He really stuck it to Bazooka!

A Texas man found a collection of baseball cards from 1957 — and used a loophole to win a contest for a brand new baseball glove, it was reported on Wednesday.

Darwin Day, 70, was cleaning his house and shuffling through the old cards when he stumbled upon a contest to “Win These Swell Prizes” if a contestant can accurately predict the score of two games.

The deadline to enter the contest was April 26 — but it didn;t list any year.

The prize options included a Gilbert Chemistry lab, a Stellar 600 Power Microscope and a Spalding Fielder’s Glove.

“I was struck by the fact it didn’t have a year listed on the card,” Day told the Dallas Morning News. “It was a simpler time. You didn’t need a team of lawyers to do everything back then.”

One of the cards was for the July 19 game where the Milwaukee Braves beat the NY Giants 3-to-1 and the Baltimore Orioles swept the Kansas City Athletics 4-to-2.

“When I found those cards and saw those contests, I said, ‘I just have to do this and see what happens,’” Day told the Texas paper.

Day looked up the scores online, filled out the cards and sent it to the company to redeem his prize.

Bazooka Candy Brands, a division of the New York-based Topps Company, made good on its promise to award a prize for a contest entry submitted nearly 60 years after it opened to contestants.

They sent Day a baseball glove last week. Also in his prize package: a pillow with a Bazooka Joe comic strip printed on it, T-shirts, and plenty of gum.

“It’s a a Louisville Slugger glove,” Day told the paper as he showed the glove to a crowd of onlookers this week.”

“In a way, I did it in memory of my brother. His obit said he was a jokester.”

The general manager at Topps Confectionery Brands, said he was shocked to find this mysterious letter from a contest from 1957.

“It did pique my interest, this kind of mysterious letter,” said Tony Jacobs, global general manager of Topps Confectionery Brands.

“I thought, ‘Hopefully, this is just a guy somewhere having a little bit of fun.’”

Jacobs who joined Topps three years ago and manages the candy wing of the company, which includes Bazooka Bubble Gum.

Day was in bed when he received a call from Rogers & Cowan, a marketing firm that represents Topps.

They told Day that Topps was going to honor the contest.