I
can never have enough Mark Fidrych customs in my stable here on the
blog, and today I post up another creation for the young man who took
the baseball world by storm in 1976:
We all know the story: that Monday Night game, how he ended up starting the all-star game, how
he won 19 games and led the league in earned run average, how he was
given the nickname "Bird" and the antics he displayed on the mound.
Sadly we also know how his career was derailed because of injuries, how
he was never able to make it back successfully, and how years later he
was tragically killed in an accident at the young age of 54.
But the "Bird" legend will always be around, and for those of us lucky enough to have witnessed it, it was incredible.
His 1977 Topps card is STILL one of my all-time favorites solely because
I feel it captured that "essence", that personality he had, as a
character that comes along all too rarely.
In 1976 I was seven years old and just starting to pay attention to
baseball, and all I kept seeing was this phenomena of “The Bird”, his
act on the mound, that smile, and of course images of him with Sesame
Street’s “Big Bird”.
This man came across as a God to my young impressionable mind, and when
ripping open packs of 1977 cards soon after, and pulling that card of
his, jeez, it was like nothing else.
What an icon of the game for that era. Perfect.