Today on the blog we revisit a 10-year old post featuring an early "missing in action" card, this one of catcher Jeff Torborg of the California Angels:
Here's the original write-up for that post:
"You know, California Angels catchers of the early to mid 1970's got "dissed" left and right by Topps.
My last "Missing in Action" subject was Angels' backstop Art
Kusnyer, and today's player is another California signal-caller, Jeff
Torborg, who should have had a card in the 1974 set.
You think a guy who caught no-hitters by BOTH Nolan Ryan and Sandy
Koufax in his career would get a little love, especially since he did
actually play in 102 games in 1973!
In those 102 games played he had 284 plate appearances and started more than half the Angels games that year with 95.
Then take into account that Topps instead went ahead and gave a
card in their 1974 set to both Charlie Sands and Rick Stelmaszek, who
appeared in only 17 and 22 games respectively as the Angels fourth and
fifth string catchers the previous year!
How does that compute?
If you're keeping track, I've only named four catchers here, yet I stated Sands and Stelmaszek as the fourth and fifth string.
Turns out (and thank you to reader "ecloy" for the heads up) Topps
also omitted ANOTHER Angels catcher that year by leaving out their
second-most active back-stop in 1973, catcher John Stephenson, who
appeared in 60 games, good for 132 plate appearances.
???
So Topps leaves out the three most active Angels catchers of 1973
and gives cards to two guys who totaled 39 games between them!?
I just can't figure it out.
Nevertheless, with the missing 1973 Kusnyer card, this 1974 Torborg
card, and in the near future the missing Stephenson cards (yes, there
were multiple missing cards for this player in the decade), I hope to
fill in all the blanks for Angels catchers of
the 1970's.
I'll also be writing about Charlie Sands and his TWO inexplicable cards during the '70's as well.
Keep an eye out for all of them here…
As for Torborg, after a very successful college career playing for
Rutgers University in New Jersey in the early 60's Torborg was drafted
by the Los Angeles Dodgers as an amateur free agent in 1963.
He made it to the Majors in 1964 and went on to play seven years for
L.A. as a back-up catcher before being purchased by the California
Angels in March of 1971, where he went on to play for another three
seasons.
After the 1973 season, as the Angels primary catcher among a slew of
guys behind the plate that year, Torborg was traded to the St. Louis
Cardinals for pitcher John Andrews.
Turns out both players never appeared in another Major League game again.
Torborg was out of the game as a player for good, but he almost
immediately made a go of it as a Major League manager, landing the job
of Cleveland Indians skipper during the 1977 season (remember his card
as manager in that awesome manager sub-set in the 1978 Topps set?).
This lead to an on-again/off-again eleven year managerial career between
1977 and 2003 managing five teams: the Indians, White Sox, Mets, Expos
and Marlins.
Some of you may also remember that Torborg was the Marlins manager at
the beginning of what was to be their World Championship season in 2003
before being replaced by Jack McKeon after a rough 16 and 22 start.
As a player Torborg never really became a full-time player, but man was
he lucky with the opportunity to catch some memorable games for some
memorable pitchers!
On September 9th, 1965 while with the Dodgers he was behind the plate for Sandy Koufax's perfect game against the Chicago Cubs.
Then on July 20th, 1970 he caught Bill Singer's no-hitter against the
Philadelphia Phillies (funny enough he'd also be a teammate of Singer
over in California).
But if that wasn't enough, Torborg ended up catching Nolan Ryan's first
of a record seven Major League no-hitters when he was behind the plate
for Ryan's masterpiece on May 15th, 1973 against the Kansas City Royals.
Not a bad string of historical experience for a part-time catcher in ten years!
As for Angels' catchers, next week I should have a card (or two)
designed for yet another missing player, John Stephenson, who really got
shafted multiple times by Topps.
Keep an eye out for it.."