Friday, July 11, 2025

"CLASSIC BASEBALL" CUSTOM WTHBALLS SET: NOLAN RYAN

Time to finally add the "Ryan Express", Nolan Ryan to my long-running WTHBALLS "Classic Baseball" set, celebrating the great game and it's rich history:


What really needs to be said about a guy who has become more myth than baseball legend?
300+ wins, 5700+ strikeouts, 60+ shutouts, and oh yeah SEVEN no-hitters, two of which came when he was well into his 40’s while with the Texas Rangers!
I love thinking about the fact that he did most of his damage in the American League with the designated hitter. Now imagine how many strikeouts he could have had in his prime pitching in the National League where the pitcher batted?!
Would it be safe to say you could add 20-30 strikeouts a season to his total? More?
Hey, you never know…
Nevertheless, the man became a baseball God, eventually finding his place in the Hall of Fame upon his first year of eligibility as an absolute no-brainer.
I just thank the skies above that I got to see him pitch in-person!

 

Thursday, July 10, 2025

NEWEST WTHBALLS SET AVAILABLE: "1980 CAREER-CAPPERS"

Good day everyone! Hope all of you are well, and here's to a happy and healthy Summer! Happy to announce that the newest WTHBALLS set, "1980s Career-Cappers", is now available for purchase:




My first custom set dedicated to the 1980s, I've had this one in the works for some time, and I'm really happy with how they came out.
Packaged in clear plastic case with full-color wrap, this set contains 21 cards, including bonus 1981 capper for Japanese all-time great Sadaharu Oh.
Among the Major League stars in the set: Reggie Jackson, Johnny Bench, Carl Yastrzemski and Willie Stargell. See images attached for cards and packaging.
Sets are $15 each plus a one-time $4.50 shipping charge, no matter how many sets you purchase.
Usual Paypal address: slogun23@gmail.com
Again, thank you all so much for the interest and support!
Take Care
Gio/wthballs

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

A SET THAT NEVER WAS: 1971 ALL-STAR TICKET SET: VIDA BLUE

Today on the blog we move on to the starting pitcher for the American League in that historic 1971 All-Star game in my custom 1971 "Ticket" set, all-world lefty Vida Blue:



Of course, we all know that Vida Blue absolutely exploded onto the Major League scene in 1971, on his way to capturing both the Cy Young and MVP Awards by season's end.
All he did in this epic season was post a record of 24-8, with a league-leading 1.82 earned run average, striking out 301 batters and tossing eight shutouts.
Oh yeah, he was only 21 years of age!
His WHIP of 0.952 and strikeouts-per-nine-innings of 8.7 also led the league, and he completed 24 of his 39 starts, putting in 312 innings of work for the upstart Oakland A's, who were about to go on the three-peat championship run between 1972 and 1974.
Blue would go on to post 209 career victories in the Majors, having some successful seasons with the San Francisco Giants, even starting the 1978 All-Star game for the National League, while finishing up his 17-year career in 1986.
It’s amazing for me to remember that when Blue started that NL All-Star game in 1978, he wasn’t even 30 years old, yet to me he already seemed to be an aging veteran by then.


 

Monday, July 7, 2025

CAREER CAPPERS: 1987 CESAR CEDENO

Good day all!
On the blog today, from my upcoming custom "1980s Career-Cappers" set, a 1987 capper for Cesar Cedeno, who finished up a wonderful Major League career in 1986 with the Los Angeles Dodgers:



In that last season in the Big Leagues, Cedeno appeared in 37 games for L.A., hitting .231 over 78 at-bats, with 18 hits, five runs scored and six RBIs.
Cedeno had the speed, the power, and the talent to put together a five-year stretch where he brought home 5 straight Gold Gloves, get named to four all-star teams while topping the 20/50 mark three years in a row between 1972 and 1976.
In 1974 he had a monster season that saw him hit a career-high 26 homers AND steal a career-high 57 stolen bases along with, you guessed it, a career-high 102 runs batted in.
I would love to know the numbers he could have put up had he not played in the cavernous Astrodome for the first 12 years of his career!
By the time he was done after the 1986 season, he retired with 199 homers and 550 stolen bases, along with a very nice .285 batting average and 2087 hits.
An excellent player who was easily overshadowed by contemporaries of the era.

