I realize I've been very heavy on the buyback posts here on the blog recently, but there are many other collecting projects that I have going on. Two of those involve 1950s baseball sets that I'm casually collecting; 1950 Bowman and 1959 Topps.
Recently Chris, who writes the excellent blog The Collector, was kind enough to send me a pair of singles for my '59 set build. By the way, if you haven't checked out the "Sports Card Tour" posts he's been featuring in recent months I highly recommend heading over there and catching up on the backlog. Anyway, Chris made it to a card show recently and as his note to me indicated, he couldn't find a single Topps buyback at the show, so he got me a couple of Topps "originals" instead!
The first card Chris sent along is pitcher Clem Labine of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Clem was a staple with the Brooklyn/Los Angeles franchise throughout the '50s, and was a big part of the team's 1955 World Series championship. Fantastic card. Clem served as a paratrooper in World War II, something I never knew until I received this card and typed up this post.
A big part of the reason I enjoy collecting and blogging as that each and every card is a chance for a learning experience/research. This card is a prime example, not only for the paratrooper factoid...
...but because I learned on the back that Labine is from Woonsocket, RI! Pretty cool that a key member of the '50s Brooklyn Dodgers hailed from the little state that I was also born in, and that I call home today. I had no idea!
Here's the other card Chris sent my way, and I should probably note here just how great a condition these two cards are in. Certainly among the best examples in my binder and cards I'll never even need to consider upgrading.
Constable was sort of a middling reliever who appeared in 56 total games across a handful of seasons. A nice enough card, especially since I like franchises of the past like the Washington Senators, but as Chris remarked in his note to me the real highlight of this one is the back:
Not because it contains a kick-ass cartoon paying homage to Constable's nickname, the "Sheriff" (though that's a killer nickname if I do say so myself!). Nope, what makes this one great is the write-up that indicates that Jimmy "retired from baseball in April".
That may have been accurate at the time, but Constable ended up making a comeback that saw him pitch in a handful of games with the Braves in 1962 and the Giants in 1963! I guess this is an uncorrected error? Haha.
Chris, it was incredibly thoughtful of you not only to send me this great duo, but also to scour a card show looking for buybacks on my behalf. Thank you! I'll make sure to hit you back with some Sox cards here!
The Starrs Are Aligned
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When it comes to blogging... my timing is terrible. I'll see things on ESPN
or on other blogs that inspire a post, but I don't have scans ready to go.
On...
3 comments:
The Constable cartoon is great too. Reminds me of something you might see in a 1950's/1960's animated cartoon.
Happy to help with your set build, and thanks for the kind words about my blog/tour. I didn't realize Labine was an RI guy when I plucked it out of the box, I mostly picked him because he was a Brooklyn Dodger and the card was in nice shape. The dealer had hundreds of very nice 1959 singles so I went right for the higher numbers.
Isn't it odd that Constable would retire before the card was released, then un-retire years after? He kinda made Topps look foolish. (then again, Topps called him a "reliefer" so they already sounded foolish to me!)
There are a few other MLB players that call Woonsocket their hometown. Labine being one of them. Also on the list; Rocco Baldelli, Gabby Hartnett, and the infamous Nap Lajoie.
Nice pair of cards from Chris.
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