Friday, June 21, 2024

#296 Andy Seminick - Philadelphia Phillies


Andrew Wasal Seminick
Philadelphia Phillies
Catcher


Bats:  Right  Throws:  Right  Height:  5'11"  Weight:  187
Born:  September 12, 1920, Pierce, WV
Signed:  Signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates as an amateur free agent before 1940 season
Major League Teams:  Philadelphia Phillies 1943-51; Cincinnati Reds 1952; Cincinnati Redlegs 1953-55; Philadelphia Phillies 1955-57
Died:  February 22, 2004, Melbourne, FL (age 83)

A longtime fixture within the Phillies organization, Andy Seminick was the acknowledged clubhouse leader of the 1950 Whiz Kids team that won the National League pennant.  Seminick struggled defensively behind the plate early in his career, but continued to earn playing time because of his bat.  He finished first among catchers for errors five times and for stolen bases allowed four times.  Still, Seminick was a valuable part of the Phillies' line-up through the 1940s and early 1950s, being named as the starting catcher for the National League All-Stars in 1949 and authoring a career year in 1950.  Seminick batted .288 for the Whiz Kids, tying his career highs from the year before in both home runs (24) and RBIs (68).  Despite a broken ankle, he caught all four games of the 1950 World Series, with the Phillies swept by the Yankees in four games.

He was dealt to the Reds in late 1951 in a seven-player deal, with Smoky Burgess (#192) taking over at catcher for the Phillies.  After three full seasons in Cincinnati, Seminick was dealt back to the Phillies with Burgess returning to the Reds.  He'd work within the Phillies organization up through the 1990s as a coach, manager, scout and roving minor league instructor.  In 1,304 career games, Seminick batted .243 with 164 home runs and 556 RBIs.

1983 Philadelphia Phillies Great Players #3
Building the Set

August 13, 1989 in Bridgeton, NJ - Card #84
We went nuts at the Bridgeton Baseball Card Show in August 1989, buying 12 different cards for our 1956 Topps set, all at $1.50 a piece.  That's an impressive haul for $18!

I have no other information on the location of this show, other than it was held in the nearby city of Bridgeton, New Jersey.  What I do have however is the checklist I brought with us to the show.  I believe this is the second full checklist we carried around, having retired the prior version I created in 1988 and posted with the William Harridge (#1) card.

Just looking at this checklist (shown here) brings back fond memories of finding the cards, deciding to make a purchase, negotiating a price and then finding a flat surface so that we could cross off the newest additions.

The Card / Phillies Team Set
Seminick was exlcusive to the Bowman sets in 1954 and 1955, and this card marks his return to Topps.  It's also his final appearance in a Topps flagship set.  The back of the card highlights his return to the Phillies in 1955 and his multi-home run inning in 1949 - see below.  And by 1956, Seminick had worked to become one of the best defensive catchers in the league after years as one of the worst.  He led all catchers with a .994 fielding percentage in 1955.

1956 Season
Seminick was nearing the end of his 15-year career, and he appeared in 60 games for the Phillies, batting .199 with seven home runs and 23 RBIs.  He was their opening day catcher for the final time, and he'd start 49 games behind the plate as the back-up to Stan Lopata (#183).  Seminick would retire following the 1956 season, assuming a coaching role with the Phillies, but he'd be activated again in September 1957 due to injuries to the team's catchers.

The Phillies held "Andy Seminick Night" on September 18, 1956 with a ceremony between games of a double header with the Phillies and the Reds.  It was a nice touch by the Phillies to have the ceremony on the night they faced off against Seminick's only other former team.  What's better is the Phillies won both ends of the double header.

Phillies Career
With the exception of his three years in Cincinnati, Seminick was a part of the Phillies organization between the mid-1940s and the mid-1990s.  He was purchased from the Knoxville Smokies of the Southern Association in September 1943, making his big league debut with the Phillies on September 14, 1943 as the starting catcher.  Chuck Klein appeared in that game as a pinch-hitter in one of his final big league appearances.  Seminick was the opening day catcher for the Phillies in 1944, 1947 and 1948, and from 1950 to 1951, and one last time in 1956.  He was 0 for 1, and was hit by a pitch in the 1949 All-Star Game, before being replaced by Roy Campanella (#101).  Seminick was the first Phillies player to hit two home runs in an inning on June 2, 1949, a feat since also accomplished by Von Hayes and Trea Turner.

