Showing posts with label Rogodzinski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rogodzinski. Show all posts

Saturday, September 19, 2020

1975 Philadelphia Phillies Photo Cards


Number of Cards:  39
Card Size:  3 1/4" x 5 1/2"
Description:  As was the case with all Phillies photocards issued throughout the 1970s, these cards feature a black and white photo with the players' name below.  The cards are unnumbered.  The backs of the cards are blank and there's no indication on the cards themselves that they're from 1975.  Some of the cards contain blue facsimile autographs, as noted on the checklist below.

The Johnny Oates card shown above features an actual autograph and the original Oates card was distributed without an autograph - facsimile or legitimate.

How Distributed:  The cards were handed out to fans individually and supplied to the players in order to reply to fan mail or honor autograph requests.  I could be wrong, but I don't believe the cards were ever available in complete set form.

Complete Standard Checklist (Unnumbered, presented here alphabetically): 

1. Cy Acosta (auto)
2. Dick Allen
3. Mike Anderson
4. Alan Bannister (auto)
5. Carroll Beringer CO (auto)  
6. Bob Boone (auto)
7. Larry Bowa
8. Ollie Brown (auto)
9. Steve Carlton
10. Dave Cash (auto)
11. Larry Christenson (auto)
12. Larry Cox (auto)
13. Billy DeMars CO (auto)

14. Jim Essian (auto)
15. Gene Garber
16. Don Hahn
17. Terry Harmon
18. Tom Hilgendorf
19. Joe Hoerner
20. Tommy Hutton
21. Jay Johnstone (portrait)  
22. Jim Lonborg
23. Greg Luzinski
24. Garry Maddox (auto)
25. Jerry Martin
26. Tim McCarver

27. Tug McGraw
28. Willie Montanez (auto)
29. John Oates
30. Danny Ozark MG (auto)
31. Ray Rippelmeyer CO (auto)  
32. Mike Rogodzinski
33. Dick Ruthven
34. Mike Schmidt
35. Ron Schueler (auto)
36. Tony Taylor

37. Wayne Twitchell
38. Tom Underwood (auto)
39. Bobby Wine CO (auto)

One and Only Phillies Baseball Card (3):  Acosta, Bannister, Hahn
First Appearance in Phillies Team Issued Set (6):  Hilgendorf, Maddox, Martin, McGraw, Oates, Underwood
Returning Players in Phillies Team Issued Set (25):  Allen, Anderson, Boone, Bowa, Brown, Carlton, Cash, Christenson, Cox, Essian, Garber, Harmon, Hoerner, Hutton, Johnstone, Lonborg, Luzinski, McCarver, Montanez, Rogodzinski, Ruthven, Schmidt, Schueler, Taylor, Twitchell

This set is the only hope of finding Phillies baseball cards for Acosta, Bannister and Hahn.  Acosta's card is particularly interesting to me, as his 1973, 1974 and 1975 Topps cards feature a relatively clean cut pitcher while his card in this set features '70s hair gone wild.

Manager (1):  Ozark
Coaches (4):  Beringer, DeMars, Rippelmeyer, Wine
Phillie Phanatic (0)
Broadcasters (0)
Commemorative Cards (0)

Surprises:  The aforementioned Acosta is a bit of a surprise here.  He made the team's opening day roster, but only appeared in six games before getting released.  The scan below is a good reference guide for this set, and this is from a 1975 tri-fold brochure that has the team's full roster and schedule on the back.  

There are six players with cards in the set not included in the composite photo below - (1) Garry Maddox, acquired from the Giants on May 4th for Willie Montanez, (2) Dick Allen and (3) Johnny Oates, acquired from the Braves on May 7th, (4) Tim McCarver signed as a free agent on July 1st and finally (5) Jerry Martin and (6) Mike Rogodzinski who played their first games for the club on May 27th and June 15th, respectively.

Omissions:  This set is a fairly complete representation of the 1975 Phillies.  There are five players who briefly played for the team who are not in the set - Wayne Simpson (5 games), John Montague (3 games), Randy Lerch (3 games), Larry Fritz and Ron Clark (both 1 game).

Variations/Rarities:  According to the set's entry at The Trading Card Database, there's a Johnstone variation featuring him kneeling in lieu of the standard portrait photo.  There are also the following variations either including or excluding the blue facsimile autograph
Photo Variation
1. Jay Johnstone (kneeling)  

Facsimile Auto Variations
1. Dave Cash (no auto)
2. Tommy Hutton (auto)


Trivia:  The Beckett.com entry for this set lists only 31 cards and the set's entry at The Trading Card Database lists 36 cards (including the Johnstone variation), omitting the Essian, Hahn, Montanez and Rogodzinski cards.

Resources:  The Trading Card DatabaseBeckett.com; Phillies collector Rick (@rickphils)

This set was originally featured in a post back in November 2014, and I'm going to slowly go through some of these team issued set posts and update them with new information gleaned (if any) over the past five years.


Thursday, June 27, 2013

1976 SSPC Phillies - Part Two

The only reason I'm breaking this team set up into two galleries is because of Blogger's 20-label limit on posts.  It would have bugged me not to label some of the players featured.  Part one was published yesterday.

Jerry Martin received his "rookie" card in this set, as he didn't appear in a Topps set until 1977.  Wayne Simpson and Erskine Thomason receive their sole Phillies cards, even though they appear in the uniforms of the Triple-A Toledo Mud Hens, the Phillies top farm club in 1975.  Simpson appeared in 7 games for the 1975 Phillies, while Thomason pitched just one inning for the 1974 squad.

Dick Ruthven isn't in this gallery, even though his 1976 SSPC card features him wearing a Phillies uniform.  The back of Ruthven's card indicates he had moved on to the Atlanta Braves.

