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APBA Games

For 60 years APBA has been the unchallenged King of quality sports simulation products. APBA dates back to the 1930s and a bunch of high-school buddies in Lancaster, PA. The boys played a baseball simulation game invented by one of them, Dick Seitz. His game was loosely based on an old tabletop baseball game called National Pastime. But unlike any previous board game, it combined the randomness of dice with the on-field performances of individual players. The boys called themselves the American Professional Baseball Association. That appellation soon was whittled down to its essential form: APBA. So while APBA is still an acronym for that first baseball simulation league, the word has taken on a meaning of its own. The game is APBA, and the word is pronounced “App’Bah” – a term as slick and condensed as the game. Seitz’s original game went with him to war in the 1940’s. He printed player cards on his own printing press, typed out play charts and played APBA with three comrades in the barracks at Fort Eustis, VA. After the war, Seitz worked as secretary to Lancaster’s mayor and a purchaser for a trucking company, all the while refining APBA and playing the game with a league of friends. The plot twist that took APBA from a handmade diversion to a nationwide phenomenon comes courtesy of the 1950 Philadelphia Phillies. The Whiz Kids captured the fancy of Seitz and his wife, Jean, and got them so baseball crazy that they resurrected the game. It played so smoothly that in 1951, Seitz decided to share his creation. The original game offered 20 player cards for each of the 16 major league teams and two play charts. The whole shebang set you back $10. The 150 games sold encouraged Seitz that there was a market for his game so he produced new versions annually from 1952-56. That steady increase in sales encouraged Seitz to quit his job in 1957 to make APBA a career. Year by year, APBA’s fan base grew. As more gamers played exponentially more games, innovations like dual pitcher ratings and double hitting columns were incorporated – but innovations were allowed only to a point. APBA has always trod a fine line between realism and playability, and Seitz stood resolute against wrinkles or gimmicks that would add a smidgen of realism to the game at a cost of five minutes more per played game. As a result, the APBA baseball game played today is not much different than the 1957 version – one played millions of times by players worldwide. APBA changes with the times not only by changing, but by the rolls of the dice.

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1976 Golfer Set

By: APBA Games

Stock #: APBA32D76

Type: Box Set

Product Line: APBA Golf - Players and Games

1992-93 Hockey Player Cards

By: APBA Games

Year: 1993

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Hockey

1994-95 Hockey Player Cards

By: APBA Games

Year: 1995

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Hockey

APBA Baseball (2013 Edition)

By: APBA Games

Year: 2013

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: APBA Baseball - Base Games & Supplies

APBA Baseball (2014 Edition)

By: APBA Games

Year: 2014

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: APBA Baseball - Base Games & Supplies

APBA Bowling

By: APBA Games

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: APBA Bowling

APBA Football 1955 Player Cards (1979 Printing)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1979

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Football 1957 Player Cards (1959 Printing)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1959

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Football 1970 Player Cards (1972 Printing)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1970

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Football 1971 Player Cards (1973 Printing)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1973

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Football 1972 Player Cards (2011 Printing)

By: APBA Games

Year: 2011

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Football 1980 Player Cards (1982 Printing)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1982

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Football 1992 Player Cards

By: APBA Games

Year: 1994

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Football 1997 Player Cards

By: APBA Games

Year: 1998

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Football 2010 Player Cards

By: APBA Games

Year: 2011

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Pro Basketball (1971/72 Teams)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1973

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: APBA Basketball

APBA Pro Basketball (1971/72 Teams)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1973

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: APBA Basketball

APBA Pro Basketball (1971/72 Teams)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1972

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Basketball

APBA Pro Basketball (1994/95 teams)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1995

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: APBA Basketball

APBA Pro Hockey Game (1992-93 Season)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1993

Type: Software (boxed)

Product Line: APBA Hockey Software (APBA)

PC 5.25"

APBA Pro League Football Game (1974 Teams)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1976

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: APBA Football

APBA Pro League Football Game (1980 Teams)

By: APBA Games

Year: 1981

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: APBA Football

NFL Football All-Stars

By: APBA Games

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: APBA Football

Volume 12, #7 "Contest Results, Something New from 1908, Formula Focus"

By: APBA Games

Year: 1979

Type: Magazine

Product Line: APBA Journal

February 1979

Discounted

Volume 7, #5 "APBA Prints 1949 Baseball, AJ Focus, Dave Hull"

By: APBA Games

Year: 1974

Type: Magazine

Product Line: APBA Journal

January 1974

Discounted

Volume 7, #6 "Two Sample Cards for '74, AJ Focus, Ivy League APBA"

By: APBA Games

Year: 1974

Type: Magazine

Product Line: APBA Journal

Fabruary 1974

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