Friday, October 25, 2019

#68 Chuck Stobbs - Washington Nationals


Charles Klein Stobbs
Washington Nationals
Pitcher

Bats:  Left  Throws:  Left  Height:  6'1"  Weight:  185
Born:  July 2, 1929, Wheeling, WV
Signed:  Signed by the Boston Red Sox as an amateur free agent before the 1947 season
Major League Teams:  Boston Red Sox 1947-1951; Chicago White Sox 1952; Washington Senators 1953-1958; St. Louis Cardinals 1959; Washington Senators 1959-1960; Minnesota Twins 1961
Died:  July 11, 2008, Sarasota, FL (age 79)

1961 Topps #406
A bonus baby with the Red Sox, the 18-year-old Stobbs made his big league debut in 1947 and would go on to pitch in parts of 15 seasons with five different teams.  All but 17 of his 459 career appearances came in the American League, and he tallied a lifetime record of 107-130 with a 4.29 ERA.  Stobbs is probably best remembered as the pitcher who surrendered a home run to Mickey Mantle (#135) in 1953 that completely exited Griffith Stadium in Washington, DC.  Mantle's 565-foot blast is celebrated with a card in the 1961 Topps set.

Stobbs was a 20-game loser in 1957 and he pitched mostly in relief following that season until his final year in 1961.  He followed the Senators to Minnesota for the 1961 season, and he was an "Original Twin," appearing in 24 games before being released by the franchise following the season.

Building the Set
September 25, 2005 in Ft. Washington, PA - Card #259
This was a late edition to our set and one of 11 cards we purchased at the 92nd Philadelphia Sports Card Show held at the convention center in Ft. Washington.  My records show we paid $6 for this card. With the Ocean City baseball card shows long gone by now, our only options for local baseball card shows were the "Philly Shows" held in Ft. Washington at the time or the occasional mall baseball card show.

My Dad didn't like the drive to Ft. Washington, and this would have been one of only a few shows we attended together in this location.  Our next show together was a few months later in December, also in Ft. Washington.  Looking at my records of when and where we purchased our cards, a full year would go by before we'd add any more cards to the set after that December show.

The year-long hiatus in collecting the set came at a time my wife and I were expecting our first son and as we moved into our first real house, so we had a pretty good excuse not to be purchasing baseball cards at the time.

I've scanned the checklist I would have had with us at both the September and December Ft. Washington shows, at the listing at the bottom left corner displays the nine remaining "big" cards we needed.  At the time, Roberto Clemente (#33) and Hank Aaron (#31) led the way.  Aaron would enter our collection on Christmas Day 2006 and the Clemente card ended up being one of the final cards added to complete our set on December 28, 2007.

The Card
It's pretty unusual to see an action shot involving a pitcher diving back head first into first base.  In fact, until learning more about this post for Stobbs, I didn't realize he was a pitcher despite the position designation on the front of his card!

1956 Season
Stobbs enjoyed his best season in 1956 with the Senators, going 15-15 with a 3.60 ERA and pitching a career high 240 innings.  He was by far the team's most reliable pitcher, but his efforts weren't enough to keep the Senators from a seventh place finish in the A.L.  He had the lowest walks per nine innings pitched ratio (2.025) among every starting pitcher in the league, with Dick Donovan (#18) finishing second (2.263).

Phillies Connection?
I couldn't find any support for Stobbs being named for Phillies great, Chuck Klein, and Stobbs' naming was only a coincidence.  Klein was born in 1904 in Indianapolis, and he would have been in his first full year with the Phillies in 1929 the summer that Stobbs was born.

1952 Topps #62
1953 Topps #89
1957 Topps #101
1959 Topps #26
1961 Topps #431
Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card:  1952 Topps #62
First Topps Card:  1952 Topps #62
Last Topps Card:  1961 Topps #431
Most Recent Mainstream Card:  1994 Topps Archives 1954 #185
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (10):  1952-1961

46 - Stobbs non-parallel baseball cards in the Beckett online database as of 9/18/19.

