Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Lots of delicious cake

I did a big vintage trade with brcdad of TCDB. On my end I got mostly Hostess cards. Yum!

So many '75s I couldn't fit them all in one photo. Here's the first half, pretty standard. 

It gets more wild in the second half. Oscar Gamble has the famous Afro he also has on his famous Topps card. Decent airbrush attempts were made to cover up Bobby Murcer's Yankee hat, and to give a Yankee hat to Catfish Hunter. But the star of the lot by far is that fantastic Rusty Staub card. The artist gave Staub a Mets hat, started putting Mets pinstripes on his Expos jersey, but gave up before getting to his sleeve. Left the Expos jersey too!
Some bicentennial beauties.
A few from '77, the set I'm currently working on for the blog series. This set has not fared nearly as well as the first two in the head-to-head's with Topps.
A nice trio of '78s.
Finishing strong with '79s, including a fantastic Yankee Stadium card with Ron Guidry.
Finally, finishing off with some gum - two 1972 Topps high numbers!

 

Monday, January 5, 2026

Wood vs. Wood #320

Last time we had a 9-1 win for 1962. Skipping past the multi-photo subsets in '62, lands us at the titanic battle at #320.

This matchup has probably the most star power. 1,517 home runs!

Hank Aaron is pictured at Milwaukee County Stadium. Henry Aaron was one of the greatest baseball players who ever lived. He was an excellent right fielder who won three Gold Gloves. He was a real speed threat, stealing 240 bases despite playing much of his career in an era where the stolen base was seldom used. He was a marvelous hitter, with a .305 lifetime average and winning two batting titles. He walked more than he struck out for his career. But of course, Hammerin' Hank is best known for his power. He broke Babe Ruth's career record with 755 over 23 seasons, a record that stood for decades, and is considered by many to be the real home run king.  The record was achieved not by a few unreal seasons, but by amazing consistency - he hit at least 20 home runs a year for 20 years (1955 to 1974), topping 30 home runs in 15 of those seasons. To this day he is the all-time leader with 2,297 RBI and 6,858 total bases. Unfortunately he was not surrounded by a lot of talent during his career, but the three times he made the postseason he continued his greatness, hitting over .300 in each series, and hitting .362 with 6 HR and 16 RBI in 17 total games. After his career, he took on a front office role with the Braves, and owned chains of restaurants and car dealerships. He died in 2021.

Barry Bonds follows through at Shea Stadium. Foul ball? Popup? In six day games at Shea in '86, Bonds went 2-for-20, with both hits being singles. If not for steroids, people would probably consider Barry Bonds the greatest hitter of all time. He holds the career record for home runs, 762, and single season record, 73 in 2001 (the only year he hit 50 or more HR). His walk totals are off-the-charts, in large part because his batting eye was so good you couldn’t throw him a strike (and no-one has ever explained how steroids help your battin eye). It’s a shame that his legacy is tainted by his use of a drug whose impact on his numbers can only be guessed at, but not explained. Bonds has been a Giants special instructor since 2014, and the Barry Bonds Family Foundation has operated since 1993.
 

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Cake or gum? 1977 Larry Herndon

Last time it was another shutout for Topps, 6-0. Will Hostess get on the board this time?

Hostess has Herndon at spring training, some bats and a helmet abandoned in the outfield behind him. Topps has him at Candlestick park, pregame at the batting cage. I'm not sure what the ad is behind him, might be for Chevron.

Herndon made his big league debut with the Cardinals in 1974 but played almost all of his career with the Giants (1976-1981) and Tigers (1982-1988). With the Giants he was a decent hitter, good fielder with some speed. After he was traded to the Tigers he immediately developed into more of a slugger. After six seasons with 23 total HR for the Giants, he hit 24 in his first season in Detroit. He hit .333 in the 1984 World Series and caught the final out. Overall in 1,537 games he hit .274 with 107 HR and 550 RBI. After his playing career he was a minor- and major-league coach, and is now retired. 
 

