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Hall of Fame Sports Memorabilia

Framed Autographed/Signed Eddie Murray 35x39 Baltimore Orange Baseball Jersey Beckett BAS COA

Framed Autographed/Signed Eddie Murray 35x39 Baltimore Orange Baseball Jersey Beckett BAS COA

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Description

Framed Autographed/Signed Eddie Murray 35x39 Baltimore Orange Baseball Jersey Beckett BAS COA — The Hand-Signed Museum-Framed Display of the Switch-Hitting Hall of Famer Who Stood at the Heart of Baltimore Orioles Baseball for Twelve Seasons, One of Only Three Players in Major League History to Accumulate Both 500 Home Runs and 3,000 Hits, Standing Alongside Hank Aaron and Willie Mays in That Extraordinary Company

✨ This 35x39 framed display brings together the hand-signed autograph of Philip Edward Murray on the bright orange jersey that is the most visually distinctive element of the Baltimore Orioles uniform identity — authenticated by Beckett Authentication Services with a Certificate of Authenticity that represents the industry-standard verification for signatures of this caliber. The orange Baltimore Orioles jersey has been a franchise touchstone through generations of Orioles history, the warm-weather alternate that lights up Memorial Stadium and Camden Yards with the color that Maryland baseball has claimed as its own since the franchise arrived in Baltimore in 1954. That orange jersey, carrying the actual handwritten signature of "Steady Eddie" Murray, framed to 35x39 display dimensions for a piece that occupies the wall space that its historical importance commands — this is the kind of item that defines what autographed memorabilia collecting is supposed to feel like.

⚾ Philip Edward Murray was born February 24, 1956, in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, the third son in a family that would produce several professional baseball players across its next generation. He attended Locke Senior High School in South Los Angeles, where his natural switch-hitting ability — the capacity to bat equally effectively from both the left and right sides of the plate — was already evident, and the Baltimore Orioles saw enough in the young first baseman to select him in the third round of the 1973 amateur draft when he was only seventeen years old. Four years in the Baltimore minor league system shaped him into a ready major leaguer, and when he arrived in the American League in April 1977, the readiness showed immediately. His rookie season — a .283 average, 27 home runs, 88 RBI — was not the performance of a player who needed time to adjust to major league pitching. It was the performance of a player who had already adjusted. The American League Rookie of the Year Award that year merely confirmed what Baltimore had been watching develop in its farm system for four seasons.

⚾ The Orioles of the late 1970s and 1980s were built on the Earl Weaver model: pitching depth, defensive integrity, and the three-run home run — the ability to score in large increments rather than manufacturing single runs through small-ball strategies. Eddie Murray was the ideal player for that system. His switch-hitting made him effective against every pitcher the opposition could throw, eliminating the strategic matchup games that managers typically use to neutralize power hitters late in close games. His first-base defense, which would eventually earn him three consecutive Gold Glove Awards from 1982 through 1984, anchored the right side of the infield in a way that allowed the pitching staff to trust that balls in play would be handled. And his bat — that patient, powerful, consistent switch-hitting stroke — produced numbers that didn't spike wildly in one season and collapse in another but maintained a steady, reliable production line that Weaver could count on building a lineup around every single spring.

⚾ The 1983 Baltimore Orioles are remembered as one of the finest teams in franchise history — a team that won 98 regular season games and navigated the American League playoffs before arriving at the World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies. Murray's performance in that World Series, which Baltimore won in five games, included a defining moment in Game 5 at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia: with the Orioles needing to close out the series, Murray drove in two runs with a home run, providing the margin that ultimately sent Baltimore home as champions. It was the only World Series ring of Murray's 21-year career, and it remains the last World Series championship in Baltimore Orioles history. For a franchise that has produced as much history as the Orioles have, that 1983 orange jersey in any form carries the memory of the last time the city celebrated a baseball championship.

⚾ Murray departed Baltimore after the 1988 season and spent the next nine years traveling through other franchises — the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Mets, Cleveland Indians, and others — collecting hits and home runs across two more decades of major league baseball before retiring in 1997. The career totals, accumulated quietly over 21 seasons without the dramatic public persona that frequently accompanies Hall of Fame careers, were staggering: 504 home runs, 3,255 hits, 1,917 runs batted in, 8 All-Star Game selections, and the Gold Gloves that documented his defensive excellence alongside his offensive production. When the voters for the Baseball Hall of Fame considered his record in 1998 — his first year of eligibility — they voted him in with 85.3% of the vote, recognizing what those numbers represented. Most significantly, Murray became only the third player in major league history to accumulate both 500 home runs and 3,000 hits in the same career — a threshold that only Hank Aaron and Willie Mays had previously crossed. That company — Aaron, Mays, Murray — tells the complete story of where Eddie Murray stands in the hierarchy of the game he played for 21 seasons.

⚾ Beckett Authentication Services occupies the position of trusted industry standard for sports memorabilia authentication. Their examiners compare submitted signatures against databases of confirmed exemplars from hundreds of athletes, evaluating pen pressure, stroke characteristics, letter formation, and consistency against documented comparison samples. A Beckett BAS COA means that process was applied to the signature on this jersey and the conclusion was authenticity — the signature of Eddie Murray, applied to this orange Baltimore jersey, verified by Beckett professionals. The 35x39 framing dimensions place this in the category of significant wall display pieces: large enough to command a room, formatted to show the full jersey in display-worthy presentation, with the Beckett authentication documentation contained in the frame. Condition: NOS.

⚾ Eddie Murray. Los Angeles, California. Locke High School. Baltimore Orioles 1977-1988. Switch Hitter. First Baseman. 1977 AL Rookie of the Year. Eight-Time All-Star. Three-Time Gold Glove. 504 Home Runs. 3,255 Hits. 1983 World Series Champion. Hall of Fame 1998. Steady Eddie. Beckett BAS COA. 35x39 Framed Orange Baltimore Jersey. Hall of Fame Sports Memorabilia. Condition: NOS.

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