CURT FLOOD - CONTRACT SIGNED 09/23/1989 CO-SIGNED BY: MARK BOMBACK - HFSID 295575
Sale Price $595.00
Reg. $700.00
CURT FLOOD
As Commissioner of the Senior Professional Baseball Association, he
signs off on a contract between the Winter Haven Super Sox and pitcher Mark
Bomback
Contract signed: "Curt Flood", "Mark V. Bomback", 11 pages,
8½x11. Somerset, Massachusetts, 1989 September 23. Contract
between the Winter Haven Super Sox and player Bomback, also signed by a club
representative on September 21, and by Flood as Senior Professional Baseball
Association Commissioner. CURT FLOOD (1938-1997) played Major
League Baseball from 1956 to 1969, and made a brief reappearance in 1971.
Flood was a reliable hitter who topped .300 three times in an era when
pitching dominated the game. But Flood's greatest talent was in centerfield,
which he roamed for the St Louis Cardinals, beginning in 1958. One of the
finest defensive players of any era, Flood had 223 consecutive games without an
error, and made no errors at all in 1966. A three-time All-Star, he won seven
consecutive Gold Glove awards. He played in all seven games of three World
Series for the Cardinals: victories over the Yankees and Red Sox in 1964 and
1967, and a loss to the Tigers in 1968. He was one of only four Cardinals to
appear on all three teams. After the 1969 season, the Cardinals traded Flood
to the Phillies. Flood refused to go, and challenged the "reserve clause" which
had long denied players the right to negotiate with multiple teams for the best
offer. He sat out the 1970 season, taking his suit against Major League Baseball
and Commissioner Bowie Kuhn all the way to the Supreme Court. The Major
League Players Association endorsed his suit, but not one active player was
willing to appear in court on his behalf. With former Supreme Court Justice
Arthur Goldberg as his lawyer, Flood lost by a 5-3 vote in the Supreme
Court. He made a brief return to baseball with the Washington Senators in 1971,
but his skills were gone, and he soon retired. Flood fought law suits and the
Internal Revenue Service for the rest of his life. In 1975, an arbiter voided
the reserve clause in cases involving two other players, and the era of free
agency began. Flood had been five years ahead of his time. The
Senior Professional Baseball Association, with Flood as commissioner,
was a winter league based in Florida. The minimum age was 35 (32 for
catchers); its oldest layer (Ed Rakow) was 44. The SPBA played a full 72-game
schedule in 1989 but folded in the middle of its second season. MARK VINCENT
BOMBACK (b. 1953) was the Minor League Player of the Year in 1979, tossing
for Vancouver of the Pacific Coast League. He had the best season of his short
Major League career in 1980, going 10-8 for the Mets in a spot starting role. He
also played for the Milwaukee Brewers (1978) and Toronto Blue Jays (1981-1982).
Staple at top left corner. Edges toned. Otherwise, fine
condition.
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