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-   -   Baseball cards of HOFers as managers/coaches (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=217533)

jason.1969 02-02-2016 07:09 PM

Baseball cards of HOFers as managers/coaches
 
Feel free to regard this as a trivia question or just a crowdsourced request for help.

I would like to assemble a list of all major issue baseball cards from 1933-1980 that depict a Hall of Fame player as a coach or manager on a card. To keep it simpler, ignore any cards where the HOFer is a player-manager or player-coach (e.g., 1964 Topps). And for that matter, I'm okay ignoring Manager cards of a non-HOFer where the card also shows a coach who was an HOF player (e.g., 1974 Topps Danny Murtaugh featuring Bill Mazeroski as coach).

Some examples from memory are these, but I'm sure there are a lot more--

1933 Goudey Eddie Collins
1933 Goudey Tris Speaker
1949 Leaf Honus Wagner
1951 Bowman Bill Dickey
1952 Topps Bill Dickey
1954 Topps Billy Herman
1969-1971 Topps Ted Williams
1973-1974 Topps Yogi Berra
1973-1974 Topps Eddie Mathews

If you have others, please copy/paste the most updated list and then add yours in. Thanks!

Exhibitman 02-02-2016 07:35 PM

1969 Topps Joe Gordon, Red Schoendienst

almostdone 02-02-2016 07:42 PM

nevermind. Already listed

Peter_Spaeth 02-02-2016 08:00 PM

Goudey and Diamond Stars Hornsby.
Billy Herman is in 65 Topps and maybe other Topps issues of that timeframe.
Bob Lemon is in 1971 Topps.
Yogi is listed as coach as well as catcher in 65 Topps I believe.
Nellie Fox is listed as coach as well as 2b in 65 Topps.
Spahn is listed as coach as well as pitcher in 65 Topps.

Rascal1010 02-02-2016 09:32 PM

1951 Bowman Frank Frisch

DBesse27 02-02-2016 10:16 PM

I know Herman is in 66 Topps. Isn't Ted Williams in 72? Schoendeinst is in 72.

nolemmings 02-02-2016 11:26 PM

1954 Topps Heinie Manush

cardsfan73 02-02-2016 11:29 PM

Schoendeinst appears on Cardinals manager/coach cards in 1965-1974 Topps sets.

edit to add: He also has a manager card in the 1976 SSPC set, and I am not sure what years but he also has manager cards in some of the OPC issues in the 60s & 70s.

sago 02-02-2016 11:53 PM

Casey Stengel; many Topps cards from 1958-1965.

Volod 02-03-2016 02:20 AM

Tough assignment
 
1 Attachment(s)
Man, the research on this would take days, I think. So, i will limit mine to just my local team, the Cleveland Indians. Only HOF players to be depicted as managers only, as far as I can tell were Lou Boudreau (1953 and 1955 Bowman)(if you count team cards - 1956, 57 and 58 Topps KC teams); Joe Gordon (1960 and 1961 Topps); Frank Robinson (1977-78 Topps teams, 1982-83 Donruss, 1982-2006 Topps various years). The two retired HOF'ers below were in the 1933 Goudey set - with the backside bios mentioning stints as managers of the Indians.

Peter_Spaeth 02-03-2016 04:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sago (Post 1499428)
Casey Stengel; many Topps cards from 1958-1965.

He wasn't a HOF player.

Peter_Spaeth 02-03-2016 09:05 AM

E121 Cobb lists him as manager.

JoeDfan 02-03-2016 09:34 AM

Not in major issues, but Joe D. was a coach in Oakland, and can be found on the Broder and Andersen cards.

Peter_Spaeth 02-03-2016 09:36 AM

1964 Berra as manager. 1963 as catcher and coach.

Peter_Spaeth 02-03-2016 09:40 AM

1969 Jack in the Box Joe DiMaggio.

Brianruns10 02-03-2016 02:22 PM

Billy Herman has a card in the '52 topps set. So does Dick Williams, who though he appears as a player in the '52 set he was inducted as a manager.

irv 02-03-2016 07:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brianruns10 (Post 1499706)
Billy Herman has a card in the '52 topps set. So does Dick Williams, who though he appears as a player in the '52 set he was inducted as a manager.

:)

begsu1013 02-03-2016 11:14 PM

tricky one here w/ the designated rules, even though it kinda turns them into a conundrum w/ this example!

i think only the 64 would qualify, if he wanted the card to only be designated as a coach/manager:

only position:
http://caimages.collectors.com/psaim.../62berra91.jpg


catcher-coach:
http://caimages.collectors.com/psaim...4/63berra8.jpg


manager:
http://caimages.collectors.com/psaim.../64berra91.jpg


catcher-coach:
http://caimages.collectors.com/psaim.../65berra91.jpg

JollyElm 02-04-2016 06:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irv (Post 1499826)
:)

Man, I'm pretty sure both of those photos are actually Dick Williams. Has anyone noticed that before? That picture looks nothing like Billy Herman.

