If
 you’re about my age (50) and remember the baseball days before some 
guys named Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling came along, you’ll remember 
the historic pitching duo of Nolan Ryan and Bill Singer seemingly 
striking everyone and their mothers out during the 1973 season.
Here’s my 1974 “special” celebrating their feat:
Found a very nice photo of Ryan and Singer, along with the most used 
catcher that season by the Angels, Jeff Torborg, and immediately thought
 of this card creation.
Of course, when you have Nolan Ryan’s record breaking 383 strikeouts, 
you’re off to a great head-start to set any kind of Major League record.
Now go and throw in Bill Singer’s 241 K’s, and you have a combined 624 
punch-outs, setting a new Big League record that wouldn’t be surpassed 
until Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling in 2001 with an incredible 664 
K’s.
I always remember when Baseball Digest would have little specialty stats
 every so often like “40+ homers in three or more consecutive seasons”, 
“100+ homers in two consecutive seasons”, and the most strikeouts by 
teammate pitchers in a single season.
I loved grabbing each new issue when released and devouring all the info
 within like a sponge, leading to much mocking by my childhood friends 
calling me the “encyclopedia” and throwing baseball questions at me 
LITERALLY every day, and to this very day some 40 years later.
Anyway, it was a great season for these two guys, as they each won 20+ 
games, combined for those record-breaking strikeouts, threw six shutouts
 between them and logged 300+ innings each over 81 starts!
Those were certainly different times...
