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I really didn’t think I’d get this good a pack. Hell, even the puzzle piece is worthwhile (though not the whites of Spahn’s eyes, which I think is the piece de resistance of this puzzle). Now I’ll shut up about how great The Pack is and tell you (lovingly) about each card.
6 Pack Analysis: 1989 Donruss
Pack 5
Bryan Harvey
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Jeff Russell While Bryan Harvey was a big deal for a little while, Jeff Russell was a big deal for a longer while. He was a great closer, no doubt about it. Also, if you pictured him without facial hair, he looked a lot like Howie Mandel (and, as a sidebar digression, why hasn’t NBC had Mandel blow up a rubber glove with his nose yet on Deal or No Deal? I’m serious. It would make the show about twenty thousand times more enjoyable).
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Ryne Sandberg
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Barry Lyons Okay, now if this was truly a Perfect Pack, Barry Lyons would be Roberto Alomar or even Sandy Alomar, Jr. But, instead, it’s Barry Lyons: Mets back-up catcher extraordinaire.
Mike Moore What makes a baseball player successful in the eyes of those who follow the game? Is it consistent greatness or do you just need to have a flash-in-the-pan brilliance about you that convinces others to see something that may or may not really be there? Take Mike Moore for example. The guy had one good year, where he won 17 games. Every other year (up until this card was printed) he was a lousy pitcher on a perennially lousy second-division team. So why do I think of him as a good player? Is it because I think he looks like a Punch and Judy puppet? Or is it the Chris Bosio Theory, that he’s considered a success but wasn’t ever really one? I’m full of questions today.
Mike Flanagan By this time Flanagan wasn’t very good. But that’s all right. He had already proved he would always be viewed as a successful major league pitcher. A definite plus to an already halfway-decent pack.
Steve Lombardozzi His inclusion doesn’t hurt the overall rating of the pack because of his name (and because he was a World Series hero, but mostly because of his name). I understand how shallow that sounds, but it isn’t every day that you get a card of Lombardozzi. Especially growing up in Massachusetts, where the Boston Globe sportswriters like to beat it over your head when a player makes the majors who happens to be from a town in the state. Lombardozzi’s from Malden, and if you’ve never been to Malden then you haven’t lived. Actually, the last part of that’s not really true.
Carlton Fisk Diamond King
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Fred McGriff He was, inexplicably, one of my favorite players. I think it originally had to do with the fact that he was one of the most underrated players of his generation, he usually got the accolades but never the national press that followed others, and he played in relative obscurity for most of his career (except for the parts with the Braves). Because of all these things, he was always included in the great subsets and insert sets that took over in the mid to late 1990s, and his cards were always cheap. He may be the first Hall of Famer with a rookie card valued at less than $8.
Kirby Puckett I think I may have started to cry when I found out he died. When I was a kid I thought he probably wore eye black all the time (even when he wasn’t playing baseball), because it made him look tougher. Really, everyone should wear eye black all the time, because, hell, it does make you look tougher.
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Ozzie Guillen It’s amazing, but at one time in the late Eighties, there were at least four Ozzies playing in the major leagues: Ozzie Smith, Ozzie Guillen, Ozzie Virgil and Ozzie Canseco. That is incredible. I don’t think there’s anyone with that name playing today.
Wally Joyner Did you know that Wally Joyner has acted in not one but two Mormon-themed movies? It’s true. In fact, his role in the first film was a recurring role in the second one. What did he play, you ask? Wally was an angel. I know, I know, those kooky Mormons. Next thing you know they’ll have Shawn Bradley play a talking tree (like that creepy tree from the old Fun Fruits commercials, only really pale and 7’6” tall).
Ray Hayward
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Rick Sutcliffe I like Rick Sutcliffe. Did you know that the Cubs gave up Joe Carter and Mel Hall for him and Ron Hassey? It’s like they were convinced that Sutcliffe had a couple more seasons in him and Hassey had another perfect game in that gigantic brain of his. Of course, they were right on both accounts, though Hassey’s second perfect game would come when he was with the Expos.
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Kevin McReynolds Oh my God, I got Kevin McReynolds. I think his cards completed the holy triptych of Over-Hyped Met Rookies (Gregg Jeffries and Kevin Elster were the other two), though, now that I think about it, wasn’t he an Over-Hyped Padre Rookie? Along with the worthless-upon-impact #1 Draft Pick card of Shawn Abner from the 1985 set. Either way, I got excited when I got a card of him and I don’t think he was really that good to begin with. Isn’t it funny how card value and actual, statistical performance never seem to quite match?