Saturday, January 3, 2026

1974 Topps Deckle dating revisited

A couple of recent comments on my Deckle Dating blog posts have pointed out a couple more instances where Topps's date for the card could not have been right.

On the last card, Willie Horton, I noted that it was the only time Topps dated a card as 1972 instead of 1973 on the back. I figured that was probably right, but commented Kevin noted that the button-down uniform Horton was wearing was last seen in 1971.

I had actually been strongly considering 1971 based on this 1972 card, where his uniform was opened in just about exactly the same way, but I had decided that wasn't enough evidence. I hadn't considered whether the uniforms themselves had changed.

Horton appears to be in the dugout in the inset photo; a very similar photo was used for his 2004 Topps All Time Fan Favorites card.

I'm guessing his '72 base card was also taken at this time, over by the third base line.

So not August 8, 1972. The Tigers were in Boston on August 8, 1971 so it couldn't have been there, plus that undershirt looks a little warm for August.

 

Then I got a comment from tjisonline on one of the first cards in the set, Steve Carlton.  He writes, "This photo is from a 1972 Spring Training game. Carlton was wearing Rick Wise's old jersey with # 38. A picture from the same photoshoot can be seen on his 1973 Topps Pin-up."

That early in the series I wasn't going back to earlier years to check for discrepancies. You wouldn't know that Carlton's number was not 32 from this photo, but based on the baggy jacket underneath, tj's tip is credible when you look at the '73 pinup:

Carlton had just been traded for Wise, and I guess he didn't get his old #32 until the season started. I assume that this 1973 Topps card is from that day also: 

I guess at some point in spring training he took Darrell Brandon's #32, with Brandon moving to #30. 

On the off chance that it is the same day, March 15, but in 1972, the Phillies beat the White Sox 8-6 in spring action. In other news, The Godfather debuted in theaters, and two British soldiers were killed by an IRA bomb.
 

Friday, January 2, 2026

Jim Wywn

I noticed this the other day when putting together a blog post on Jim Wynn, and was going through his TCDB pages. I don't usually pay attention to facsimile signatures, even on vintage cards, but this one on his 1969 Topps Deckle caught my eye.

Wywn! Did he not know how to spell his own name, or was this such a bad job by Topps in making a fake one?

This inspired me to go through his full run of cards on TCDB. The oldest Wynn card with a facsimile auto is a 1966 team issue. His handwriting is clearly labored, especially with his M and N's which seem constructed of multiple separate lines. Still, his name is spelled correctly.

Another team issued card in 1967 has a more script autograph. It does look like it says "Wynne" instead of "Wynn" but that might just be some extra flourish.

That year, Topps issued their fourth card of Wynn, and first with a facsimile auto. Here is where we see WYWN!

For the next several years, this exact same WYWN autograph appeared whenever there was a facsimile auto in a set Wynn appeared in, most notably 1968 Topps Game, 1970 Topps Super and 1971 Topps. Also his 1970 Kelloggs card. Topps provided the photos, and I guess the autographs, for that set.

His MLB Photostamp from that year, not produced by Topps, has a correct autograph for him.

Finally, in 1975, Topps produced a card with a "correct" autograph for Wynn. (Well, it looks like it could say Fire Ulyru, but at least it doesn't say Jim Wywn.)


 

Thursday, January 1, 2026

1981 Topps Gary Alexander

 

The front: Action shot at Yankee Stadium, with the photo angled to make his stance look less crouched. In the stands a hot dog vendor is busy in the first row. Alexander played in one day game at Yankee Stadium in 1980, June 29. In the top of the 6th inning, down 2-1, Alexander pinch hit for second baseman Dave Rosello and hit a sac fly off of Ron Guidry to tie the game. In the bottom of the 6th Jack Brohamer replaced Alexander to play second base. Jim Lefebvre hit a three-ruh homer that inning to break the game open; the final was 7-2 Yankees.

