- P. Yan – D. Figeiredo / 139$
- Plessis Robinson – Montpellier Volley UC / 175$
- Slavia Prague – Kolin / 158$
- Japan – Italy / 130$
- Murcia – Breogan / 172$
- Guinea – DR Congo / 153$
- Ethiopia – Tanzania / 166$
- Gilberto Ramirez – Chris Billam-Smith / 142$
- Fredericia HK 1990 – Bjerringbro Silkeborg / 189$
- Blackpool – Northampton / 159$
Hall of Fame museum
What is Hall of Fame museum in baseball?
Are there permanent expositions there?
What is Autumn Glory?
National Baseball of Fame is the facility in Cooperstown, NY. Its idea appeared in the 19th century after Sam Crane’s public speech. He considered it a good idea to honor the significant past baseball players of the past and install a monument to them. But the group of individuals announced the foundation of the Baseball Hall of Fame only in 1934. It’ll be the pantheon of the baseball stars and a collection of baseball artifacts from around the world.
The museum’s maximum attendance is about 500000 visitors per year. But now it has lost its popularity due to Dream Park competitor 5 miles away from Cooperstown. It has the same idea with the bonus of 22 fields for playing baseball. The Cooperstown attendance falls each year. Pandemics added one more stone to the complex tomb.
The first museum’s floor is the place of activities. It performs a collection of movies related to baseball. Bullpen Theatre offers workshops, book discussions and photos of famous pitchers on the walls. The viewers can see the Inductee Row. It presents the famers inducted between 1937 and 1939. All induction plaques for all years can be found close to it. That area has the name Plaque Gallery. Kids will learn some baseball tricks at the Sandlot Clubhouse while adults discover the facts about baseball broadcasting and publications at Scribes and Mikemen. This area attracts visitors by its floor-to-ceiling windows opening the yard decorated with statues of Roy Campanella and Johnny Padres, who led the Dodgers to the championship in 1965. There is a statue of the unnamed Girl’s Professional League player. The Education Gallery provides classes for school groups in the summer.
The Game zone takes a significant space on the second floor looking like the timeline stylized as the continuation of the game. It acquaints the visitors with the game’s development from its early days till nowadays. There are some offshoots like Babe Ruth room, Diamond Dreams corner dedicated to the women’s baseball or Viva Baseball bilingual exhibit about this sport in Latin America. The Whole New Ballgame at the Janesthek Gallery is a permanent exhibition covering the last 45 years. A Today’s Game zone provides jerseys and some items with some facts about the history of each major league franchise.
The Autumn Glory is the third floor space devoted to the post-season period. It has replicas of World Series champion rings, advertisements and other related artifacts. One for the Books tells the baseball history via books. BBWAA stands to ell the organization’s history and presents the inductees’ stories. They’re available online to everybody. The final area is Sacred Ground, where the fans discover new facts about the ballparks. Photos of the ruined ballparks, for example.