Wednesday, January 26, 2011

1967 Topps Steve Carlton St. Louis Cardinals Phillies Hall of Famer

Today's entry for my collection of 1967 Topps Autographed Baseball cards is one of the greatest left handed pitchers of all-time. The card is the Hall of Famer Steve Carlton of the St. Louis Cardinals. Card number 146 in the 1967 Topps Baseball set of 609 cards. As of January 26, 2011, I have accumulated 515 different autographs in the 1967 set.

Mr. Carlton signed my card on April 25, 2009 at the Moeller High School baseball card show in Cincinnati, Ohio. "Lefty" took the time to talk to me as well during the autograph and was a class gentleman. Steve was gracious enough to sign this card for me with a beautiful blue sharpie autograph. Even though he threw left handed, he signs his name with his right hand, see the picture below. Thank you Mr. Carlton.

Steve "Lefty" Carlton pitched 24 seasons in the Major Leagues from 1965 to 1988. The first 7 seasons, Steve played for the St. Louis Cardinals and then was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies in 1972. Considered one of the most lopsided trades in history; Steve became a huge star with the Phillies, winning the first of his four Cy Young Awards that same season, by winning 27 games. That total was 46% of the team's wins, which is still a major league record. Steve also pitched for the Giants, White Sox, Indians and Twins towards the end of his career. 

Steve Carlton's career statistics include 329 wins versus 244 losses, a 3.22 earned run average, 4,136 strikeouts (most all-time by a left-handed pitcher when he retired), 254 complete games and 55 shutouts. He was named to the National League All-Star teams 10 times, won the Cy Young Award 4 times and won two World Series rings, 1967 with the Cardinals and 1980 with the Phillies. Carlton was elected into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1994 on the first ballot with 95.8% of the vote and has his number 32 retired by the Phillies. Steve was also a good hitter and was used often in a pinch hitting role. He hit 13 home runs and drove in 140 runs during his career while batting .201. A dubious record that Steve Carlton also owns is the record for career balks with 90, which is double his next closest pitcher, Bob Welch. On the postive side, Steve owns the record with 144 pick-offs by a pitcher, which is 62 more than the closest person, Jerry Koosman.

To learn more about Steve Carlton, read his biography at http://www.carlton32.com/pages/bio.html


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Thursday, January 20, 2011

1967 Topps Bobby Wine Philadelphia Phillies

Today's entry in my 1967 Topps Autographed baseball card collection is a player who had a 12 year career as the definitive light hitting shortstop then went on to a long career as a coach and scout. It is Bobby "Wino" Wine, shortstop for the Philadelphia Phillies. Card number #466 in the 1967 Topps Baseball card set of 609 subjects.

The autographed was obtained through the mail after sending Mr. Wine the card on September 6, 2009 to his home in Pennsylvania. Four hundred ninety-nine days later, I received the card back signed with a black ink pen. Thank you, Mr. Wine, it was worth the wait. As of January 20, 2011, I have accumulated 515 different signatures in my collection.

During Bobby Wine's 12 year career, he played in 1164 games with .215 batting average, 30 home runs, 268 runs batted in and 682 hits. His career started in 1960 with the Phillies and played there until 1968 when he was traded to the expansion Montreal Expos. He played for the Expos until 1972. Bobby was awarded the Gold Glove in 1963 and set a record for double plays in a season (137) in 1970 with the Expos. After retiring from playing, Bobby went into coaching back with the Phillies. From 1973 to 1983, Bobby was a fixture on a team through the lean years to the World Series Championship in 1980. After the Phillies, Bobby coached for the Atlanta Braves and was named interim manager for the end of the 1985 season. He also spent four years as a coach for the New York Mets. A long time friend and confidant to Braves manager Bobby Cox, Wine was very influential during the Braves long run of division winning teams from the 1990's and 2000's.

To learn more about Bobby Wine, check out his biography at wikipedia.org.

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