LA Sports Museum

A new sports museum opened to the public in downtown Los Angeles Thanksgiving Weekend that is absolutely phenomenal. PHENOMENAL! It is literally the size of a large grocery store and stocked with seemingly never-ending display rooms of the highest-end sports collectibles I have ever seen.
It would take pages and pages to describe the extent of the collection (which is all owned by collector Gary Cypress), but it is no exaggeration to say that the top end of almost anything related to sports collectibles is there, and there in multiple variations. From multiple sets of fingerless gloves, workmans, ambidextrous, etc, to four Executioner style football helmets, to numerous Spalding trophies (and many other huge one-of-a-kind trophies), to every old baseball game (the big coin operated ones and board game variety), to the old poster size glove ads and movie posters, to mushroom and decal bats galore, ancient trophy balls, and nearly full runs of most pre 40s cards (including the T206 Wagner).
Jim Daniel, Ricky "Bulldog" and I went together and we were literally shaking our heads in disbelief the whole time. It's hours later and I'm still stunned. The displays are as top quality as the artifacts themselves. All I can say is that if you ever get the chance do not hesitate to visit, and please drop me a note if you are in the area.
My website is back up but with a new URL: www.glovecrazy.com. I've posted some pictures in my HodgePodge page, but even then they just don't do the museum justice. It's the Smithsonian book times fifty.
It would take pages and pages to describe the extent of the collection (which is all owned by collector Gary Cypress), but it is no exaggeration to say that the top end of almost anything related to sports collectibles is there, and there in multiple variations. From multiple sets of fingerless gloves, workmans, ambidextrous, etc, to four Executioner style football helmets, to numerous Spalding trophies (and many other huge one-of-a-kind trophies), to every old baseball game (the big coin operated ones and board game variety), to the old poster size glove ads and movie posters, to mushroom and decal bats galore, ancient trophy balls, and nearly full runs of most pre 40s cards (including the T206 Wagner).
Jim Daniel, Ricky "Bulldog" and I went together and we were literally shaking our heads in disbelief the whole time. It's hours later and I'm still stunned. The displays are as top quality as the artifacts themselves. All I can say is that if you ever get the chance do not hesitate to visit, and please drop me a note if you are in the area.
My website is back up but with a new URL: www.glovecrazy.com. I've posted some pictures in my HodgePodge page, but even then they just don't do the museum justice. It's the Smithsonian book times fifty.