Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted November 18, 2010 Posted November 18, 2010 SteveJRogers wrote:My buddies were mocking me for filling my top 60 list with Mets, so I had to pause the countdown and include these non-Mets of note:You handled it with aplomb, but your buddies have no soul.This rather Seaver heavy list reminds me of something I saw a huge Beatle fan FB friend do when presented with one of those "Pick Your Favorite 5" lists questions. The question, pick your 5 favorite bands that AREN'T the Beatles. His answers:WingsPlastic Ono BandTraveling WilburysQuarrymen (I think) and the obscurest one for the win, The Dirty Mac. John Lennon, Eric Clapton, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards (I think that was the lineup off hand) performed as a "one off" super group on the Stones' Rock And Roll Circus television program.My friend says about his buddy: He has very varied musical tastes. He like ALL of Elvis Costello's CDs.
ashie62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 18, 2010 Posted November 18, 2010 How do you add images as a URL???
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted November 18, 2010 Posted November 18, 2010 Apparently my web browser doesn't have access to Ashie's C: drive.
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2010 Posted November 19, 2010 Looking at the checklist for 2011 Topps Heritage -- which will use the 1962 design -- Topps did a cool thing. They've tried, with their Heritage sets, to parallel the original set. If the card numbers hold when the set is released next year, they'll have done a nice job:7 Beltran (in the 1962 set, Frank Thomas was card 7)26 Thole (Cannizzaro)29 Mets Manager (Casey)85 Ike (Gil)94 Dickey (Hook)181 Gee183 Pelf (Craig)213 Pagan (Ashburn)256 Tejada (Chacon)290 Niese (Bob Miller)333 DUda421 KRod (Ken MacKenzie)436 Reyes (Mantilla)464 Santana (Al Jackson)478 Wright (Zimmer, who was pictured as a Met but listed as a Cub)and they'll have cards for Takahashi, Mejia, and Nickeas, although the numbering got weird on the file I saw.No 1962 number parallels for Gee/Duda (those numbers were guys on other teams), but that's well done.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2010 Posted November 19, 2010 Looking at the checklist for 2011 Topps Heritage -- which will use the 1962 design -- Topps did a cool thing. They've tried, with their Heritage sets, to parallel the original set. If the card numbers hold when the set is released next year, they'll have done a nice job:7 Beltran (in the 1962 set, Frank Thomas was card 7)26 Thole (Cannizzaro)29 Mets Manager (Casey)85 Ike (Gil)94 Dickey (Hook)181 Gee183 Pelf (Craig)213 Pagan (Ashburn)256 Tejada (Chacon)290 Niese (Bob Miller)333 DUda421 KRod (Ken MacKenzie)436 Reyes (Mantilla)464 Santana (Al Jackson)478 Wright (Zimmer, who was pictured as a Met but listed as a Cub)and they'll have cards for Takahashi, Mejia, and Nickeas, although the numbering got weird on the file I saw.No 1962 number parallels for Gee/Duda (those numbers were guys on other teams), but that's well done.#392 will be a David Wright NL Sporting News All-Star Card. original '62 #392
Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted November 21, 2010 Posted November 21, 2010 Here's another pause in the countdown to welcome Terry Collins and see how previous Mets managers have fared. Here's the best of the manager cardsCaseyWes, who had two darned good cards.Gil, only the 1970 is worthy of his greatnessYogi, who had two good card and a two team card headshot.Joe Frazier, the only non-interim never to get his own cardJoe Torre, who only got one card to himselfGeorge Bambeger, one card onlyFrank HowardDaveyBuddyJeff Torborg got one air-brushed card and one shared cardDallas Green. Here's a card with the Mets best manager, and Dallas Green, too. It's Green's only card.Bobby Valentine only got two cards. And the Mets most animated manager gets two dull headshots.Art Howe got a great Heritage cardWillieJerry, so gets only one card as far as I can tell
Guest Rockin' Doc Guests Posted November 21, 2010 Posted November 21, 2010 How can this card not be a favorite for any Mets fan?
Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted November 21, 2010 Posted November 21, 2010 Oh, I think we're going to see that one in the top 10!
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted November 21, 2010 Posted November 21, 2010 More Mets managers:Dave Johnson Topps Update 1984Randolph, as (haha) Stengel -- 2008 Topps HeritageWillie Randolph was also card #1 in a 2008 Topps special Mets team set. (same template as the regular 2008 set, but different image than the base set Randolph card) I couldn't find an image on the internet.
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted November 22, 2010 Posted November 22, 2010 batmagadanleadoff wrote:Willie Randolph was also card #1 in a 2008 Topps special Mets team set. (same template as the regular 2008 set, but different image than the base set Randolph card) I couldn't find an image on the internet.All the coaches were in that set too (as well as a similar set from 2007), so coaching cards of such luminaries as Rick Peterson and Rickey Henderson exist as well. (I have an extra 2008 set if anyone needs one.)
Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted November 22, 2010 Posted November 22, 2010 Here's the team set Willie.I have all the Mets managers cards in the blog post, but didn't know if I'd be pushing the limits by posting all 40 of them here.http://metsguyinmichigan.blogspot.com/2010/11/will-history-repeat-terry-collins-can.htmlI should boo Topps for using a near identical photo of Howe in different sets.Torborg's brutal airbrushing:Buddy looking serious:
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted November 22, 2010 Posted November 22, 2010 Here's my imitation of Jeff Torborg opening a birthday present:"If I can... I just don't want to mess up this great paper... and here we go... and it's... WOW! THANK YOU! ANOTHER GREAT TURTLENECK!!"
Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Guests Posted November 22, 2010 Posted November 22, 2010 Torborg is so white, he puts mayo on mayo./Tip your waitstaff//Try the Chicken Murphy-- it's heavy on the sauce
RealityChuck Old-Timey Member Posted November 22, 2010 Posted November 22, 2010 The next installment:No. 40Jim Fregosi: All-Star infielder, killer accordion player. Trading Nolan Ryan probably made a lot more sense to fans once this card came out and they learned that Fregosi was a man of many skills. Most of the boyhood cards in the magnificent 1972 set showed the players in their Little League uniforms. Not Fregosi. No, he�s brandishing that massive accordion, ready to burst out a lethal version of �Lady of Spain.� And the crazy thing is the back of the card details Jim youth league exploits and never once mentions his apparent musical skills.Most fans would have agreed that the accordion was a better pitcher than Ryan in 1971. Even fans today:WHIP: 1.586, increasing every year he pitched.K/BB: 1.18, becoming worse every year he pitched.ERA+: 860 shutouts, 0 complete games (more important back then).Averaging just over five innings a start.-0.2 WAR
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted November 22, 2010 Posted November 22, 2010 The next installment:No. 40Jim Fregosi: All-Star infielder, killer accordion player. Trading Nolan Ryan probably made a lot more sense to fans once this card came out and they learned that Fregosi was a man of many skills. Most of the boyhood cards in the magnificent 1972 set showed the players in their Little League uniforms. Not Fregosi. No, he�s brandishing that massive accordion, ready to burst out a lethal version of �Lady of Spain.� And the crazy thing is the back of the card details Jim youth league exploits and never once mentions his apparent musical skills.Most fans would have agreed that the accordion was a better pitcher than Ryan in 1971. Even fans today:WHIP: 1.586, increasing every year he pitched.K/BB: 1.18, becoming worse every year he pitched.ERA+: 860 shutouts, 0 complete games (more important back then).Averaging just over five innings a start.-0.2 WAREverybody knows that accordion folded third time around through the order. Would start to squeeze the ball too tight...
RealityChuck Old-Timey Member Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 True, but an accordion could always go to the Eye of Argon.(And that's probably the most obscure joke anyone could possibly make.)
Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 Here's the next 10 in the countdown, with discussion on the blog. http://metsguyinmichigan.blogspot.com/2010/11/counting-down-topps-all-time-top-60.htmlNo. 30, 1994 Stadium Club Ryan ThompsonNo. 29, 1987 David ConeNo. 28, 1974 Rusty StaubNo. 27, 1981 Lee MazzilliNo. 26, 1969 Cleon JonesNo. 25, 1985 Davey JohnsonNo. 24, 1993 Stadium Club John FrancoNo. 23, 1978 Felix MillanNo. 22, 1990 Keith HernandezNo. 21, 2005 Heritage Mike Piazza
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 That Staub card has a lot of good elements. The hip swagger, the bozac, the short sleeves, his refusal to wear undershirts, his cute pursed lips... but that shadow from his brim (and, to a lesser extent, the same with Mazzilli's in the next card) is just something that the guy who shot the Cleon Jones card would have been embarassed by.That's merely a two year gap on those cards, but there's a cultural watershed moment in there, from the end of the great-society optimism to the harsh realism of Vietnam fatigue. The cardmakers are, of course a few years behind the cultural vanguard, but the differing values of the passing era are summed up right there. To the Jones photographer, art has a nobility in the composition. To the Staub guy, it's about keeping it real.One guy is a craftsman and the other is a guerilla journalist.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 Altamont is the scapegoat for everything.
Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Guests Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 metsguyinmichigan wrote:No. 30, 1994 Stadium Club Ryan Thompson"My sixth tool is my relaxed, musky sexiness."
Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 I think the Rusty card was shot on Helmet Day, based on the people in the box seats.
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 metsguyinmichigan wrote:I think the Rusty card was shot on Helmet Day, based on the people in the box seats.That's a nice catch. You're probably right; I love when you can peg card photos to specific events.
Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket Guests Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 seawolf17 wrote:I think the Rusty card was shot on Helmet Day, based on the people in the box seats.That's a nice catch. You're probably right; I love when you can peg card photos to specific events.UMD Memories:April 21, 1973 Shea StadiumMets 5, Montreal Expos 0 Jay TysverJanuary 29, 2002This game was helmet day. The first game I ever attended. I was 8 years old and it was with my cub scout troop. It was a weekend day game. I believe Matlack started and Milner hit a home run. I was happy to say that I did get to see Willie Mays play. He flied out to right- center field to Mike Jorgensen who made a great play on the ball and was also injured in some manner.Warm April day for Rusty to be going gloveless and sleeveless but he was that kinda player. 0-for-1 with 3 walks and 2 runs scored that day.
Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 That could be a whole new tangent! Figuring out the day a card photo was taken.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 Topps Mets trivia question:During the period 1962-1980, when Topps was the only company producing large baseball sets, three players appeared in games as a Met in three separate seasons, yet never appeared on a Topps card as a Met. Who are they?(Wise-ass preemptive strike --- these three Mets might have appeared in a Mets team picture card. I really don't know. But if so, those appearances don't count).
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 metsguyinmichigan wrote:Dave Schneck?Schneck is one of the three.Staub and Milner aren't.
Zach Thornton Syracuse Mets - AAA LHP On Sunday, the southpaw tossed five shutout innings as the bulk pitcher. He gave up 2 hits, walked 2 and had 5 strikeouts. Explore Zach Thornton News >
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.