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#1
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Doubling down on Wally Moses with his 8x the normal card size (8 x 10") 1938 Dixie Lid Premium. There are 7 players combined (Carl Hubbell is in both sets) represented in the 1937 and 1938 issues, and Wally is the only non-HOF. Before this thread, I knew that Wally was no schlub, but now I know he was 2K hit man.
Related to this thread, I will point out that Wally has more career hits than these other players in the sets...Carl Hubbell (no duh), Bob Feller(no duh part two) and Gabby Hartnett (duh-huh?). By the way, these Dixie Lid Premiums are suitable for framing...they are gorgeous! I only have Wally, but the bonus with him is that he is definitely the least expensive baseball subject. Brian |
#2
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Down to final subject...Tommy Corcoran.
And like I mentioned previously, feel free to post any items you have/cool ones you have seen of the players already shown. It is a celebration of these individuals, and what party would be complete without some party crashers? Brian |
#3
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Here are some players that have already been posted.
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My avatar is a drawing of a 1958 Topps Hank Aaron by my daughter. If you are interested in one in a similar style based on the card of your choice, details can be found by searching threads with the title phrase Custom Baseball Card Artwork or by PMing me. Last edited by molenick; 06-07-2024 at 10:15 PM. |
#4
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Messrs. Hoy, Judge & Milan:
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Seeking very scarce/rare cards for my Sam Rice master collection, e.g., E210 York Caramel Type 2 (upgrade), 1931 W502, W504 (upgrade), W572 sepia, W573, 1922 Haffner's Bread, 1922 Keating Candy, 1922 Witmor Candy Type 2 (vertical back), 1926 Sports Co. of Am. with ad & blank backs. Also 1917 Merchants Bakery & Weil Baking cards of WaJo. Also E222 cards of Lipe, Revelle & Ryan. |
#5
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The excerpt from Milan's (pronounced millin) SABR biography sums up how his career and life were intertwined with Walter Johnson's. And with two names and a role as Walter Johnson's wing man, of course he has a big head. Walter himself is here to put in a good word for his friend and hunting companion.
Milan began the 1906 season by hitting .356 for Shawnee (Indian Territory) of the South-Central League, but the team again disbanded before Milan received his pay. Disgusted with professional baseball, he was thinking about quitting when he received an invitation to join Wichita of the Western Association. “I felt none too sure that I could make good there, for the company was much faster,” Clyde recalled. That partial season in Wichita saw him hit just .211, but he returned in 1907 and batted .304 with 38 stolen bases in 114 games, attracting the attention of Washington manager Joe Cantillon, who had seen him in a spring exhibition. That summer Cantillon dispatched injured catcher Cliff Blankenship to Wichita with orders to purchase Milan’s contract, then go to Weiser, Idaho, to scout and possibly sign Walter Johnson. In later years Clyde loved to relate Blankenship’s remarks during his contract signing: “He told me that he was going out to Idaho to look over some young phenom. ‘It looks like a wild goose chase and probably a waste of train fare to look over that young punk,’ Blankenship said. ” Milan cost the Nats $1,000, while Johnson was secured for a $100 bonus plus train fare. Milan and Johnson had a lot in common: They were the same age, they both hailed from rural areas – Washington outfielder Bob Ganley started calling Milan “Zeb,” a common nickname for players from small towns – and they were both quiet, reserved, and humble. Naturally, they became hunting companions and inseparable friends, and eventually they became the two best players on the Senators team. “Take Milan and his roommate, Walter Johnson, away from Washington, and the town would about shut up shop, as far as base ball is concerned,” wrote a reporter in 1911. |
#6
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#7
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After Walter Johnson, the next two pillars added by Clark Griffith, as he built the back-to-back pennant winning Washington team of 1924-25, were Joe Judge and Sam Rice. Sam insisted on joining this shindig to remind us that he and Joe were teammates for 18 seasons in Washington, which was a record for the longest pairing of two teammates until surpassed by Detroit’s Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker (1977-1995).
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