On the blog today, we have my "Classic Baseball" custom card for Boston Red Sox young slugger Tony Conigliaro, who was on his way to a wonderful career before his tragic beaning in 1967:
Just
a beautiful photograph of the promising right-fielder, who was already a
home run champ by the age of 21, two years before a Jack Hamilton pitch
to the face derailed his career.
We all know the story by now: "Tony C" was a budding star in the big
leagues, leading the league in homers at the young age of 20 in 1965 and
building on a career that was making the homegrown player a Boston
darling.
But in 1967 he was hit in the face by a Jack Hamilton pitch that
permanently derailed his career, eventually playing a single year for
the Angels in 1971 before leaving the game for three years before making
a dramatic "comeback" in 1975.
That season he appeared in only 21 games, good for 69 plate
appearances. But it was an emotional return of sorts for Conigliaro,
even if it would be the last games of his career, forcing him to retire at the age of 30.
Since he actually appeared in those final games during the 1975 season, I figured a 1976 card for him was more appropriate.
It is easy to forget that after his beaning in 1967, and missing
all of 1968, Conigliaro came back and posted a remarkable return season
in 1969, hitting 20 homers, driving in 82, and taking home the American
League Comeback Player of the Year Award.
1970 was even more incredible, as he swatted a career high 36 home
runs, while driving in 100+ for the only time in his career (116)!
Sadly because of the beaning he suffered eye-troubles and was never
the same again, and he was traded to the California Angels with pitcher
Ray Jarvis and catcher Jerry Moses for Doug Griffin, Jarvis Tatum and
Ken Tatum.
As if that wasn't enough for the poor guy, the true tragedy of the
Tony Conigliaro story would be in 1982, when he was about to interview
for a broadcasting job in Boston and suffered a catastrophic stroke,
leaving him in a vegetative state until his death
eight years later in 1990.
Really a sad story that leaves you with the "what if's" of the sports world…