(The pictures didn't come over when I hit quote for some reason.)

con40 02-04-2016 08:48 AM

Here's a few of HOF players who later served as coaches or managers...

1954 Topps Earle Combs (Yankees coach)
1951, 1953, 1955 Bowman Lou Boudreau (Red Sox, Athletics manager)
1955 Rodeo Meats Lou Boudreau (Athletics manager)
1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1969 Topps Al Lopez (White Sox manager)
1985 Topps Yogi Berra (Yankees manager)
1987 Topps Yogi Berra (Astros coach)
1969 Topps Joe Gordon (Royals manager)
2002 Topps Tony Perez (Marlins manager)
1965, 1966 Topps Billy Herman (Red Sox manager)
1983, 1984, 1989, 1990, 1991, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Topps Frank Robinson (Giants, Orioles, Expos, Nationals manager)
1971, 1972, 1978 Topps Bob Lemon (Royals, White Sox manager)
1961 Fleer Ted Williams (he did coach the Red Sox in spring training that year)

In fact, the 1960 and 1961 Fleer sets are loaded with cards of HOF players in later years as coaches and managers

irv 02-05-2016 07:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 1499928)
Man, I'm pretty sure both of those photos are actually Dick Williams. Has anyone noticed that before? That picture looks nothing like Billy Herman.

(The pictures didn't come over when I hit quote for some reason.)

You have a good question and I can also see some resemblance, but going by some of these pics, I think it is actually him in the card.

I have never heard anything of what you say before, so that also leads me to believe it is actually him.

http://www.sportsmemorabilia.com/pla...seball-photos/

JollyElm 02-05-2016 08:43 PM

2 Attachment(s)
I gotta be honest, I don't see anything even remotely similar to Billy Herman's face…
Attachment 220309

But, man, does it look exactly like Dick Williams…
Attachment 220310
Same ears, same smile, same head shape, same chin, same nasolabial lines (Yes, I had to look up that term. The lines going down from the edges of the nose to the outer edges of the mouth.), etc.

Add to it the fact that they were teammates and it's easy to imagine the original photograph used to create the card was labeled wrong by someone in Brooklyn.

Peter_Spaeth 02-05-2016 08:50 PM

It almost certainly isn't Herman, but I'm not seeing Williams there either.

jason.1969 02-05-2016 08:51 PM

Agree with Peter. But I wonder who it could be. This piece is more interesting than the OP.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N910A using Tapatalk

jason.1969 02-05-2016 08:58 PM

Here are more pics of these guys. http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/2016...967770831b.jpghttp://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/2016...90e7e884d1.jpg

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N910A using Tapatalk

JollyElm 02-05-2016 09:30 PM

The worst part of this research is putting in "Dick Williams" in the image search and watching what depravities come back!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I quickly added the word "Dodgers."

Peter_Spaeth 02-06-2016 07:44 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Maybe someone can figure it out from here.

irv 02-07-2016 10:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 1500773)
I gotta be honest, I don't see anything even remotely similar to Billy Herman's face…
Attachment 220309

But, man, does it look exactly like Dick Williams…
Attachment 220310
Same ears, same smile, same head shape, same chin, same nasolabial lines (Yes, I had to look up that term. The lines going down from the edges of the nose to the outer edges of the mouth.), etc.

Add to it the fact that they were teammates and it's easy to imagine the original photograph used to create the card was labeled wrong by someone in Brooklyn.

I can't see your pics for some reason, and I am not denying one way or another as I really don't know, but if the image on the card wasn't Billy Herman, do you not think this would have been old news by now?

I am assuming Herman seen his card from the series and if so, most likely would have said something, which, would have been documented somewhere by now?

Either way, it's a cool little mystery we have going on! :)

jason.1969 02-07-2016 10:57 AM

I took it to someone great with faces. She put it as less than 5% likely that the 52T and 54T Herman are the same guy (even two years aged) and less than 10% likely that the 52T Herman and 52T Williams are the same guy. A true mystery.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N910A using Tapatalk

irv 02-07-2016 11:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jason.1969 (Post 1501396)
I took it to someone great with faces. She put it as less than 5% likely that the 52T and 54T Herman are the same guy (even two years aged) and less than 10% likely that the 52T Herman and 52T Williams are the same guy. A true mystery.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N910A using Tapatalk

Interesting! :cool:

Volod 02-09-2016 06:05 AM

To me, it is almost certainly Williams in both photos. Look at the earlobes and the corners of the mouth - those features are identical in the Williams shots, but much different in Herman's images. From what I have read about Herman, he wasn't the kind of guy who would go out of his way to look at his cards, or care what was on them. And, as common players, neither guy's mixed up card pics would likely have drawn much notice, in 1952 or even years later. So now, a sharp-eyed Net54'er points out the mistake - I don't think the reaction will be any more than a few yawns among vintage collectors.

