Good day everyone!
Thought it'd be fun to revisit my post from 2014, a "dedicated rookie" for Don Baylor, a favorite player of mine from my youth as I followed the New York Yankees in the mid-80's:
Nice shot of the slugger as he began what ended up being an excellent Major League career spanning almost two decades.
Here's the original write-up:
Let's
go and give Don Baylor a dedicated rookie card in the 1971 set, where he
originally shared a multi-player rookie card with Tom Paciorek and
Dusty Baker.
Now
while his original rookie wasn't too shabby a card, I found this nice
image of Baylor during his very early years and decided to whip up a
1971 card for him.
Some of you may wonder about his uniform!
But if you notice all the late-series Orioles players in that 1971 set
were photographed with the "new" Baltimore uniform, which Baylor is
wearing on this card.
As a young teen in NYC in the early
1980's, I can tell you Baylor was a favorite of ours in the schoolyards
of Brooklyn for his hard-nosed play.
He was cool as a cucumber, yet as likable as you can be when we'd see him at baseball card shows around town.
Besides, he looked bad-ass standing there at the plate, upright and waiting to crush a ball into the stands.
He
finished his 19-year career in 1988, playing for his third straight
American League Champion team, and all three were different: Red Sox in
'86, Twins in '87, and the A's in 1988.
Of those, the Twins brought home the title, giving Baylor his only Championship ring as somewhat of a "regular player".
He retired with over 2000 hits, 330 homers, 285 stolen bases and over 1200 runs scored and runs batted in.
In
1979 he exploded while with the Angels, bringing home the American
league Most Valuable Player Award after slamming 36 home runs while
leading the league in runs scored (120) and runs batted in (139), while
hitting .296 with 22 stolen bases thrown in.
Of course, he'll
also be remembered as one of the key components in the Orioles-A's trade
that sent Reggie Jackson to Baltimore in April of 1976.
But by
the time he hung up his cleats for good, he put together a very solid
career himself, even winning the National League Manager of the Year
Award in 1995 while steering the Colorado Rockies to a 77 and 67 record
(good for second place).
Here's to you "Groove"!