Issa Masroor, Managing Director of Standard Numismatic, is Leading the Collectible s Renaissance
More Than Mere Hype, Collectibles Continue to Increase in Popularity, Issa Masroor is Using Bullion to Redefine the Industry
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MANCHESTER, United Kingdom, April 14, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Over the past few decades, the art of collecting has become so prominent that it has essentially created its own niche industry. As this continues to evolve, the general public still has little understanding of the intricacies of memorabilia, collectibles, NFT s, and their perceived value. As a master of numismatics and rare collectibles,
Issa
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This weekend isn’t the first time Tony La Russa has managed against somebody close. That doesn’t make competing against the Royals’ Mike Matheny any easier.
“Very uncomfortable, very uncomfortable,” La Russa said.
La Russa, early in his second stint managing the White Sox, goes back a long way with the Kansas City skipper. Matheny spent five years playing for La Russa in St. Louis, including winning the 2004 National League pennant. Matheny also took over as Cardinals manager following La Russa’s first retirement, which came after St. Louis won the 2011 World Series.
Their relationship clearly means something to La Russa, who recalled the bond he had with another well-known manager when talking about Matheny.
April 9, 2021
The mystery pitcher began appearing in my morning box scores during the second half of September 1980. Sometimes he was Valenzuela, others Valenzla, but every time I looked, he had zeroes next to his name. I couldn’t find him in my baseball card set, my
Street & Smith’s Official Yearbook 1980, or my
Complete Handbook of Baseball 1980. All I knew was that suddenly he was one of the Dodgers’ most reliable relievers, a rookie thrown into the fire of a three-way NL West race between the Dodgers, Astros, and Reds.
What I didn’t know was that just over six months later, everybody who was anybody would know the name Fernando Valenzuela and the trail of zeroes he left in his wake. Fernandomania was coming.
Published:
5:15 PM April 6, 2021
Updated:
5:20 PM April 6, 2021
A family steps out for a walk wrapped up in their winter woollies during the Easter holidays.
- Credit: Stephen Huntley
A coastal village lived up to its name as blizzard conditions swept across the county.
Winterton in Norfolk boasted white beaches as Christmas card scenery replaced Sunday s sun-kissed conditions.
It was a day to pull up your hood and reach for your cosiest gloves at Winterton on Tuesday.
- Credit: Stephen Huntley
A few hardy walkers out with their dogs pitched their faces against the cold as winter and spring battled it out - each taking turns to have the upper hand.
Dave Parker’s memoir ‘Cobra’ points out how MLB can rebuild its cultural clout The one-time National League MVP’s newly released autobiography is an elegy for when baseball was a more visceral game that was elevated by Black star power, which MLB seemed to take for granted.
MLBBy Neate Sager on
April 1, 2021
April 1, 2021
Dave Parker was at least a six-tool player, perhaps even seven, depending on whether charisma and swagger are separate categories. It would have been easy enough for Parker (seen above at the Pirates’ 2019 40th anniversary celebration of their 1979 title team) to write an autobiography that trades on the nostalgia his legend conjures, usually through tweets of the seven-time all-star outfielder wearing a swaggy self-designed T-shirt, smoking a dart in the Pittsburgh Pirates dugout or making a throw from deep in the right-field corner at the Seattle Kingdome to cut down a runner at home plate in the 1979 all-star game, the season of