just a quick post today to share two more complete pages in my quest to finish the 1955 bowman set.
here is sheet number 10, cards 73 through 80
and here are the backs:we get an extra oriole on the page, or is it a bonus athletic? the checklist seems to be less attentive to teammate matching as we progress, but three out of four rows isn't bad.
i can really appreciate what eddie yost has to say on the back of his card as part of his advice to youngsters. "dreams plus dreams equal dreams, but dreams plus action equal success". i had a therapist at one point say the same sort of thing - "thought without action is fantasy". words to ponder for sure.
here is sheet number 11, cards 81 through 88:and here are the backs:
again, we have just one set of mismatched teammates.
again, we have just one set of mismatched teammates.
most of the cards feature biographical information, but lee walls and steve bilko offer some personal thoughts which are always fun to read.
walls counts his biggest thrill in baseball as hitting a pinch-hit triple off of robin roberts when he was 17. walls did indeed hit a pinch-hit triple off of robin roberts as a rookie in 1952, but he was 19 at the time. the card back has his birth year correct (or at least it matches what is in baseball reference's database) as 1933 and he didn't debut until 1952. i find it interesting that walls would remember it less than three years later as being five years ago.
as for bilko, another future dodger and a pacific coast league legend, he has a lot to say, including a reference to "the catch" by willie mays in the 1954 world series and that lee walls got his pinch-hit triple off of the best pitcher in the game.
Definitely a unique card design.
ReplyDeleteSolid design... that looks really good together in these 8-pocket pages. Just noticed the card number in the glove. That's pretty cool.
ReplyDeleteI imagine someone at Bowman embellished a lot of those personal narratives. I assume the purely inspirational ones are completely ghostwritten. But even something like Walls, maybe someone at Bowman decided 17 would be more interesting than 19.
ReplyDeleteIt makes sense to me now that you pointed it out that these are likely edited using shorter responses from the players. I once saw a ttm reply from Bobby Doerr where the question was around playing in Fenway and being in awe of the history and environment and his response was “yes”. I could write a paragraph around that response given the question.
DeleteThat's always been my problem, too many dreams and not enough action :(
ReplyDelete