Tuesday, April 14, 2026

GIMMIE A DO-OVER: 1975 JOSE CRUZ

Good day everyone.
On the blog today, a card I've been meaning to "do-over" for years, a 1975 redo for Jose Cruz, showing him with the team he suited up with in 1974, the St. Louis Cardinals:


Now if you don't remember the card originally out there in packs that Spring of 1975 for Cruz, please look at this airbrushed gem:


Absolutely hilarious!
That Houston Astros logo is about the largest logo I've ever seen on a cap!
In late October of 1974 Jose Cruz was purchased by Houston from St. Louis, where he played from 1970-1974.
He never really got to play full-time with the Cardinals, but that changed in a hurry when he suited up for the Astros.
He immediately became a popular player, going on to play 13 solid seasons for them in the outfield and finishing in the top-10 in M.V.P. voting three times in the process.
Actually, Cruz can be the quietest 2000+ hits guy from the 1970's and '80's. He finished with 2251 hits, 165 home runs and 317 stolen bases while collecting two Silver Slugger awards over a 19-year career. Not bad at all.

 

Sunday, April 12, 2026

REVISIT: 1978 "TURN BACK THE CLOCK" STAN MUSIAL

Up on the blog today, thought it'd be fun to revisit another 10-year-old post, this one my 1978 "Turn Back The Clock" card for all-time great Stan Musial, celebrating his 3000th hit from 20 years earlier:


He would go on to collect another 630 more hits to become the leading National League hit-maker before Hank Aaron would overtake him about 10 years later.
Throw in 725 doubles, 177 triples and 475 home runs and you have yourself one of THE best all-around hitters the game ever saw.
Three Most Valuable Player Awards, FOUR second-place finishes, including three in a row between 1949-1951, and twenty consecutive all-star appearances, Musial definitely is a member of that rarified stratosphere of baseball royalty along with the likes of Ruth, Cobb, Mays and Wagner, among others.

 

Friday, April 10, 2026

WTHBALLS CUSTOM SPECIAL: 1980 RICKEY HENDERSON PEPSI ALL-STAR

Good day all!

On the blog today, we have a fun card I created for my latest WTHBALLS release, a reprint of the never-released 1980 Pepsi All-Stars baseball set, with a bonus Rickey Henderson you see here:




I thought it'd be fun to add in one special card to the 22-card reprint set, and the Rickey rookie card was a natural choice.
Imagine if this was part of the very valuable test set!?
In his first taste of the Majors, Rickey appeared in 89 games with the Oakland A's in 1979, hitting .274 with 96 hits in 351 at-bats, stealing 33 bases and scoring 49 runs.
Coming into 1979 Henderson was on fire in 1977 and 1978 playing for Modesto and Jersey City in the Minors.
In '77 with Modesto, all he did was hit .345 with 120 runs scored and 95 stolen bases to go along with a sick .465 on-base-percentage.
The following year, getting promoted to Double-A ball, Henderson kept on hitting, this time to the tune of .310 with 81 runs scored and 81 steals.
So at the dawn of the 1979 season Henderson was ready to just about take over the game, straight to the Hall of Fame some 25 years later.
Just a glimpse of the dynamic player that was about to take over the baseball world over the next quarter century!
Greatest lead-off man the game has ever seen!

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

FIXING UP ALL-STAR CARDS: 1984 MANNY TRILLO

Today on the blog we fix another 1980's Topps All-Star snub, this time a 1984 card for Manny Trillo of the Cleveland Indians, the starter at second base for the American league in the 1983 game:


Topps decided to give the All-Star card to Lou Whitaker of the Detroit Tigers, a practice that I came to hate as a kid collecting back then. Why stray from the voted players? 
Anyway, Trillo would find himself shipped off to the Montreal Expos after the All-Star game, before ending up with the San Francisco Giants for the 1984 season.
He’d put together an excellent career that saw him win a World Championship with the Philadelphia Phillies in 1980, win three Gold Gloves between 1979 and 1983 and get tabbed for four All-Star games.
By the time he retired after the 1989 season he finished up with 1562 hits over 5950 at-bats, good for a .263 average, with 598 runs scored and 571 runs batted in.

