We're knocking on June's door and I'm absolutely loving it. School is nearly out and I can spend a little of my newfound time writing up HOF posts. I'm still in the middle of a time crunch with final exams this week and a sectional baseball playoff this evening, but I'm starting to get stoked for summer!
Let's get right to page 20!
1980 TCMA Baseball Immortals, #160 -- John Henry "Pop" Lloyd
John Henry Lloyd played in the Negro Leagues for twenty-seven years. His plaque in Cooperstown describes him as a "scientific hitter" who batted over 0.400 several times. "Pop" also went by another nickname: "Shovel." He earned that nickname because of the tendency to pick up a lot of dirt in his glove when fielding ground balls. Lloyd is considered to be the greatest short stop in the history of the Negro Leagues.
1980 TCMA Baseball Immortals, #162 -- Amos Rusie
Amos Rusie played nine full years in baseball and amassed 246 wins with a 3.07 ERA during the late 1800s. Five times he led the league in strikeouts and walks and he earned the pitching Triple Crown in 1894. He also logged more than 300 innings in eight seasons and three times he threw over 500 in a single season. Rusie was also a fair outfielder and a career 0.248 hitter with the bat.
1980 TCMA Baseball Immortals, #163 -- Joe Sewell
Joe Sewell was a shortstop and third baseman for the Indians (11 years) and Yankees (3 years). Sewell earned MVP votes during seven different campaigns. Overall, he was a consistent 0.300 hitter who was as durable as can be, starting nearly every game during a ten year stretch in his career. He had gap power and twice topped the century mark in runs scored and RBIs, but what catches my eye is base running line in 1927: he went 3 for 19 in the stolen base department!
2014 Panini Golden Age, #19 -- Addie Joss
Addie Joss had a brief nine year career, but during that time he went 160-97 with a 1.89 ERA. He is the all-time leader in career WHIP with a 0.968 mark. His highest posted ERA was 2.77 during his rookie year in 1902. The lifetime Cleveland Nap finished five seasons with ERA markings lower than 2.00. Joss died of tubercular meningitis at age 31 and he surely would have pitched longer and been a no doubt HOF inductee, rather than being inducted by the Veteran's Committee.
1959 Topps, #450 -- Eddie Mathews
Eddie Mathews played seventeen seasons, fifteen of which were with the Braves, and hit 512 homers. He was an offensive force for years in the National League and he was voted to twelve All-Star games during his career. He career stat lines shows over 1,500 runs scored and over 1,400 RBIs, while striking out only 43 more times than walking. Fun fact: he graces the cover of Sports Illustrated's first issue.
1970 Topps, #600 -- Willie Mays
Willie Mays. Rookie of the Year, MVP x2, batting champion, Gold Glove winner x12, All-Star in twenty different seasons, stolen base leader x4, home run leader x4 . . . he even missed a year to military service. Willie Mays was the goods. The only question is where does he fit in your rankings for the best player ever? Mays would be my #1 if Babe Ruth didn't also have a pretty solid pitching career.
1985 Woolworths, #40 -- Hack Wilson
Hack Wilson had five really good years from 1926 to 1930 for the Cubs, which carried him to the HOF. It is said that if could have stayed away from the bottle he would have been one of the best outfielders ever. Wilson was only 5'6", but that didn't stop him from leading the NL in homers four different seasons. He is the single season record holder for RBI with 191 in 1930. That season he hit 56 homers and batted 0.356 and also led the league in walks and strikeouts. Wilson was one of the first true "three outcome" players in MLB history.
The talent on this page is pretty diverse, but it's strong. I'd like to seek out a few replacements for the three 1980 TCMA All-Stars that start the page. Favorite card? . . . I really love the Woolworth's card of Hack Wilson, but the Eddie Mathews card is my favorite. There's something about fuzzy and rounded corners on vintage cardboard that really makes me smile.
Any page with a Brave has got to be a great page. :)
ReplyDeleteYou do want that Voggy auto I posted last week, right?
Love the Mays and Mathews. I remember when Shop At Home had copies of the very first issue of Sports Illustrated. Kinda regret not buying one back in the day.
ReplyDeleteI agree...Mays is the #2 player of all time in my book, only behind Ruth.
ReplyDeleteI'm with you as well on Mays being the #2 player of all-time. I've never really seen that 1970 Topps card of his before. I like it a lot.
ReplyDeleteBefore so many guys passed them it stood out more but Eddie Mathews is forever linked with Ernie Banks, tied at 512. I wouldn't argue with Mays at #2. Isn't it kind of amazing that over a century after his career began almost no one wouldn't put Ruth on top, even though, "he was nothing but a fat old man with little girl legs".
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