Sources:  
Baseball Reference
Beckett Database
SABR
The Trading Card Database

In some cases, the first and last cards listed above are subjective and chosen by me if multiple cards were released within the same year.  Most recent mainstream card may also be subjective and does not include extremely low serial numbered cards, buybacks or cut autograph cards.

Friday, October 18, 2019

#67 Vic Power - Kansas City Athletics


Victor Pellot Power
Kansas City Athletics
First Base


Bats:  Right  Throws:  Right  Height:  6'0"  Weight:  186
Born:  November 1, 1927, Arecibo, Puerto Rico
Acquired:  Purchased by the New York Yankees from Drummondville (Provincial) before 1951 season
Major League Teams:  Philadelphia Athletics 1954; Kansas City Athletics 1955-1958; Cleveland Indians 1958-1961; Minnesota Twins 1962-1964; Los Angeles Angels 1964; Philadelphia Phillies 1964; California Angels 1965
Died:  November 29, 2005, Bayamon, Puerto Rico (age 78)

Vic Power, who assumed that name for American baseball but used his actual name of Vic Pellot when playing in Puerto Rico, played for 12 years in the Majors, making the All-Star team in four seasons and winning seven consecutive Gold Gloves for his defense at first base.  Traded by the Yankees to the Philadelphia A's in December 1953, he was the first player of Puerto Rican descent to play for the club.  Despite the rampant racial discrimination he experienced during his early playing days, Power became a star with the A's and later the Indians, second only to Roberto Clemente (#33) in popularity back in his native Puerto Rico.

Power accumulated 126 career home runs and 658 RBIs while hitting .284, finishing in the top ten for hits in the American League in five different seasons.  Power never played in the postseason, getting closest to winning pennants with the 1959 Indians, the 1962 Twins and the 1964 Phillies, all teams that finished in second place.  He retired at the age of 37 following the 1965 season in which he hit .259 over 124 games for the Angels.

Building the Set
October 3, 1999 in Raleigh, NC - Card #183
We bought this card on October 3rd at the Raleigh Sports Card Show, and it ended up being part of a birthday present to me from my Dad.  I was still living in Raleigh in late 1999, and my parents made the trip south to visit me for my birthday.  We bought 8 cards that day (that I knew about) paying $5 for seven of the cards, including this Power card, and $2 for the Grady Hatton (#26) card.  Unbeknownst to me, my Dad also purchased the Sandy Koufax card (#79) but squirreled that one away until Christmas morning 1999.

The Card
Power appears to be out at a play at the plate, and my best guess at the catcher is Sammy White (#168) who wore #22 and was the primary catcher for the Red Sox in 1955.  The Tigers' Frank House (#32) is also a possibility as he wore #2.  The head shot of Power is the same used on his 1954 and 1955 Topps cards, and it appears as if the photo features him in a Yankees uniform with the blue pinstripes still visible.

On the back of the card, Topps skims four years off Power's age, stating he was born in 1931 while all other current sources show his birth year as 1927.

1956 Season
Power enjoyed his second All-Star season in 1956, hitting .319 with 14 home runs and 63 RBIs. 
Despite an impressive line-up consisting of Power, third baseman Hector Lopez (#16) and right fielder Harry Simpson (#239), the A's finished in last place in the American League with a record of 52-102.

Phillies Career
On September 9, 1964, the Phillies acquired Power from the Angels for a player to be named later and cash.  The Phillies would send pitcher Marcelino Lopez to the Angels a month later to complete the deal.  The Phillies' regular first baseman, Frank Thomas (#153), had broken his thumb and Power was seen as a right-handed hitting compliment at the position to the left-handed hitting John Herrnstein.

Power became the second player in Phillies franchise history to wear #62, as the number had been worn earlier in the season by rookie pitcher Rick Wise.  Relief pitchers Ken Roberts and Patrick Schuster wore the number for the Phillies in 2015 and 2016 respectively.

Power's month with the Phillies allowed him to witness one of the worst collapses in professional sports history as the team had a 6 1/2 game lead over the Cardinals on September 20th, but ended up finishing the season in second place.  Power hit .208 (10 for 48) over 18 games with four doubles and three RBIs, starting 11 of those games at first base.  Following the season, the Phillies sold Power back to the Angels.

