Baseball card pioneer Sy Berger dies
By Darren
Rovell | ESPN.com
Sy Berger, the father of modern day
baseball cards, has died of natural causes at the age of 91.
The news was announced Sunday
morning by baseball historian Marty Appel on behalf of the family.
Berger most famously devised the
practice of signing Major League Baseball players year after year to be able to
use their name and image on cards in annual sets.
For more than three decades, Topps
was paying players only $75 a year for that privilege and, most of the time,
that amount was applied to buying something from the company catalog.
Berger's personal relationships with
the stars in the beginning years made it easier to make them sign on the dotted
line, though he did not sign St. Louis Cardinals slugger Stan Musial for the
first six years. Berger was often seen at the side of Willie Mays, whom he
considered among his closest friends
Topps was founded in 1938 as a
chewing gum company. As the competition in the gum market exploded, Topps unveiled
Bazooka -- with the added value of comics -- to help sell the brand.
That eventually led to putting gum
in packs of baseball cards. And in 1952, Sy Berger arrived at the company to
help make and produce the first set, which he designed at his kitchen table
using cardboard and scissors. The packs of six cards were wrapped in wax and,
of course, had a piece of bubble gum in it for a total cost of five cents.
Despite having a Mickey Mantle
"rookie" card in the set, sales were not good. Since they overproduced
the second part of the set that year, Berger, for years, would try to unload
the cards anywhere they could.
"Around 1959 or so, I went
around to carnivals and offered them for a penny a piece, and it got so bad I
offered them at 10 for a penny," Berger told Sports Collectors Digest in
2007. "They would say, 'We don't want them.'"
In 1960, still saddled with a huge
number of cards from the 1952 set, Berger put the remaining cards into three
full garbage trucks and commissioned a barge to dump the remaining inventory
into the Atlantic Ocean.
With kids putting the cards in the
spokes of their bicycle and years later, the parents of those who had saved
them throwing out their shoeboxes full of cards, scarcity led to an era where
the baseball card became an investment.
After the T206 Honus Wagner card,
the 1952 Topps Mantle is the most valuable card in the baseball card world. One
of the 1952 Mantle cards sold at auction last week for $268,664.
For years, baseball cards were the
marketing mechanism for the gum companies -- Topps competed with Bowman and
Fleer and Donruss.
In the mid-80s, the fervor over
cards led the cardboard to become the main attraction over the gum. Gum was
soon wrapped in plastic so as not to hurt the cards and eventually was gone
from packs altogether.
Berger, who worked for Topps until
2002, is survived by his wife Gloria, his daughter Maxine, and his two sons
Glen and Gary.
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