5 Satchel Paige Baseball Cards To Celebrate His Legacy
Unfortunately for collectors, there aren’t too many Satchel Paige baseball cards to go around…
You see, Paige spent most of his career as a superstar in the Negro Leagues, making his debut in 1926 with the Chattanooga Black Lookouts.
And since he didn’t make his Major League debut until 1948 when he was 42 years old, few Satchel Paige cards would be printed before he would retire.
His charisma made for stories as legendary as Babe Ruth’s called shot.
Like those of him making his teammates sit down in the grass behind him as he struck out the opposing side.
Or taunting the legendary Josh Gibson by intentionally walking the bases loaded just so he could strike him out.
Satchel Paige baseball cards remain rare and coveted by many vintage baseball card collectors to this day.
Here is a list of 5 of Paige’s most important baseball cards in the hobby.
Let’s jump right in!
Satchel Paige Baseball Cards Wrap-up
Amazingly, 1953 was not Paige’s last stint in Major League Baseball.
After returning to barnstorming for many years thereafter, he found himself financially strapped.
So, to help complete five years of big league service to qualify for a player’s pension, he returned to baseball in 1965 when Kansas City Athletics owner Charlie Finley signed him to pitch in one game.
The A’s were 40 games back anyway, so Finley came up with “Satchel Paige Appreciation Night” to help draw a crowd.
At 59 years old, Paige would become the oldest player to play in a Major League baseball game when he took the mound against Carl Yastrzemski and the Red Sox.
To help give the crowd a show, he sat in a rocking chair between innings while a nurse tended to his aging right shoulder and an errand boy would grab him fresh glasses of water.
Shockingly (or, maybe not so shockingly), Paige tossed three innings of scoreless ball while giving up only one hit–to none other than Yastrzemski.
It was yet another unbelievable achievement for Paige to add to his legacy.
By the time he made his last appearance in 1965, Paige had pitched across five different decades.
And his dominance was just as unquestionable as his longevity.
After facing him during an exhibition game, New York Yankees legend Joe DiMaggio once stated that Paige was “the best and fastest pitcher I’ve ever faced.”
That’s a lot coming from a guy who once hit safely in 56 straight Major League games.
It was no secret that Paige had wanted to be the first African American to play in Major League Baseball.
He said in his autobiography that, “Signing Jackie like they did still hurt me deep down. I’d been the guy who’d started all that big talk about letting us in the big time.I’d been the one who’d opened up the major league parks to colored teams. I’d been the one who the white boys wanted to go barnstorming against.”
While he may not have achieved that dream, he was the first Negro League veteran elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Committee on Negro Baseball Leagues in 1971.
A true showman and dominant pitcher, Paige’s legacy will live on forever as one of the game’s best players of all-time.