Following his playing days, he was a coach for the Phillies (1957-58, 1967-69) a minor league manager (1959-66, 1970-73) and a long-time scout (1974-mid 1980s).  In the early 1970s, Seminick helped covert Bob Boone from a third baseman to a successful Gold Glove catcher.

1949 Bowman #30
1950 Bowman #121
1951 Bowman #51
1953 Topps #153
1955 Bowman #93

Other Notable Baseball Cards

First Mainstream Card:  1949 Bowman #30
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (4):  1951-53, 1956
Most Recent Mainstream Card:  1991 Topps Archives 1953 #153

40 - Seminick non-parallel baseball cards in the Beckett online database as of 6/21/24.

Sources:  
Baseball Reference
Beckett Database

Sunday, June 16, 2024

#295 Clem Labine - Brooklyn Dodgers


Clement Walter Labine
Brooklyn Dodgers
Pitcher

Bats:  Right  Throws:  Right  Height:  6'0"  Weight:  180
Born:  August 6, 1926, Lincoln, RI
Signed:  Signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers as an amateur free agent before 1944 season
Major League Teams:  Brooklyn Dodgers 1950-1957; Los Angeles Dodgers 1958-1960; Detroit Tigers 1960; Pittsburgh Pirates 1960-1961; New York Mets 1962
Died:  March 2, 2007, Vero Beach, FL (age 80)

Clem Labine was a two-time All-Star and a three-time World Series Champion, best known for his 11 seasons as one of the Dodgers' best firemen.  Labine was a key member of the Dodgers' bullpen throughout the 1950s, leading the league with 60 appearances the year the Dodgers won their only title in Brooklyn in 1955.  Labine was 1-0 with a 2.89 ERA and a save in four World Series games against the Yankees in 1955, and although the Dodgers lost their repeat bid in 1956 against the Yankees, he was even better than the year before, throwing 12 scoreless innings.  Although not an official statistic at the time, Labine has been retroactively credited with leading the league with 19 saves in 1956, and 17 saves in 1957.  Those were also his two All-Star seasons.

Labine moved with the Dodgers to Los Angeles, pitching in 2 1/2 seasons on the West Coast, and winning another ring with the Dodgers in 1959.  Moving to Pittsburgh in 1960, Labine would win one more World Series ring with the Pirates, and he retired after appearing in three games for the expansion Mets in 1962.  At the time of his retirement, Labine's 94 career saves ranked fourth all-time, and he was the Dodgers' franchise leader in saves and games pitched with 425.  Overall, Labine was 77-56 with a 3.63 ERA in 513 games and 1,079 2/3 innings pitched.

Building the Set
August 13, 1989 in Bridgeton, NJ - Card #83
We went nuts at the Bridgeton Baseball Card Show in August 1989, buying 12 different cards for our 1956 Topps set, all at $1.50 a piece.  That's an impressive haul for $18!


I have no other information on the location of this show, other than it was held in the nearby city of Bridgeton, New Jersey.  What I do have however is the checklist I brought with us to the show.  I believe this is the second full checklist we carried around, having retired the prior version I created in 1988 and posted with the William Harridge (#1) card.

Just looking at this checklist brings back fond memories of finding the cards, deciding to make a purchase, negotiating a price and then finding a flat surface so that we could cross off the newest additions.

The Card / Dodgers Team Set
I spent a little bit of time trying to figure out the company advertisements behind Labine as the pitcher poses in Ebbetts Field, and I came up empty.  Labine was in both the 1954 and 1955 Topps sets, and the main photo here is re-used from his 1955 Topps card.  The cartoon panels on the back of the card highlight his 1955 World Series appearances and his low breaking curve.  He's also referred to as a "reliefer."

Topps reprinted the card in its 1995 Topps Archives Brooklyn Dodgers set.

1956 Season
Labine enjoyed an All-Star season for the National League Champions, going 10-6 with a 3.35 ERA in 62 games pitched.  He recorded 19 saves to lead the league, and struck out 75 in 115 2/3 innings pitched.  Labine pitched the biggest and perhaps best game of his career in Game 6 of the 1956 World Series.  With the Yankees holding a 3-2 series lead following Don Larsen's (#332) perfect game in Game 5, manager Walter Alston (#8) named reliever Labine as his starting pitcher for Game 6.  Labine threw 10 scoreless innings, out dueling Yankees' starter Bob Turley (#40).  The Dodgers won the game in the bottom of the 10th, forcing a Game 7, when Jim Gilliam (#280) walked and came around to score on Jackie Robinson's (#30) RBI single.

