This is an Original 100% Authentic Full Season Ticket from the 2012 MLB Season.
April 18, 2012 Los Angeles Angels vs Oakland Athletics at Angel Stadium in Anaheim, CA.
4/18/2012
C.J. WILSON pictured on the ticket

BARTOLO COLON
38 CONSECUTIVE STRIKES THROWN
MLB RECORD
11 BATTERS - ALL STRIKES!!!!
CAREER WIN #164 GEM 5K
"Big Bart, Big Sexy or Morales"
4x All-Star, Cy Young

ALBERT PUJOLS
CAREER HIT #2086
"Prince Albert, Phat Albert, The Machine, La Maquina or Tio Albert"
11x All-Star, 3x MVP, 2x Gold Glove
Rookie of the Year, 2x World Series, 6x Silver Slugger
Batting Title, NLCS MVP, 3x ML PoY
Clemente

YOENIS CESPEDES
HR #4 (1st on the Road)
"La Potencia or El Talento"
2x All-Star, 2x HR Derby Champ
Gold Glove, Silver Slugger

JONNY GOMES
HR #121
"Ironsides"
2013 World Series

Bartolo Colon’s Amazing Streak
We already talked about Cliff Lee and Matt Cain’s pitcher’s duel for the ages last night, but that wasn’t even the most remarkable thing that took place last night. Over in Anaheim, Bartolo Colon was doing something that we might not see done again in our lifetime.  In the fifth inning of last night’s game, Colon threw a first pitch ball to Maicer Izturis. He wouldn’t throw another pitch that was called a ball until he faced Bobby Abreu in the eighth inning. Between Izturis and Abreu, he faced 11 batters and didn’t throw a single ball to any of them. His all-strikes, all-the-time approach lasted a remarkable 38 pitches. You can see all 38 of them in this video compiled by MLB.com.  How unlikely is that? Well, we can estimate the chances of an event occurring 38 times in a row using a mathematical tool called binomial distribution. Essentially, binomial distribution takes the probability of an event occurring and then extrapolates how often you’d expect that event to happen a certain number of times given a number of opportunities. In this case, the probability of Bartolo Colon throwing a strike on any given pitch is roughly 67% percent. In other words, out of every three pitches Colon throws, we’d expect two strikes and one ball.  Last night, we got 38 consecutive strikes without a ball. Binomial distribution tells us that the odds of that occurring, given what we know about Colon’s career strike percentage, is about 0.000000246. In other words, you’d expect to find one string of 38 consecutive strikes if you had a population of approximately 4.1 million strings of pitches thrown by Bartolo Colon. One in 4.1 million.  Yeah. What Lee and Cain did was downright ordinary compared to what Colon did.

RARE FULL SEASON TICKET IN MINT CONDITION!!!
You get the ticket in the photos.  No creases, Sharp corners, Nice ticket
Ticket measures 2 x 5-1/2 inches
Section V507 - Row N - Seat 4

Photo/Scans have been watermarked for auction purposes only.
Ticket will be shipped in the Ticket Toploader (Hard Plastic Holder) shown in the photos.
It will be protected and surrounded by 2 pieces of rigid cardboard and sent via USPS with tracking.
For multiple ticket orders add items to cart for combined shipping. (Box 7)