Here’s
 a “not so missing” 1978 card for former catcher Bruce Kimm, who had his
 first baseball card the previous year as part of the 1977 set:
Kimm appeared in only 14 games for the Tigers, batting .080 with two 
hits over 25 official at-bats while catching, after a rookie year that 
saw him play in 63 games, batting a respectable .263 with 40 hits in 152
 at-bats, while being used as Mark Fidrych’s personal catcher. 
He would spend the 1978 season in the Minors before making it back to 
the Majors in 1979, though as a member of the Chicago Cubs, where he 
played in nine games, the only games he’d appear in for the 
North-Siders.
In 1980 he would see the most action of his short career, this time with
 the team who drafted him back in 1969, the Chicago White Sox.
In what would turn out to be his last year as a Major League player, 
Kimm appeared in 100 games, batting .243 with 61 hits over 251 at-bats 
for the White Sox.
In his brief four-year career, he’d bat .237 with 104 hits in 439 
at-bats, spread out over 186 games, before moving on to managing in the 
minor leagues, with a Major League managerial stint in 2002 with the 
Cubs thrown in.
Sadly for him, he was let go at the end of the season, with Dusty Baker 
hired to lead the eventual Central Division champs, leading to the 
memorable 2003 National League Championship series against the Florida 
Marlins.
