greenberg are pretty common. Foxx is more plentiful than people want to admit to compared with a few years ago. Kelly’s difficult, and Bottomley is even more problematic to locate, but Sisler had us baffled.
Among four long time collectors, guys who’ve been rummaging for gloves longer than we’d like to admit to, only one Sisler between us. Perplexing given his tenure as a Rawlings endorser. Yes, basemitts are specialized equipment that weren’t produced in the same quantity as fielder’s gloves. It’s very likely that few were sold because less than 10% of kids actually played that position, and a regular glove does the job fine. He endorsed through a depression where people couldn’t spend money on something so position specific. He also endorsed through a war where recreation wasn’t a top priority for the masses. Still, nearly four decades of production and few Sislers survive. Why is this?
Fred, would love to hear your take on it. As the premier basemitt collector in the hobby, you jumped at the opportunity to grab my pre-war Sisler years ago. How many others have crossed your path and how would you rank the rarity of these guys?