 

Monday, April 6, 2026

"CLASSIC BASEBALL" CUSTOM WTHBALLS SET: MARK FIDRYCH

Time to go ahead and give "The Bird", Mark Fidrych a card in my long-running custom WTHBALLS set, "Classic Baseball":


Does everyone still remember the impact Mark Fidrych had in Major League Baseball that summer of 1976!?
It was incredible, and for a young kid of seven, it was one of the first hypes I remember as a baseball fan.
The antics: talking to the baseball, grooming the mound, and all-around clownish behavior made him an instant favorite of mine back then.
There was so much I was learning about baseball all at once, and one thing I thought I learned was that guys like this were always around. Little did I know that what I was seeing was something truly special.
Well, we all know the story: Fidrych came up later in the season, having only pitched one inning as of mid-May, until a lucky break had him spot start for the Tigers where he ended up pitching a complete game two-hitter. In his first 13 starts, Fidrych had a remarkable 120 1/3 innings pitched. That's MORE than nine-innings a start due to three 11-inning games. Amazing.
By early July, as the media took hold of the story, "The Bird" was 9-1 with a 1.85 E.R.A. and was picked, as a rookie, to start the All-Star game for the American League.
By now he was taking over the baseball world, and everyone loved the show, including me!
He ended his season as Rookie of the Year, with a league-leading 2.34 E.R.A and 24 complete games out of 29 starts with a 19-9 record.
Sadly, after a dead arm the following season and repeated attempts at comebacks, Fidrych hung up the cleats by 1980 and ended up working as a contractor and fixing up his farmhouse back home in Northborough, Ma.
Turns out a torn rotator cuff went undiagnosed for years, and by the time this was discovered in 1985, all hopes of a repair and a comeback to baseball was long gone.
As it seems to happen with so many larger than life characters who come in and out of our lives, Fidrych met an untimely death on April 13th, 2009 at the age of only 54 when the truck he was working under caught his clothing.
I'll always remember that season, just as I was religiously forming my baseball addiction, and this "crazy" bird-man was always on T.V., talking to the baseball and smiling his way into my psyche.

 

Saturday, April 4, 2026

GIMMIE A DO-OVER: 1972 GEORGE HENDRICK

Up on the blog today we have a do-over for George Hendrick and his classic 1972 rookie card, which originally had a black and white image colorized:

Redone version


Here's the original as-issued if you don't remember:

As-issued by Topps

I remember I found this card at a flea market in Brooklyn, where you went through boxes of cards this guy had on these fold-out tables. It was $1.00 for 22 cards! This was around 1981. I walked away with about 400 cards, and had to explain to my dad why I was carrying this big box when I went back to meet him after wandering around the market wondering where I was. I also remember how pissed he was that I managed to spend $20, all of my money, on something as ridiculous as "old cards". 
Hendrick would go on to play through the 1988 campaign, finishing up with 267 homers, 1111 RBIs, a .278 batting average and 1980 hits in 2048 games and 7129 at-bats.
He was an important cog in the Cardinals '80s machine that would net a World Championship in 1982, while taking home two Silver Slugger Awards and making two All-Star teams.
Apparently his nickname was “Silent George”, though I do not remember that, but perhaps I need to whip up a “nickname of the 1970’s” card for him as well!

 

Thursday, April 2, 2026

OPC IMAGE VARIATION: 1977 MIKE JORGENSEN

Good day all!
On the blog today, we take a closer look at another OPC to Topps image variation, this one the 1977 cards of former Montreal Expos first baseman Mike Jorgensen:

OPC version

Topps version


Seems OPC decided to crop in a bit on the photo Topps used of Jorgensen swingin, with the Topps image more to my liking to be honest.
Jorgensen put in 17 years as a Major League player, originally coming up with the New York Mets in 1968 at the age of 19, and playing through the 1985 season with the St. Louis Cardinals.
In between, he had his best years with the Expos between 1972 and 1976, even taking home a Gold Glove in 1973.
In 1975 he pretty much set career bests with 116 hits, 18 homers and 67 runs batted in over 445 at-bats, hitting .261 while also collecting 79 walks.
Never truly a full-time player, he finished up with a .243 batting average, with 833 over 3421 at-bats in 1633 games.

 

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