Authors’ Biography
Phil S. Dixon is widely regarded as one of America’s foremost experts on baseball history. He has authored six previous books on the Negro Baseball leagues: The Ultimate Kansas City Baseball Trivia Quiz Book (Bon A Tirer Publishing), The Negro Baseball Leagues a Photographic History, 1867-1955 (Amereon House), The Monarchs 1920-1938 Featuring Wilber “Bullet” Rogan The Greatest Ballplayer in Cooperstown (Mariah Press), Phil Dixon’s American Baseball Chronicles, Vol. III, The 1905 Philadelphia Giants (Booksurge), John “Buck” O’Neil, The Rookie, The Man, The Legacy, 1938 (Author house), Phil Dixon’s American Baseball Chronicles, Vol. I, The 1931 Homestead Grays (Xlibris) and Phil Dixon’s American Baseball Chronicles, Vol. III, The 1905 Philadelphia Giants (2010 update), (Xlibris). A knowledgeable and entertaining speaker, Dixon lectures regularly to colleges, High schools, community groups and is routinely quoted in print and broadcast media. Dixon formerly worked in the Public Relations Department of the Kansas City Royals major league baseball team, and currently serves on the Board of Governors for the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, an organization which he served as a co-founder in 1990. He has interviewed hundreds of athletes and researched baseball topics for more than twenty-five years. Phil S. Dixon resides in Belton, Missouri, with his wife Kerry and children. |
Sunday, August 24, 2014
"Baseball Card Man" Meets Phil Dixon
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Went to the Royals Game 6-22-2013
Game notes
The Royals (34-38) dropped to 11-33 when scoring three runs or fewer. ... Keppinger started at 2B in place of Beckham and finished 3 for 3. ... The White Sox secured their first series win since May 24-26 at Miami. ... The Royals activated OF Jarrod Dyson (right high ankle sprain) from the DL and optioned 2B Chris Getz to Triple-A Omaha. ... RHP Dylan Axelrod goes to the mound for the White Sox in Sunday's series finale. RHP James Shieldsstarts for Kansas City.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Trevor Rosenthal Rookie Card from Ebay
Trevor Rosenthal Rookie Card-He went to the same College as my daughter Cowley County Community College.
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Topps Mini Warren Spahn Card number is TM-93
Thursday, July 26, 2012
I bought more !967 Topps
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
1967 Topps on E-bay
Sunday, January 1, 2012
Great Trade!
73Toppsmann at Sports card Forum sent me a six-for-one deal. For every 1975 card, I sent him,he sent me six 2011 cards. I had not trade at Sports Card Forum in a long time.Great Trade!!!! I got a Albert Pujols and Josh Beckett cards, in total I got a 150 topps 2011 cards

Thursday, December 29, 2011
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Saturday, August 27, 2011
Monday, August 22, 2011
August 21 ,2011 Royals Game

The kid had his good stuff Sunday, Ned Yost noticed, and his good command, too.
Despite yielding a leadoff walk — in which he kept trying to make the perfect pitch — Danny Duffy escaped the first inning of the Royals’ 6-1 loss to Boston unscathed. But Yost, the Royals’ manager, still wasn’t going to let his rookie left-hander overthink this. Not when he was matched up against one of the best pitchers on one of the best teams in the American League.
“Danny,” Yost told Duffy in the dugout, “let everybody play. You don’t have to strike everybody out.”
Duffy had heard the whole “pitch to contact, trust your defense” mantra from managers before, but never from Yost, so he figured he’d better listen. And while the Royals still fell to the Red Sox 6-1 on Sunday, it’s hard to imagine Duffy — who rebounded from a rough start in his last outing to allow only two runs on five hits in six innings — could have pitched much better.
“This is the best I’ve seen Duffy look in a while,” Royals infielder Mike Moustakas said. “He was in the zone, making pitches when he had to, keeping guys off balance. He gave us a chance to win.”
The Royals didn’t, of course. But a lot of that can be attributed to the performance of Boston’s own left-hander with top-notch stuff, Jon Lester. Lester, 13-6, carried a no-hitter into the fourth and allowed only one run and three hits in six innings as Boston , 77-49, took the finale of a four-game series at Kauffman Stadium.
“Jon Lester, he’s just bona fide,” Yost said. “He’s a premier pitcher in the American League, and he showed why today.”
Yet on this day, the difference between the 27-year-old Lester, a Cy Young candidate a year ago, and the 22-year old Duffy, who dropped to 3-8, wasn’t that wide.
When Duffy departed after the sixth inning, the Royals only trailed 2-0 — an encouraging sign for a rookie who is still feeling his way around the big leagues after he was pounded to the tune of eight runs in three innings in his previous start against the New York Yankees.
“The mistakes (Lester) made were way up out of the zone or way down out of the zone,” Duffy said, “while the mistakes I made were right over the middle of the plate.”
Two mistakes in particular cost Duffy. The first came in the fifth inning, when he hung a curve to Boston catcher Jason Varitek, who drove the pitch to right for a triple — his first in almost four years — that gave Boston a 1-0 lead.
The second (and more frustrating) mistake came in the sixth inning, when he wasted a 0-2 count to Darnell McDonald by throwing a 94-mph fastball that caught too much of the plate. McDonald, who entered the game with a .175 batting average and four home runs, muscled the ball to left for a homer that made the score 2-0.
Lester, meanwhile, was cruising. Through six innings, he’d allowed only one hit, a single to catcher Salvador Perez. But after the Red Sox tacked on another run in the seventh against reliever Aaron Crow, the Royals hoped to mount a comeback when rookie Johnny Giavotella led off the bottom of the inning with a triple. Perez followed with a walk, and Lester — who was well over 100 pitches at this point — allowed a RBI single to Moustakas.
With Boston’s lead trimmed to 3-1 and runners on first and second and no outs, Red Sox manager Terry Francona decided to call on his top setup man, hard-throwing right-hander Daniel Bard. And the combination of Bard, who retired the next three batters in order, plus a three-run eighth that made the score 6-1, immediately ended any hopes the Royals had of a comeback.
The defeat was another bitter one for the Royals, who dropped to 52-76 and ended a seven-game homestand against the Yankees and Red Sox with a 2-5 record.
But Duffy, who called the performance “a step forward,” says he will take it as a learning experience. It’s likely he will continue to battle himself, at least until he figures out how to control his aggression on the mound.
But Yost’s message in the first inning Sunday, and the results Duffy found after he listened, showed what can happen when he trusts his defense and doesn’t try to strike out everybody.
“Sometimes less is more,” Duffy said. “I’m going to come at you every start, but I’ve got to learn to ease up a little bit.”
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Link Exchange with The Dugout Cards and Collectibles

This is a great site and the manger of this site told me that
Saturday, January 30, 2010
1966 Bazooka Baseball Cards COMPLETE SET 1-48!!
COMPLETE SET of 1966 Bazooka handcut baseball cards!!!!!!!
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