Thursday, January 1, 2026

FIXING UP ALL-STAR CARDS: 1984 AL OLIVER

The next 1980's "All-Star Card Fix" is a 1984 card for Al Oliver, who was the starting first baseman for the National League in the 1983 game, though George Hendrick of the St. Louis Cardinals got the card instead by Topps (???):


Again, why Topps decided to just go and select who THEY wanted to get an All-Star card starting in 1981 is beyond me.
Oliver was at the top of his game in the early-80s, and his two seasons with the Montreal Expos were fantastic, including leading the N.L. in doubles both years, while also taking home the batting title in 1982 along with most hits (204) and most RBIs (109).
What do you call a guy who was a seven-time all-star, Silver Slugger winner at three different positions, collector of over 2700 hits, 200 home runs, .300 career average, 1300 runs batted in, and 500 doubles?
I call that a Hall of Famer, especially when you consider that the first nine years or so of his career were the "dead" 1970's.
Yes I know an argument can be made here for Oliver's Hall-worthiness.
But I have always felt that he fell into that Vada Pinson, Dave Parker, Steve Garvey crowd that should have gotten, at the very LEAST, more of a shot at Cooperstown.
I mean, when he was finally eligible for Hall voting, he only got 4.3% and was dropped just like that! THAT is just insane.
He won three consecutive Silver Slugger Awards in 1980-1982, as an outfielder, a designated hitter and a first baseman and he batted .300 or better eleven times in his 18-year career!
He finished in the top-10 in batting eight times during his career, in the top-10 in hits eight times in his career, top-10 in doubles nine times in his career, top-10 in total bases five times, runs scored four times, runs batted in four times, triples three times, extra base hits five times and slugging percentage twice.
Is THAT enough of a statement? His consistency was amazing.
And to top it off, he should have been the National League Rookie of the Year in 1969 but got ripped off, with the award going to Los Angeles Dodger Ted Sizemore.
Al Oliver is grossly overlooked as far as players of that era in my book.

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