 

Saturday, July 5, 2025

REVISITING A 10-YEAR-OLD POST: MISSING 1976 GATES BROWN

Hello all.
Today on the blog we revisit a post from 10 years ago here on the blog, my "missing" 1976 card for Detroit Tigers star Gates Brown, who finished up a very nice Major League career in 1975:


Brown closed out a wonderful 13-year career in 1975, all for the Tigers, playing in 47 games.
He hit .171 with six hits in 35 at-bats in his final season, but don't let that fool you, he was THE man off the bench for the Tigers, and one of the top pinch-hitters in baseball history.
Between 1963 and 1975 he collected 582 hits, with 107 of them as a pinch-hitter, and of those 107 pinch-hits 16 were home runs.
It's interesting to note that during the "year of the pitcher" in 1968, when Carl Yastrzemski led the American League with a .301 average, and Danny Cater finished second with a .290 average, Brown, in the role of pinch-hitter, finished with an amazing .370 average in just under 100 at-bats.
Certainly not a full season by any means, but he was raking it nevertheless as part of the eventual World Champion team.
If none of you have read up on the man, I suggest you at least Google him to read some of the anecdotes attributed to him, as well as his interesting life story and how he eventually made it to the Major Leagues. 
Definitely one of those great baseball characters that live on forever in my eyes.

 

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

1960s "IN-ACTION": 1965 WILLIE STARGELL

Up on the blog today, we have my 1965 "In-Action" card for Pittsburgh Pirates legend Willie Stargell, from my recent "Series 3" set released a few months ago:




Over 21 seasons, Stargell would lead the Pittsburgh Pirates to two world championships, take home an MVP Award in 1979 (shared with the Cardinals Keith Hernandez), and get named to seven All-Star teams.
He would also have a great three-year run between 1971 and 1973 that saw him finish second, third and second respectively in MVP voting, winning two home run titles, an RBI title and even lead the league with 43 doubles (1973).
Luckily, I got to see him towards the end of his career in the late-70's/early-80s before he retired after the 1982 season.
His final numbers? Hall of Fame worthy as he'd finish with 475 home runs, 1540 RBIs, a surprisingly high .282 batting average and 2232 hits over 2360 games and 7927 at-bats.
Think about those numbers in UNDER 8000 at-bats!
Of course when eligible for the Hall of Fame, he was in, with 82.4% of the vote in 1988.
So sad that he would pass away at only 61 years of age in 2001.
One of baseball's beloved players, especially among his fan-base, he left such a lasting legacy that resonates to this day.

 

Monday, June 30, 2025

A SET THAT NEVER WAS: 1971 ALL-STAR TICKET SET: CARL YASTRZEMSKI

Today on the blog we come to the third starting outfielder in my 1971 "All-Star Ticket" set, celebrating perhaps the greatest Midsummer Classic of the all, Boston Red Sox legend Carl Yastrzemski:


The man was at his height of his game at the time this photo was taken, already a three-time batting champion, Triple Crown winner in 1967, and five-time Gold Glove winner.
As someone who grew up in New York City during the second half of his career, it's really easy to forget that Yastrzemski was a Long Island, New York boy before he went on to become a New England legend.
And how could he NOT become a legend, what with 23 years of Major League ball, all with the Red Sox, turning in three batting titles, a Triple Crown in 1967 along with an MVP Award, seven Gold Gloves, 18 all-star nods, and 25 league-leads in primary offensive categories.
By the time he did the retirement tour in 1983, he scored 1816 runs, collected 3419 hits, 646 doubles, 452 homers, 1844 runs batted in along with a .285 batting average.
He was just plain awesome…

 

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