(I was just realizing that I posted more than 40 times last month. I hadn't posted that much since last May and haven't been consistently above 40 since 2011. What's that mean? I don't know. But don't get used to it. Time for Cardboard Appreciation. This is the 178th in a series): Don Reynolds was cheated. He wasn't cheated in the way that you would think. It's not that he didn't get a shot at a long major league career or that his younger brother, Harold Reynolds, became much more well-known, or that his big-league career was done by the time Harold made the pros. It's that I never had the chance to worship him in cardboard form. This is the only Topps card of Don Reynolds. It's No. 292 in the set. I received this card a couple of weeks ago in a package of 1979 Topps, which you will read about in the next post. When I shuffled through the cards and came across this one, I stopped as I often do when seeing a card that is not cataloge...
Up all hours talking baseball, cardboard & collecting