JollyElm 02-09-2016 06:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Volod (Post 1502133)
To me, it is almost certainly Williams in both photos. Look at the earlobes and the corners of the mouth - those features are identical in the Williams shots, but much different in Herman's images. From what I have read about Herman, he wasn't the kind of guy who would go out of his way to look at his cards, or care what was on them. And, as common players, neither guy's mixed up card pics would likely have drawn much notice, in 1952 or even years later. So now, a sharp-eyed Net54'er points out the mistake - I don't think the reaction will be any more than a few yawns among vintage collectors.

Finally, someone agrees!!! I have to laugh at all the people who have visited this thread and said it's not Dick Williams. I am very close to 100% sure it is him, but the naysayers will continue to pile on. I just don't get it.

It's also important to note that the cards aren't actual photographs, they are artistic interpretations of photographs, so they aren't perfect likenesses of the players, but they are very close. It's plain as day to me that the Herman card features the same person in the Williams card. All the features of his face, (except for a bit of pudginess, which could simply be the result of the photo being taken from a bad angle from below his face), eyes, ears, mouth, hair, chin, etc. point to Williams. And that smile and general appearance of a very happy person is quite consistent between the two pics. Plus, most of us were familiar with Dick WIlliams in the 70's, so we have a great sense of what he really looked like (albeit a bit older).

irv 02-09-2016 07:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 1502138)
Finally, someone agrees!!! I have to laugh at all the people who have visited this thread and said it's not Dick Williams. I am very close to 100% sure it is him, but the naysayers will continue to pile on. I just don't get it.

It's also important to note that the cards aren't actual photographs, they are artistic interpretations of photographs, so they aren't perfect likenesses of the players, but they are very close. It's plain as day to me that the Herman card features the same person in the Williams card. All the features of his face, (except for a bit of pudginess, which could simply be the result of the photo being taken from a bad angle from below his face), eyes, ears, mouth, hair, chin, etc. point to Williams. And that smile and general appearance of a very happy person is quite consistent between the two pics. Plus, most of us were familiar with Dick WIlliams in the 70's, so we have a great sense of what he really looked like (albeit a bit older).

Well, I never said one way or the other that you were wrong, I just wasn't sure, based on what I said prior, that this likely would have been documented somewhere before?

The more I look the more confused I get if both are Williams, or if that is in fact actually Herman in the pic/card I posted?

Not sure where this is going to go, but I must say, if in fact both are Williams, this must be one of the biggest error cards ever produced.:confused:

Volod 02-09-2016 08:29 AM

Prickly, but very sharp
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 1502138)
...that smile and general appearance of a very happy person is quite consistent between the two pics. Plus, most of us were familiar with Dick WIlliams in the 70's, so we have a great sense of what he really looked like (albeit a bit older).

Williams was smiling just like that after he famously hoodwinked Johnny Bench in the eighth inning of the third game of the '72 WS. With two out, Reds runners on second and third, and a full count on Bench, Williams went to the mound and ordered Rollie Fingers to give Bench a free pass, but secretly instructed Gene Tenace to dive back behind the plate as Fingers threw strike three down the middle to a shocked Bench. Managerial acumen like that is what put Williams in the Hall.

stlcardsfan 02-09-2016 12:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Volod (Post 1502168)
Williams was smiling just like that after he famously hoodwinked Johnny Bench in the eighth inning of the third game of the '72 WS. With two out, Reds runners on second and third, and a full count on Bench, Williams went to the mound and ordered Rollie Fingers to give Bench a free pass, but secretly instructed Gene Tenace to dive back behind the plate as Fingers threw strike three down the middle to a shocked Bench. Managerial acumen like that is what put Williams in the Hall.

Just watched this on You Tube. Pitch was outside.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xw0w9rhNtCk

Peter_Spaeth 02-09-2016 03:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Volod (Post 1502168)
Williams was smiling just like that after he famously hoodwinked Johnny Bench in the eighth inning of the third game of the '72 WS. With two out, Reds runners on second and third, and a full count on Bench, Williams went to the mound and ordered Rollie Fingers to give Bench a free pass, but secretly instructed Gene Tenace to dive back behind the plate as Fingers threw strike three down the middle to a shocked Bench. Managerial acumen like that is what put Williams in the Hall.

