Good day all.
On
 the blog today, we revisit a post from just about 10 years ago, my 1975
 "dedicated rookie" for Keith Hernandez, of the the greatest fielding 
first baseman in the game's long, rich history:
Hernandez was just about to launch his stellar Major League career in 1975 after playing in 14 games during the 1974 season.
Topps gave him a spot on one of the multi-player rookie cards in 
the 1975 set, but a dedicated card for him seems like a natural for this
 blog.
As far as his career, all he would do from then on is win a batting
 title in 1979, a co-MVP Award the very same year (sharing it with 
Pirate legend Willie Stargell), take home 11 Gold Glove Awards for his 
magic at first base, and get named to five all-star
 games.
He was part of a World Champion team with both the St. Louis 
Cardinals in 1982 and the New York Mets in 1986, and would finish his 
17-year career with over 2000 hits, 1000 runs scored, 1000 runs batted 
in and a .296 average.
He became an instant darling here in New York to so many kids when 
he arrived during the 1983 season, and I have to admit even though I was
 a rabid Yankee fan and WORSHIPPED Don Mattingly, Hernandez was a guy I 
just had to like no matter what.
It just seemed that it was the Hernandez trade that got the 
mid-80's Mets team going in the right direction, soon to be joined by 
the likes of Cone, Gooden, Carter and crew.
