Let’s
 go and add a 1978 Rico Carty “traded” card to my long-running sub-set 
through the 1970’s, updating the former batting champion’s card which 
originally showed him as a Cleveland Indian before he was traded to the 
Toronto Blue Jays on March 15th, 1978:
Carty was traded right before the beginning of the season for Dennis 
DeBarr, and though hassled by injuries through his career, was still an 
excellent hitter even while in his mid-30’s.
1978 would remind many of that as he would go on to hit a career high 31
 home runs with 99 runs batted in while hitting .282 for the Blue Jays 
and Oakland A’s, where he would be traded later in the season for Willie
 Horton and Phil Huffman.
He’d play one more season in the Big Leagues, back with Toronto in 1979,
 where he hit .256 over 132 games and 512 plate appearances before 
calling it a career.
He’d finish his Major League tenure with a .299 batting average, with 
1677 hits in 5606 at-bats, with 204 homers and 890 RBIs, getting named 
to an All-Star team in 1970 when he was voted in by write-in vote, a 
season that saw him hit .366 for the Atlanta Braves with 25 homers and a
 career-high 101 RBIs.
But a crushed knee had him miss all of 1971, while tuberculosis had him 
miss all of 1969, two full seasons lost for the all-star hitter that 
really altered his MLB resume.