He didn't look fooled to me on the youtube clip, just that he thought the pitch was outside. Which it was. He looks like any other batter sizing up a pitch.

Peter_Spaeth 02-09-2016 06:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 1502138)
Finally, someone agrees!!! I have to laugh at all the people who have visited this thread and said it's not Dick Williams. I am very close to 100% sure it is him, but the naysayers will continue to pile on. I just don't get it.

It's also important to note that the cards aren't actual photographs, they are artistic interpretations of photographs, so they aren't perfect likenesses of the players, but they are very close. It's plain as day to me that the Herman card features the same person in the Williams card. All the features of his face, (except for a bit of pudginess, which could simply be the result of the photo being taken from a bad angle from below his face), eyes, ears, mouth, hair, chin, etc. point to Williams. And that smile and general appearance of a very happy person is quite consistent between the two pics. Plus, most of us were familiar with Dick WIlliams in the 70's, so we have a great sense of what he really looked like (albeit a bit older).

Forgive my inferiority :D but I am still not convinced. Skin color much darker on the "Herman" isn't it? Eyes look different to me.

irv 02-09-2016 06:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by peter_spaeth (Post 1502371)
forgive my inferiority :d but i am still not convinced. Skin color much darker on the "herman" isn't it? Eyes look different to me.

lol.

Volod 02-11-2016 07:02 AM

The bitterness never goes away
 
Ok, guys, you want to see some outside pitches called strikes, take a look at the umpiring in the '95 WS that benefitted Maddox and Glavine...sheesh:mad:

Peter_Spaeth 02-11-2016 07:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Volod (Post 1502876)
Ok, guys, you want to see some outside pitches called strikes, take a look at the umpiring in the '95 WS that benefitted Maddox and Glavine...sheesh:mad:

Maddux, and Pedro, had the biggest strike zones I have ever seen.

ALR-bishop 02-11-2016 08:15 AM

Inferior
 
You are not inferior Peter, you are just a naysayer who piles on. At least you got a laugh out of him :)

As far as skin color, different paints ? ;)

Volod 02-11-2016 09:39 AM

Williams redux
 
1 Attachment(s)
A couple more shots of Williams, for what it's worth.

Peter_Spaeth 02-11-2016 01:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ALR-bishop (Post 1502885)
You are not inferior Peter, you are just a naysayer who piles on. At least you got a laugh out of him :)

As far as skin color, different paints ? ;)

A condescending laugh, I would guess, based on Darren's tone there. :D
Do you think it's Williams, man, I just don't see it, I mean it could be given how bad some of the 52T drawings are (e.g. Mantle which but for the fact that the association is burned into our minds doesn't really look much like him), but it's not like it jumps out and screams yeah it has to be him.

David W 02-11-2016 02:43 PM

2 Attachment(s)
Red Schoendienst went in the HOF as a player, and has manager cards from 1965 to 1974 every year I think, plus his cameo in 1990.

irv 02-12-2016 09:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 1502991)
A condescending laugh, I would guess, based on Darren's tone there. :D
Do you think it's Williams, man, I just don't see it, I mean it could be given how bad some of the 52T drawings are (e.g. Mantle which but for the fact that the association is burned into our minds doesn't really look much like him), but it's not like it jumps out and screams yeah it has to be him.

Off topic but I believe this is the pic used to produce Mick's 52 TOPPS card?

Peter_Spaeth 02-13-2016 07:19 AM

Irv it is but compare the face in the pic to the drawing. To me, something got lost in the translation, it's almost cartoonish, but it's subjective.

ALR-bishop 02-13-2016 07:31 AM

Cartoons
 
For me the 53 is more cartoonish ( hope Chris and other Mantleites do not blackball me), but at least whoever did the Topps 52 and 53 Mantles did not take the 51 Bowman Paul Richards approach :)

JLange 02-13-2016 12:25 PM

1934 Butterfinger Walter Johnson
 
1 Attachment(s)
How about this one?

1934 Butterfinger Walter Johnson, Manager of the Cleveland Indians

Shoebox 02-14-2016 12:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JLange (Post 1503697)
How about this one?

1934 Butterfinger Walter Johnson, Manager of the Cleveland Indians

Really love that premium!

Volod 02-14-2016 03:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ALR-bishop (Post 1503579)
For me the 53 is more cartoonish ( hope Chris and other Mantleites do not blackball me), but at least whoever did the Topps 52 and 53 Mantles did not take the 51 Bowman Paul Richards approach :)

"Chris and the Mantleites" would have been a great name for a rock band. Sorry.:rolleyes:


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