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T206 & Old Judge
This has probably been discussed before but for some reason I was thinking about this: Duffy, Latham, and Beckley are the only guys I can think of in both sets, and Beckley was the only truly active player in both though in T206 he was in the minors.
I know Latham had a couple at bats with the Giants, which was something he seemed to do every few years after he retired, and I guess that's good enough to get him a card in T206, but I hardly consider that an active player. Am I missing anyone? Does the Phantom Lajoie make him the only guy in T206 and 1933 Goudey? Does anyone from any of the Goudey issues make it to Bowman or even Topps? Weird stuff that runs through my mind. |
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Tris Speaker has a card in both T206 and 1933 Goudey. Also, I know a couple of Goudey players had cards as coaches in '52 Topps, Like Dickey and Crosetti.
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Clark Griffith is in both sets.
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Stretching things a bit, I believe Casey Stengel had:
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Connie Mack could have destroyed some records if Goudey and Topps/Bowman had thought to add him. There were the Topps Connie Mack All Stars if you wanted him in on a technicality! We do have Play Ball, though. |
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Is Stengel the record holder for longest run between first and last cards for an active participant in the game (player, coach or manager) You've got guys like Schoendienst, and Red Sox Johnny Pesky and Charlie Wagner who had 70+ years in the game but did they have a "cardspan" that matched Stengel? |
Connie Mack had an Old Judge card as a player and was an active manager in 1940 Play Ball (53 years)
Dusty Baker’s rookie card was 1971 Topps and he had a 2024 Topps Heritage card (53 years). Can’t think of anyone close to those two. And for fun, Ted Williams was an active player in 1940 and an active manager in 1971, linking (almost) the entire history of baseball cards with three people. |
It really sad, but Wagner didn't actually have a card of his own as an active player. According to TCDB, his first issued card as a current/active partcipant in baseball pathetically didn't arrive until 1980 when TCMA depicted him as a coach for the Elmira Pioneer/Red Sox. That's a grave injustice for a wonderful human being and incredible baseball lifer.
As to your other question, Connie Mack has to hold the record for longest span, doesn't he? OJ to the 1950 Callahan. I am not sure what exact year his OJs were actually released, but this could be up to a 63 year span between issues. Was his Callahan a 1950 release? If they released them in the order of when the HOFers were inducted, I would have to think so, but others will know better. Unfortunately, his 1951 Topps Connie Mack All Star was released the year after the last game he managed. |
Eddie Collins was also in both T206 and 1933 Goudey.
Steve |
Why were Speaker and Collins (and Lajoie) included in this set? None were still active. Might as well have thrown Ty and WaJo into the mix as other recently retired greats.
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We could actually count Cobb in the mix too, since he was in T206, and 1933 Goudey Sport Kings. Steve |
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Brian (my filler is BO-tox...aka Body Odor toxic) |
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The issue period for Clark Griffith's cards is almost the same as that for Connie Mack's cards, except that Griffith's Old Judge card was issued two years later than Mack's (1889 vs. 1887) and Griffith isn't in the 1951 Topps Connie Mack All-Stars set. Here are Griffith's 1889 Old Judge, 1948-50 Safe-T-Card, and 1950 Callahan:
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I believe Jimmie Reese has a 1925 Zeenut player card and a 1993 Carls Jr. coach card. That would be a 68 year span.
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If we're counting minor-league and special issues, Bobby Doerr was in the 1936 Goudey premiums, then was featured in the 2007 Topps Distinguished Service set. |
I don't own either, but Babe Pinelli has a 1917 Zee-Nut as a player and a 1955 Bowman as an umpire...just to toss a new branch on the discussion...
Ed Rommel, Jocko Conlan, and Lon Warneke are also umps in the 55 set with pre-war experience...might be missing someone, but Pinelli is the earliest player. |
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Sport Kings Connection?
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With Hubbell having such great year in 1933 they moved him to Sport Kings at the last minute which would explain why he is at the end of the set and then used Lajoie who was supposed to be a Sport Kings card but they had to cover spot #106 unexpectedly. The style of Lajoie's portrait doesn't match the other '33 Goudey cards at all. Collins was general manager for the Red Sox in 1933 and his card really doesn't look like him so I wonder if he was just a name to use instead of the guy in the artwork. Just speculation.. |
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Reese and Griffith both came to my mind, but I was only thinking of MLB cards even though that wasn't specified as a parameter by anyone. Just how my mind was working, in spite of the fact that Eric already threw Casey's Old Mill into the conversation.
If minor league cards are to be taken into consideration, Reese should definitely be our winner! Talk about a long career, and just like Charlie Wagner, another great person. On a related note, has it ever dawned on anyone else that these baseball lifers with ridiculously long careers seemed to be unusually nice people and beloved by so many? I was friends with a few men who fit the bill, and that could unfailingly be said about all of them, too. |
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As an aside, I would have loved it if they'd made a T206 Casey Stengel. |
Just limiting it to Topps/Bowman, you've got Yogi Berra in 1948 Bowman and then in 1987 Topps on the Astros Leaders card. So 40 years worth of Topps cards. He's also in the 2025 Heritage set, but I hardly think that counts for these purposes. So 48-87. Not the longest, but a good stretch.
kevin |
If you limit it to Topps base, Yogi is in the 1951 Topps Red Backs set and then in the 1987 Topps set. That's a good run as well. Billy Martin got 1952 and then his last base card in 1986.
kevin |
Bill Hart is in the OJ set and the T206. He had over 300 wins in pro ball, though due to some missing stats, his BR page currently has him at 294. That's missing a few seasons of pro ball. I believe the actual number is 317, but that might be missing wins too.
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(Cards shown are not mine). |
Manager cards
i am not a collector of recent modern sets, when did they stop making manager and coaches cards? I know they still made them in the 70’s Topps sets, last ones that i actively have collected. Did they stop or have they beeen included recently again? Team cards?
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Were there any recent Bob Uecker cards? He had a ‘62 Topps card as player. A 202X Topps Now card (or something similar) would constitute a ~60 year span.
Being the team’s broadcaster counts, in my opinion. |
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Kinda amazing Topps never got him to do some of their autograph inserts or similar. I have a decent amount of Cubs announcer autos on licensed cards, and I'm happy to have them. |
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Just a literary twist: 'Casey at the Bat'. For all we know, Casey might still be playing, trying to redeem himself for his dark deeps that fateful day in Mudsville.
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We need Lucas and his Schoendienst checklist |
It'd be interesting to locate prewar examples that show Chicago's "Sharkey brothers" (White Sox clubhouse men Art and Ephraim Colledge), as they purportedly first worked for the White Sox before WWI and continued in that capacity for decades, with Ephraim last appearing on a Topps team card in 1967. They're named as "Sharkey" on the 1933 R309 Goudey AL All-Star team photo and at least one of them appears on Topps team photos from 1951-67.
More details on the Sharkey brothers: https://www.number5typecollection.co...baseballs.html I'm told Pete Sheehy served a similar long tenure (1920s-80s) for the Yankees, so might well appear in team photos and other official marketing throughout that time. |
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