Overall Analysis
It’s not every day that you get two bona fide superstars, a Diamond King worth something in a trade, your favorite player, four good to very good pitchers, and Wally Joyner and Ozzie Guillen all in the same pack. The success rate here is a mighty 73% (11 good to great cards out of a possible 15), so I’m not so far off-base to call this a Perfect Pack. In fact, it’s a very apt title. What would have made this an Über Pack would be the inclusion of at least one Red Sox player, preferably Ellis Burks. If I didn’t already know that Mayor McCheese was running the show down in Philly, I would’ve sworn he was behind the scenes in Boston when the Sox inexplicably dumped Burks to make room for the immortal Bob Zupcic (sidebar note: you know how Baseball Reference lists ten players the player in question is most like? Well, #9 on Zupcic’s list is the great Olympian Jim Thorpe (who was generally a horrible baseball player)).
Fight! Fight! Fight!
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So who wins? Will Hal Lanier have to sign a basketball for Carlton Fisk? Will Jose Cruz get to try out those roundhouse leg sweeps he’s been practicing out in his garage late at night? Does Robin Ventura even know where he is?
You tell me.
9 comments:
Ahhh, Barry Lyons. Growing up on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, he signed at EVERY card show. He was followed by Greg Hibbard; then, Matt Lawton, but by the time Lawton became a "name," card shows had subsized.
I'm pretty sure Gregg Jeffries supposed to be the best player ever in 1989. There was a theory from my neighbors (twins who were two years older than me and INSANELY cool) that if you looked on the bottom of the 1989 Topps box and it was a certain card, you went down four packs on the lower left of the box and that pack was guaranteed to have a Jeffries. They had like eight of them, all lined up in one plastic sheet, and I didn't have any, so I had to believe them. I finally found the box and got the magic pack and ... no Jeffries. One major reason why I want to get a box of '89 Topps is so I can finally pull a Jeffries. Does that make me weird?
Lombardozzi was never a good player, never mind great. He does leesen the pack a great deal!
Talking about the Jefferies theory, how about 1992 Donruss Diamond Kings --- Upper Left --- 4th pack from the bottom.
McReynoldsa was a very good player for several years. Good defense, very good hitter, and an excellent baserunner for a guy who wasn't fast.
A very good argument could be made that he deserved the NL MVP in 1988. He certainly was a better player than the guy who won the award, Kirk Gibson.
His problem was that it never looked like he was really trying out there. He was sort of a white Garry Templeton, always nonchalant-looking. At least he never flipped-off a stadium full of fans.
RE Howie Mandel: He claims that he "blew out a sinus" doing the rubber-glove-over-the-head bit, so he stopped doing it. (In his almost - seamless crossover cameo on Las Vegas, he explained as such to the assistant who escorted him from the Deal or No Deal set to fly him to Vegas.)
RE Malden: I grew up in the next town over (Saugus); Malden wasn't so bad, and it was where you went if you wanted to go bowling and / or get good pizza.
Apologies for veering off the topic. I appreciate your blog, and I've set it up on My Yahoo! so I know when you've posted. (And yes, I'm another guy originally sent here courtesy of Bill Simmons' now - retired Intern.)
I think that Lowell Palmer card is the coolest card I've seen in quite a while.
I lived in Malden for two years on Valley St. I enjoyed many a night at the Dockside and at Veez. I especially enjoyed visiting Saugus and going to the Kowloon.
And in reference to my Phillies... in the early 80's, Bill giles, the majority owner, was conviced he could run a baseball team. After all, he was Warren Giles' son. Dallas Green, former 80 Phils manager, became the Cubs GM in 82. And the players he took from the Phillies who played for him included...
Ryne Sandberg
Larry Bowa
Bob Dernier
Keith Moreland
Warren Brusstar
Dickie Noles
Dick Ruthven
Ryne Sandberg was the throw in player in that Ivan DeJesus trade. The story is Larry Bowa talked Bill Giles into including him in that trade. Great, huh?
Then, to top it off, Green also grabs Gary Matthews for the 1984 division title, the year after he gets NLCS MVP for the Phillies in 1983.
The way Dallas Green used Bill Giles in the early 80's, Mayor McCheese would have been an upgrade for the Phillies.
lowell palmer = young kent tekulve
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