Jump to content
Grand Central Mets
  • Create Account

Yearbook Cover Derby Round 1.09 1976 vs 2004  

18 members have voted

  1. 1. Yearbook Cover Derby Round 1.09 1976 vs 2004

    • 1976
      16
    • 2004
      2


Recommended Posts

Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


what's 2004 trying to tell us with "BASEBALL"?


Posted


A lot of these later covers suffer from the existence of digital photo editing tools. It allows the cover designer to easily go overboard. I think the "graph paper" idea is pretty creative, but unfortunately it's not executed all that well.

The 1976 Bicentennial cover is one of only two yearbook covers to feature Mr. Met, and both are in the cartoon form. I suppose it's inevitable that the costumed Mr. Met will appear on a cover, most likely during one of the down periods when there aren't any star players for the team to highlight. The other Mr. Met cover has already appeared in this competition. It's the 1963 cover which currently has a healthy lead over 2017 in Round 1.05.


Guest d'Kong76
Guests
Posted


I have Bicentennial Mr. Met in the Final Four in my bracket pool.


Guest 41Forever
Guests
Posted


Not sure the tri-corner hat came out well, but I remember buying that at Shea as a kid, attending with my Grandmother and thinking it was the coolest thing ever!


Posted


The i-word seems apropos here: the 1976 cover is iconic. There's no doubting what year its from. It could have been cribbed from some kid's banner, and that's a compliment. Plus, you've got that mailing address. It's just so good-spirited...the Spirit of '76!

There are two particularly appealing images within the 2004 grid, both of them unfortunately presented, like all the others, as postage stamps. had they featured either the Shea 40th anniversary patch or Piazza accepting walkoff congratulations (which ended a game I had to leave early), it could have been a contender. Hell, if they had composed the cover with the Leiter pitching picture facing the Piazza swinging picture -- two verticals -- it would have been not only featured your two stars, but it would have echoed the neon figures from the Shea patch. Instead, it comes off as homework hurriedly completed on the bus.

This one will cover the spread and then some on merit. In this battle of election years, the vote is for 1976.


Posted


Benjamin Grimm wrote:
I kinda like that the blue on Mr. Met looks like it was colored in with a felt-tip marker.

There's something charmingly DIY about being about to see the artist's pen strokes.

Of course, before the year was out, the whole organization would become not-so-charmingly DIY.


Posted


Edgy MD wrote:
Of course, before the year was out, the whole organization would become not-so-charmingly DIY.


My only reticence in voting for 1976 came from knowing there is a page within devoted to Mickey Lolich inside instead of a page devoted to Rusty Staub.


Posted


batmagadanleadoff wrote:
Poor Mickey. It wasn't his fault.


It wasn't. Just tough to look at the '76 yearbook this week and think about who's not in there.

I was at a fever pitch the entirety of the 1975 season. Staub-for-Lolich, as soon as it happened, brought everything down a notch in advance of '76. But not Lolich's fault, just as it's not Mr. Bicentennial Met's.


Posted


G-Fafif wrote:
batmagadanleadoff wrote:
Poor Mickey. It wasn't his fault.


It wasn't. Just tough to look at the '76 yearbook this week and think about who's not in there.

I was at a fever pitch the entirety of the 1975 season. Staub-for-Lolich, as soon as it happened, brought everything down a notch in advance of '76. But not Lolich's fault, just as it's not Mr. Bicentennial Met's.


I didn't think you were taking it out on Mickey. (If you wanna pretend that Staub was a '76 Met, pull out his '76 Topps card. It's my favorite Staub Mets card.) I just felt like sticking up for him, some, because Mets fans of that generation sure do have it in for him. Lolich, in '76 was an extremely solid back of the rotation pitcher for what was baseball's best staff. Those '76 Mets were very competitive and gave us fans many thrills, including Koosman's Cy Young caliber showing and the pleasure of hearing or reading the words Kingman and Maris in the same sentence for much of the season.

I voted for the '76 cover for pretty much the same reasons already stated.


Posted


batmagadanleadoff wrote:
I just felt like sticking up for him, some, because Mets fans of that generation sure do have it in for him. Lolich, in '76 was an extremely solid back of the rotation pitcher for what was baseball's best staff.


I believe I learned the phrase "snakebit" from Bob Murphy that season, because he applied it so often to Lolich's lousy luck, pitching well, not getting run support. He'd be using it for Koosman a year later.


Posted


Benjamin Grimm wrote:
A lot of these later covers suffer from the existence of digital photo editing tools. It allows the cover designer to easily go overboard.


Yes. By trying to show more they wind up showing less.


Posted


I was thinking, "A lot of missing pieces, just like the team portrayed in it".

Boy, think what an easy target Mr. Met would have been for the Redcoats in the Revolution. He wouldn't have survived Lexington or Concord with that giant noggin. Despite that, I was in the Spirit of '76.


Old-Timey Member
Posted


Lefty Specialist wrote:
I was thinking, "A lot of missing pieces, just like the team portrayed in it".

Boy, think what an easy target Mr. Met would have been for the Redcoats in the Revolution. He wouldn't have survived Lexington or Concord with that giant noggin. Despite that, I was in the Spirit of '76.


lol. If I was quick I'd whip up a .gif of him outrunning cannonballs and musket shells.


Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Mets community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...