
So then it’s with great pride (as a budding copywriter myself) to give exposure to one of the best blurbs I’ve ever read. If ever there was a true baseball card hall of fame (and no, I don’t count the one put together by Beckett, as it’s filled with obvious, famous choices), I would elect this card as part of the Blurb Annex. The copywriter utilized everything at his or her disposal, creating a biography that is at once humorous and accurate, conveying both the hope and disappointment associated with the game. It’s an achievement in short-form prose.
“‘I’m always drawn to shiny objects,’ Hideki has said when discussing his favorite things. A scalpel is probably not what he had in mind. Last May, he went under the knife to repair his knee, missing six early weeks in the new phase of his career as an Expo. The injury took him away from the game he came to love as a child in Japan. His father worshipped the game, and most days would – as dads do in America – take his son to a park to play catch. It paid off, as Irabu eventually became credited with being the first Japanese pitcher to throw 95 mph in a professional game.”
-Hideki Irabu, 2001 Topps #234
1 comment:
You know how you can find packs of packs that should be worth a lot now, say 86 Topps, for a buck or 50 cents these days? I bought a pack the other day and could not resist the temptation and I ate the gum for a second.
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