I worked hard on my 1964 Topps Giants set during the past two weeks. I am posting five new cards tonight, which includes three Hall of Famers and a great of the era. Really happy with how well this project is going.
Here are the new cards, saving the better cards for later in the post.
He stuck around for a few more seasons, but was never the same player. Alvis made the 1967 American League All-Star team. He was not having a particularly good season, but the Indians traded Rocky Colavito and Alvis was the most popular player remaining on the team.
Next.
I am not sure where Topps got the 10 number from on the back of the card. Boyer appeared in seven All-Star games at this point in his career. I guess they could be including Minor League All-Star games too, although Boyer was not in the Minors very long. He rose quickly and also spent time with the Army during the Korean War.
I like the back of Bunning's card. Some of the newspaper headlines on the back of the cards feel like a bit of a stretch. Max Alvis has a fancy headline about leading a last place team in home runs and then meanders into him playing in the Pacific Coast League. Bunning has a perfect game on the back of his card. If I recall the details correctly, the perfect game was thrown on Father's Day and Jim Bunning had a Philip Rivers amount of children.
They also mention the fact that Bunning threw a no-hitter for the Tigers. Solid work here pairing an accomplishment with another good accomplishment. Nice that Topps stayed on topic here. Sometimes they drift.....
The super-high leg kick was Marichal's claim to fame while he was playing. The Topps Giants cards do not have action photographs on the fronts of the cards. They really missed out here. If I ran a card company in the 1960s, every Juan Marichal card would have a picture of his leg kick. I also like that Topps gives him a headline for his no-hitter against the Astros in 1963, but it goes downhill after the picture and headline.
Remember at the bottom of Jim Bunning when I mentioned drifting card backs?
I am a little puzzled why they spent half of the back talking about where he played in the Minor Leagues. It's Juan Marichal. Won a lot of games, struck out a lot of batters, crazy leg kick? Do we need to know about how he pitched in Tacoma or the Eastern League? Could we have squeezed another sentence out of 25 wins or 248 strikeouts? Talk about the leg kick.
Last card of the post.
This is a big one off the checklist.
I will let the card do the talking.
A little wear along the left edge on the front of the card, but otherwise this is in really good shape. Not nearly as painful as I had imagined it was going to be.
Updated checklist. 19 out of the 60 cards.
2 Ken Johnson
3 Sandy Koufax SP
4 Bob Bailey
5 Milt Pappas
6 Ron Hunt
7 Whitey Ford
8 Roy McMillan
9 Rocky Colavito
10 Jim Bunning
11 Roberto Clemente
12 Al Kaline
13 Nellie Fox
14 Tony Gonzalez
15 Jim Gentile
16 Dean Chance
17 Dick Ellsworth
18 Jim Fregosi
19 Dick Groat
20 Chuck Hinton
21 Elston Howard
22 Dick Farrell
23 Albie Pearson
24 Frank Howard
25 Mickey Mantle
26 Joe Torre
27 Ed Brinkman
28 Bob Friend SP
29 Frank Robinson
30 Bill Freehan
31 Warren Spahn
32 Camilo Pascual
33 Pete Ward
34 Jim Maloney
35 Dave Wickersham
36 Johnny Callison
37 Juan Marichal
38 Harmon Killebrew
39 Luis Aparicio
40 Dick Radatz
41 Bob Gibson
42 Dick Stuart SP
43 Tommy Davis
44 Tony Oliva
45 Wayne Causey SP
46 Max Alvis
47 Galen Cisco SP
48 Carl Yastrzemski
49 Hank Aaron
50 Brooks Robinson
51 Willie Mays SP
52 Billy Williams
53 Juan Pizarro
54 Leon Wagner
55 Orlando Cepeda
56 Vada Pinson
57 Ken Boyer
58 Ron Santo
59 Johnny Romano
60 Bill Skowron SP
These are great, the Aaron and Marichal in particular. I didnt know anything about Max Alvis until this post. Can't wait to see more of these.
ReplyDeleteLearning about players like Alvis is one of the reasons that these old cards are fun to work on. Always find some interesting new players along the way.
DeleteThat Marichal leg kick is fantastic. Congratulations on crossing off Aaron. As for Boyer's all-star appearances... I think it has to do with the fact that there was a period when there were two all-star games each season and Boyer played in both of them or at least made the roster for both of them.
ReplyDeleteI actually checked that out, that was pre-Boyer. It’s not really clear, but given this was a test issue, it may not have undergone some of the editing and revising scrutiny that a regular Topps set would have gone through.
DeleteYou're really going to town on this set! The Aaron is certainly cool, but the Bunning is my favorite too. He's someone that accomplished a great deal, but is almost never talked about nowadays.
ReplyDeleteBinning is easy to forget about with all the other pitchers from his era and his numbers are sneaky good. So many 300 win or 3000 Ks pitchers in the 1950s and 60s, but he’s under so he’s kind of an afterthought.
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