Let’s
 go and fill-out former lefty Larry Gura’s card resume with a “not so 
missing” 1972 card, when he was still just getting started in the Big 
Leagues:
Gura did have a card in the 1971 set, but after only six appearances for
 the Chicago Cubs that year, in which he tallied only three innings, 
Topps didn’t give him a card in the 1972 set, and rightfully so.
He didn’t factor in a decision during those six appearances, finishing 
up with a bloated 6.00 earned run average, and he really never got 
started as far as his Major League career until he was 30 years of age, 
when he went 16-4 for the Kansas City Royals in 1978 with a very nice 
2.72 ERA over 35 appearances, 26 of which were starts, with a couple of 
shutouts.
Over the next five years he’d be an all-star arm for KC, winning 18 games twice and posting a sub-3.00 ERA three times.
After an 18-win season in 1982, he ended up losing 18 games in 1983 to 
lead the league, before bouncing back with a 12-9 season in 1984 for the
 Western Division champs, though his ERA was an unsightly 5.18.
Sadly for him, after starting the 1985 season with the Royals, he was 
released in May, signing on with his original club the Cubs, only to see
 Kansas City go on to win the World Series.
That must have hurt a bit!
After five forgetful games with Chicago in 1985, he called it a career, 
finishing up with a record of 126-97, with an ERA 3.76 over 403 
appearances, with 16 shutouts and 14 saves.
