On the blog today, a real travesty for Topps regarding their All-Star cards of the 1980s.
Imagine
being selected as a starter for your league, and THEN you go on to hit
the FIRST grand slam in All-Star game history, helping your league win
its first Midsummer Classic in 12 years, and you get OVERLOOKED for an
All-Star card the following year!?
Well,
welcome to California Angels star Fred Lynn, who had this very thing
happen in 1984 when the new Topps baseball cards came out.
So here is his rightful All-Star card, 42 years later:
As for Mr. Lynn, after a wonderful college career at USC, Lynn became an instant star in 1975
when he led the Boston Red Sox to the World Series after copping both
the Rookie of the Year AND Most Valuable Player Awards. The first player
ever to do so, and still only one of two (Ichiro Suzuki joined him in
2001).
He’d go on to win four Gold Gloves, get named to nine all-star teams, and hit the only Grand Slam in All-Star game history, a memorable shot off of Atlee Hammaker in the 1983 classic that gave the American League it’s first win over the National League since 1971.
Hampered by injuries throughout his 17-year career, he still finished with a very solid MLB resume: 306 homers, 1111 RBI’s, 1063 runs scored and a .283 batting average, with 10 seasons of 20+ homers over 1969 games.
He’d go on to win four Gold Gloves, get named to nine all-star teams, and hit the only Grand Slam in All-Star game history, a memorable shot off of Atlee Hammaker in the 1983 classic that gave the American League it’s first win over the National League since 1971.
Hampered by injuries throughout his 17-year career, he still finished with a very solid MLB resume: 306 homers, 1111 RBI’s, 1063 runs scored and a .283 batting average, with 10 seasons of 20+ homers over 1969 games.

-29.jpg)





-28.jpg)