He has one Phillies "baseball card" to his name, having appeared within the 1964 Philadelphia Bulletin Phillies Album series.

1954 Topps #52
1957 Topps #167
1959 Topps #229
1963 Topps #40
1966 Topps #192
Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card:  1954 Topps #52
First Topps Card:  1954 Topps #52
Representative Phillies Card:  1964 Philadelphia Bulletin Phillies Album
Last Topps Card:  1966 Topps #192
Most Recent Mainstream Card:  1994 Topps Archives 1954 #52
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (13):  1954-1966

77 - Power non-parallel baseball cards in the Beckett online database as of 9/15/19.

Sources:  
Baseball Reference
Beckett Database
SABR
The Phillies Room
The Trading Card Database

In some cases, the first and last cards listed above are subjective and chosen by me if multiple cards were released within the same year.  Most recent mainstream card may also be subjective and does not include extremely low serial numbered cards, buybacks or cut autograph cards.

Friday, October 11, 2019

#66 Bob Speake - Chicago Cubs


Robert Charles Speake
Chicago Cubs
Outfield

Bats:  Left  Throws:  Left  Height:  6'1"  Weight:  178
Born:  August 22, 1930, Springfield, MO
Signed:  Signed by the Chicago Cubs as an amateur free agent, November 8, 1948
Major League Teams:  Chicago Cubs 1955, 1957; San Francisco Giants 1958-1959

Over the course of four big league seasons, Bob Speake appeared in 305 games for the Cubs and Giants, hitting .223 with 31 home runs and 104 RBIs.  He saw the most action in 1957 when he appeared in 129 games for the Cubs and was the team's primary center fielder.

In April 1958, he was traded to the Giants for fan favorite Bobby Thomson (#257).

Building the Set
June 20, 1992 in Ocean City, NJ - Card #105
This is one of 11 cards (and the 7th I've covered on this blog) that my Dad and I bought in June 1992 at the Ocean City baseball card show held on the boardwalk at the Music Pier.  We paid $60 for the lot of 11 cards, which at the time was most likely a steal.  Chronologically, I have this listed as the 105th card we added to the set.  Like the other cards in this lot, this card is gorgeous with four sharp corners.  I'd love to get into my time machine and buy whatever other 1956 Topps cards this dealer had for sale as they're some of the finest cards in our set.

The Card
This is Speake's rookie card and he'd go on to appear in Topps' flagship sets in 1957, 1958 and 1959.

When I first read the middle panel, I had no idea what the "K.O.M." was.  Turns out it's the D-Level Kansas-Oklahoma-Missouri League and Speake played there in 1949 with the Carthage Cubs.  D-Level would have been the equivalent of the current Rookie League and Speake's 14 home runs lead the league that season.

1956 Season
Speake is the second player in the set (so far) to have not appeared in the Majors in 1956, along with Nelson Burbrink (#27).  Speake played in 158 games for the Los Angeles Angels of the Pacific Coast League, hitting an even .300 with 25 home runs and 111 RBIs.  It's odd that his successful season didn't at least earn him a late season promotion, especially since the 1956 Cubs were destined to finish 8th in the National League with a record of 60-94.  The Cubs relied on Walt Moryn, Pete Whisenant, Monte Irvin (#194) and Jim King (#74) in the outfield and apparently they didn't need Speake.

With the Angels, Speake was a teammate of Steve Bilko in 1956 as Bilko was electrifying the minor leagues with his amazing season.  Bilko led the PCL in eight offensive categories, hitting .360 with 55 home runs and 164 RBIs.  The Angels ran away with the PCL title with a record of 107-61, and perhaps the Angels' historic run was one of the reasons why Speake didn't get a promotion to the Cubs.

1957 Topps #339
1958 Topps #437
1959 Topps #526
Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card:  1956 Topps #66
First Topps Card:  1956 Topps #66
Last Topps Card:  1959 Topps #526
Most Recent Mainstream Card:  2008 Topps Heritage Real One Autographs #ROA-BSP
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (4):  1956-1959

8 - Speake non-parallel baseball cards in the Beckett online database as of 9/11/19.

