Sunday, March 21, 2021

ON-CARD ALL-STAR: 1970 REGGIE JACKSON

Today we come to the last player to get the "All-Star Fix" on their 1970 Topps card, Hall of Fame slugger Reggie Jackson, who made a splash during the 1969 season, meeting all expectations after being drafted #2 overall in 1966:

  

Jackson had it all going on in 1969, finishing the year with a career-best 47 home runs along with a league-leading 123 runs scored, paired up with 118 runs batted in and a .275 average for the Oakland A's.

Those numbers got him a fifth-place finish in the MVP race at season's end, and we all know he was FAR from finished.
Truly one of the eternal icons of the game, the man was just destined for baseball greatness since his days at Cheltenham High School in Pennsylvania.
Recruited by pro teams and colleges alike, he went on to Arizona State where he was actually on a football scholarship.
Of course we all know the story of the 1966 amateur draft, where the New York Mets held the #1 pick, and opted for high school catcher Steve Chilcott instead of who many considered the true #1 overall amateur, Jackson.
With the second pick, the Kansas City Athletics (later Oakland) picked the slugger and the rest is history, as he would eventually lead the organization to three straight championships between 1972-1974 before being traded in a blockbuster to the Baltimore Orioles where he’d play for one season in 1976.
As a highly coveted free agent before the 1977 season, Jackson signed with the New York Yankees, and with Reggie in NYC, the legend exploded as he helped the Yankees to two championships in 1977-78.
With his larger than life persona, New York ate it up and before you knew it, he was known around the world, even getting his own candy-bar by the end of the decade.
For a kid like me growing up in Brooklyn in the ‘70’s, Reggie was like a God, larger than life, and before he finished up his career in 1987, putting in 21 seasons, he would put together a Hall of Fame career with 563 homers, 1702 runs batted in, an MVP Award in 1973, and five championships.
Add to that 14 all-star nods, four home run titles, a legendary homer in the 1971 All-Star Game against Dock Ellis, his 1977 World Series performance, and you can see why he goes down as one of the most well-known baseball personalities the game has ever seen!
 

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