1952 Topps #342
1953 Topps #14
1957 Topps #53
1959 Topps #403
1961 Topps #22

Other Notable Baseball Cards

First Mainstream Card:  1952 Topps #342
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (10):  1952-1961
Most Recent Mainstream Card:  2006 Topps Heritage Then and Now #TN10

95 - Labine non-parallel baseball cards in the Beckett online database as of 6/16/24.

Sources:  
Baseball Reference
Beckett Database

Friday, June 7, 2024

#294 Ernie Johnson - Milwaukee Braves


Ernest Thorwald Johnson
Milwaukee Braves
Pitcher

Bats:  Right  Throws:  Right  Height:  6'3"  Weight:  190
Born:  June 16, 1924, Brattleboro, VT
Signed:  Signed by the Boston Braves as an amateur free agent before 1942 season
Major League Teams:  Boston Braves 1950, 1952; Milwaukee Braves 1953-1958; Baltimore Orioles 1959
Died:  August 12, 2011, Cumming, GA (age 87)

Ernie Johnson pitched in nine major league seasons, mostly with the Braves, before enjoying a second career as a longtime broadcaster also with the Braves.  Johnson was used mostly in relief by Boston/Milwaukee, and he earned a regular spot in the team's bullpen in 1952.  His best season statistically came in 1954 when Johnson was 5-2 with a 2.81 ERA in 40 appearances, pitching in a career-high 99 1/3 innings.  Johnson was a member of the World Champion Braves team in 1957, pitching seven innings over three games against the Yankees.  He surrendered a go-ahead, seventh inning home run to Hank Bauer (#177) in Game 6,  forcing a Game 7.  Lew Burdette (#219) would shut out the Yankees in Game 7 to clinch the Series for the Braves.

Johnson's last action in the majors came in 1959 with the Orioles, and he was 40-23 lifetime with a 3.77 ERA in 273 games pitched.  He served as a broadcaster for the Braves between 1962 and 1999 and was inducted into the Atlanta Braves Hall of Fame in 2001.  The Braves' broadcast booth at their current home at Truist Park bears Johnson's name.  His son, Ernie Johnson, Jr., is also a long-time broadcaster and is the current lead host of Inside the NBA.

Building the Set
May 20, 1989 in Sea Isle City, NJ - Card #72
For 45 years, my grandparents owned a house in Sea Isle City on 37th Street.  As a result of the Storm of 1962, which wiped out the block of houses in front of them, their house became beach front property until the construction of the Spinnaker Condominiums in 1972.  We were lucky enough to spend most of our summers in Sea Isle, and the five-minute walk to the beach was accomplished by climbing up a ramp in back of the Spinnaker, crossing over the concrete promenade and walking down a few steps to the sand.

For several years in the late 1980s and early 1990s, there was a complete dive of a snack shop called Joe's Sno-Cone located in the Spinnaker at the top of that ramp.  The menu at Joe's was limited to the usual beach fare - hot dogs, soft pretzels, bags of chips, candy and yes, snow cones.  During a visit to Joe's on the weekend before Memorial Day in 1989, I noticed the shop's owner (Joe presumably) had set up a small display of baseball cards for sale.  This Johnson card was available for $3 and another 1956 Topps card, Bobby Hofman (#28), was also available for $3.  I purchased both cards and most likely added a cherry snow cone to my order before heading next door to the arcade to drop several quarters into the Rolling Thunder game.

The Card / Braves Team Set
This is Johnson's first Topps card, as he was exclusive to Bowman in 1954 and 1955.  The back of the card reveals Johnson has a sidearm pitching motion, and contains a typical for the times representation of his success as a Braves pitcher in the final cartoon panel.

1956 Season
Johnson appeared in 36 games for the Braves, all in relief, and was 4-3 with a 3.71 ERA.  He led the second place Braves' club in relief appearances, and was second on the team, behind Dave Jolly, with five saves.

1954 Bowman #144
1955 Bowman #157
1957 Topps #333
1958 Topps #78
1959 Topps #279

Other Notable Baseball Cards

First Mainstream Card:  1954 Bowman #144
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (5):  1956-1960
Most Recent Mainstream Card:  1960 Topps #228

29 - Johnson non-parallel baseball cards in the Beckett online database as of 6/7/24.

Sources:  
Baseball Reference
Beckett Database