This card is hand signed by Gaylord Perry and is authenticated by the Panini Company with a certificate of authenticity on the back of the card. The childhood dream - a baseball card of your favorite player with his authentic, hand signed autograph across the front!
- Authentic player signed memorabilia
- Hall of Fame 75th Anniversary Logo
- Authenticated by the Panini Company
- Delivered in a UV protected acrylic case with magnetic closure
- Orginal Baseball Card: 2014 Panini Cooperstown # 82
Gaylord Perry won 314 games, struck out 3,534 batters, earned Cy Young awards in both leagues, and hurled a no-hitter during his 22-year major league career with eight teams. But the spitball – or more accurately, the threat of one – gave Perry his everlasting fame. The author of “Me and the Spitter” could distract and frustrate through an array of rituals on the mound, including fidgeting with his glove, uniform and the bill of his cap. When Perry retired in 1983, he proclaimed, “The league will be a little drier now, folks.”
This card is hand signed by Gaylord Perry and is authenticated by the Panini Company with a certificate of authenticity on the back of the card. The childhood dream - a baseball card of your favorite player with his authentic, hand signed autograph across the front!
- Authentic player signed memorabilia
- Hall of Fame 75th Anniversary Logo
- Authenticated by the Panini Company
- Delivered in a UV protected acrylic case with magnetic closure
- Orginal Baseball Card: 2014 Panini Cooperstown # 82
Gaylord Perry won 314 games, struck out 3,534 batters, earned Cy Young awards in both leagues, and hurled a no-hitter during his 22-year major league career with eight teams. But the spitball – or more accurately, the threat of one – gave Perry his everlasting fame. The author of “Me and the Spitter” could distract and frustrate through an array of rituals on the mound, including fidgeting with his glove, uniform and the bill of his cap. When Perry retired in 1983, he proclaimed, “The league will be a little drier now, folks.”