The back: Alexander's 27 home runs were four more than Johnny Bench and Dale Murphy, who was still primarily a catcher in '78.

The player: Gary Alexander played parts of three seasons for the Giants from 1975 to 1977, catching John Montefusco’s no-hitter in 1976. He was traded twice in three months in 1978 – to the A’s in March, then to Cleveland in June. He managed to hit 27 home runs that year but struck out a league leading 166 times. In 1979 he struck out 100 times in 358 at bats, then struck out 52 times in 178 at bats in 1980. He played briefly for Pittsburgh in 1981 and that was it.

The man: After his playing career Alexander joined the Los Angeles Fire Department, retiring as a Captain in 2020.

My collection: I have 12 of his cards, from 1977 to 1982. I would be interested in trading for 1975 TCMA Lafayette Drillers #12.
 

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

1970s football

I don't go after vintage football very often, but I like the '74 set a lot and found a very cheap lot that nobody else bid on. I needed about half the cards in the lot, several dozen additions. 

Some fun posed and action photos to highlight. The weirdest and most fun is the card of Browns DT Jerry Sherk. I'm guessing he's the guy toward the bottom of the pile but not totally sure.

 

Lots of dupes to trade! 

I enjoyed it so much that right after getting it I saw a similar lot of mostly '73s, bid and got lucky again. I have very few '73s so I needed most of them. A few '69s and even a '63 as well. There was a little duplication, one of which was a 1969 checklist, but not really a dupe because there was a white football VAR and a yellow football VAR. Lots of great photos in this set, including eagles safety Bill Bradley punting. (He was the regular punter too but that is not actually mentioned anywhere on the card.)

 

 A few availables from this set too.






 

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

'54s and '49s

Bought a couple of cheap lots of older cards that both were delivered yesterday.

Starting off with a nice big lot of '54 Topps. It's getting nearly impossible to find decently priced lots of older Topps cards these days. I was able to snag this one because they were trimmed down to "standard" card size. I'm OK with any condition, though I must trimming like this sometimes annoys me a little when flipping through my cards. Still, all of these will fit well into my set.

Plenty of leftover to trade. Not sure if any bloggers have use for trimmed '54s, if not I'm sure I can find homes for these in OBC.

Topps lots are hard but interesting older oddballs are still getable at good prices. These are 1949 Eureka Stamps. I guess not everyone considers these cards but I do. Great photos at a time when other cards just had paintings. 

I needed all 11 of these, including both Muellers on the Giants (unrelated to each other), Johnny Jorgensen who is usually known as Spider, and Spike Nelson who is usually known as Rocky. Great little look into the National League of the late 1940s.
 

Monday, December 29, 2025

1976 SSPC Bill Buckner

 

The card, in brief: A rare action shot! That's number 51, Roy McMillan, in the dugout. Buckner played in two days games at Shea in 1975 - one on May 26, when Yogi Berra was the Mets manager and McMillan a coach, and one on August 10, four days after Berra was fired and McMillan was named interim manager. Buckner went 1-for-7 with two intentional walks in those games.

Playing career, in brief: Bill Buckner put up some excellent numbers over a 22-year MLB career. The NL batting champion in 1980, he hit .289 with 2,715 hits, 498 doubles, 174 HR, 1,208 RBI and 183 SB. Of course, despite all that success he's known for one bad play . . . 

Post-playing career, in brief: After his playing career Buckner worked in real estate and was a minor league coach. He died in 2019.

My collection: I have 71 of his cards, from 1970 to 1990. I would be interested in trading for 1971 Topps #529. 

Sunday, December 28, 2025

1986 Renata Galasso Mattingly #4

Great scoreboard shot!


 This is Garvin Park in Evansville, IN. The road to the park is now named Don Mattingly Way. Also on Don Mattingly Way is Bosse Field, home of the Evansville Otters. Opened in 1915, it is the oldest minor league park in the United States. (Wrigley Field and Fenway Park are both older.)