Sources:  
Baseball Reference
Beckett Database
The Trading Card Database

In some cases, the first and last cards listed above are subjective and chosen by me if multiple cards were released within the same year.  Most recent mainstream card may also be subjective and does not include extremely low serial numbered cards, buybacks or cut autograph cards.

Friday, October 4, 2019

#65 Johnny O'Brien - Pittsburgh Pirates


John Thomas O'Brien
Pittsburgh Pirates
Second Base

Bats:  Right  Throws:  Right  Height:  5'9"  Weight:  170
Born:  December 11, 1930, South Amboy, NJ
Signed:  Signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates as an amateur free agent, March 19, 1953
Major League Teams:  Pittsburgh Pirates 1953, 1955-1958; St. Louis Cardinals 1958; Milwaukee Braves 1959

Johnny O'Brien, along with his twin brother Eddie (#116), became the first twins in Major League history to play for the same team in the same game, first accomplishing the feat on May 10, 1953.  Johnny was originally a basketball star (with Eddie) at Seattle University and he was the first player in NCAA history to score 1,000 points, despite his less than six-foot stature.  As an infielder (and occasional relief pitcher), O'Brien played in parts of six seasons, hitting .250 with four career home runs.  He pitched in 25 games between 1956 and 1958, tallying a 1-3 record and a 5.61 ERA over 61 innings.

Following his playing days, O'Brien served as the head of security, sales and promotion at Seattle's Kingdome, the home of the expansion Seattle Mariners.

Building the Set
December 25, 2004 from San Diego, CA - Card #256
Dad - Christmas Eve 2004

This is the fourth of six cards my Dad gave me for Christmas 2004, and I've already covered the cards for Andy Carey (#12), Bob Kennedy (#38) and "Windy" McCall (#44).  I have no record of how much my Dad paid for the six cards, ordered from Kit Young's Cards in San Diego.  It couldn't have been much as all six cards purchased would have been considered commons.

The Card
This is O'Brien's fourth Topps card, but only his third solo card as he and his brother Eddie shared a card in the 1954 Topps set.  The portrait photo is the same photo used for his 1955 Topps card.  That's O'Brien sliding head first back into the base (first base?) in what looks to be a pick-off play.

There's no mention of his twin brother on the back of his card, but it does mention his successful college basketball career.  O'Brien hit .299 for the 1955 Pirates, but I don't think he had enough plate appearances (304) to technically qualify for the team lead.  Dale Long, who hit .291 had 479 plate appearances and is credited with winning the Pirates batting title that season.

Only after scanning did I realize the back of my card is crooked and miscut.

1956 Season
O'Brien missed all of the 1954 season while in military service and he struggled in his third season in the Majors.  Appearing in 73 games, O'Brien hit .173 (18 for 104) and served as back-up infielder to Bill Mazeroski.  He actually found more success as a relief pitcher, first appearing in relief on June 27th and pitching a shutout inning while striking out two Reds batters - Frank Robinson and Roy McMillan (#123).  O'Brien would go on to make eight relief appearances in 1956, throwing 19 total innings with an impressive ERA of 2.84.  His worst outing came during a blow-out loss to the Giants in which he allowed three runs on three hits and four walks.

1953 Topps #223
1954 Topps #139
1955 Topps #135
1958 Topps #426
1959 Topps #499
Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card:  1953 Topps #223
First Topps Card:  1953 Topps #223
Last Topps Card:  1959 Topps #499
Most Recent Mainstream Card:  2008 Topps Heritage Real One Autographs #ROA-JO
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (6):  1953-1956, 1958-1959

17 - O'Brien non-parallel baseball cards in the Beckett online database as of 9/1/19.

Sources:  
Baseball Reference
Beckett Database
The Trading Card Database
Wikipedia

Also, here's a great article from a 2018 edition of The Seattle Times providing more detail on the O'Brien twins legacy in the state.

In some cases, the first and last cards listed above are subjective and chosen by me if multiple cards were released within the same year.  Most recent mainstream card may also be subjective and does not include extremely low serial numbered cards, buybacks or cut autograph cards.