#470 Mike Schmidt
#471 Bob Boone
#472 Tom Hutton
#473 Dick Allen
#474 Tony Taylor

#475 Jerry Martin
#476 Danny Ozark MG
#599 Wayne Simpson
#600 Erskine Thomason
#607 Mike Rogodzinski

Sunday, July 17, 2011

1974 Topps Phillies

1974 Topps #283, #69, #515 and #198
Santa was very, very good to me in 1986, not only bringing me the G.I. Joe stuff I so desperately wanted, but also leaving a surprise box under the tree containing a starter set of 1974 Topps baseball cards.  My Dad and I made quick work of the set, finding the last two cards we needed in February 1988 in the now long-gone Collector's Corner in Williamstown, New Jersey.

The 1974 Topps set always seemed slightly mysterious to me, and I still think it looks much older than it actually is.  I always thought the color combinations Topps used to represent some of the teams was odd as there are a lot of blacks, blues, reds and pinks for teams having nothing to do with those colors.  I also loved the "young" looking cards of several Phillies who would become my heroes in the early '80s.

The Set
1974 Topps #255 (Back)
Number of cards in the set:  There are 660 cards again in the base set, and for the first time ever Topps added a 44-card Traded set.  There was also a set of 24 unnumbered red-bordered team checklist cards included as inserts in packs.  Finally, if you're going after a "master" set, you'll need to track down the 15 San Diego Padres cards available with the team designation of "Wahington, Nat'l League," as Topps had prepared these cards in line with the rumor that the Padres were about to be moved to D.C.  For the first time in its history, Topps issued the entire set all at once.  
My very brief thoughts on the set:  It's actually one of my favorites.  My Dad and I collected every single one of the cards from the 1974, 1975 and 1976 Topps sets together.  (Except for the cards Santa brought, of course.)
Notable competition:  Johnny Pro Enterprises released a 12-card set of Phillies cards, designed to be punched out of their cardboard backgrounds and stood up.

1974 Phillies
Record and finish:  The Phillies finished with a record of 80-82, in third place in the East, eight games behind the Pirates.  It's easy to see the parallels between the Phillies teams of the early '70s and the mid '00s.  Both groups were planting the seeds of success that would manifest in just a few short years.
Key players:  Something clicked for third baseman Mike Schmidt, as he hit .282 with 116 RBIs and led the league with 36 home runs.  Center fielder Del Unser (.264, 11 home runs, 61 RBIs) and first baseman Willie Montanez (.304, 7 home runs, 79 RBIs) also provided steady offense.  New second baseman Dave Cash and his .300 batting average must have rubbed off on shortstop Larry Bowa, as Bowa raised his average up to .275.  The pitching staff was led by Steve Carlton (16-13, 3.22 ERA, 240 strikeouts) and Jim Lonborg (17-13, 3.21 ERA).
Key events:  In the offseason, General Manager Paul Owens acquired Cash from the Pirates for Ken Brett.  Cash provided the leadership and positive attitude that Owens thought had been lacking the last few years.

1974 Topps #131, #255, #360 and #619
1974 Phillies in 1974 Topps
Cards needed for a complete team set: There are 28 Phillies cards in the base 1974 Topps set and 3 more Phillies cards in the Traded set for a total of 31 cards.  When I started this project, I decided I'd include the Traded series cards in the tally of total Phillies cards as these are extensions of the regular set and critical for any team set collector.  If you're keeping score at home, that's 152 Topps Phillies cards from the '70s and 620 Topps Phillies cards overall.
Who’s in:

  • Cards of the eight starting position players - 8 cards
#131 Bob Boone (c), #515 Willie Montanez (1b), #198 Dave Cash (2b), #255 Larry Bowa (ss), #283 Mike Schmidt (3b), #360 Greg Luzinski (lf), #69 Del Unser (cf), #619 Mike Anderson (rf)
  • Cards of the starting pitching rotation - 5 cards
#95 Steve Carlton, #342 Jim Lonborg, #47 Dick Ruthven, #544T Ron Schueler, #419 Wayne Twitchell

1974 Topps #95, #342, #47 and 1974 Topps Traded #544T
  • Base cards of other players who played with the Phillies in 1974 - 9 cards
#149 Mac Scarce, #174 Bill Robinson, #214 Billy Grabarkewitz, #443 Tom Hutton, #492 Mike Rogodzinski, #587 Larry Christenson, #632 George Culver, #642 Terry Harmon, #534T Eddie Watt
  • Phillies appearing on multi-player "Rookie" cards - 2 cards
#599 Ron Diorio with Dave Freisleben (Padres), Frank Riccelli (Giants) and Greg Shanahan (Dodgers), #608 Mike Wallace with Bob Apodaca (Mets), Dick Baney (Reds) and John D'Acquisto (Giants)
  • Base cards of players who didn't play with the Phillies in 1974 - 4 cards
#23 Craig Robinson, #383 Barry Lersch, #538 Cesar Tover, #564 Mike Ryan
  • Base cards of players who never played with the Phillies - 1 card, #139T Aurelio Monteagudo
  • Manager and coaches card - 1 card, #119
Featuring the same guys as the 1973 manager and coaches card - Manager Danny Ozark with coaches Ray Rippelmeyer, Bobby Wine, Carroll Beringer and Billy DeMars
  • Team card - 1 card, #383
Who’s out:  Reserve outfielder Jay Johnstone was omitted from the set completely, having played in just 23 games in 1973 with the Oakland A's.  Tony Taylor returned to the team after a three year stint in Detroit, but he doesn't appear in the set.  Relievers Jesus Hernaiz (27 games, 1 save) and Frank Linzy (22 games) were also omitted.
Phillies on other teams:  Given the release of this set in all one series, there are quite a few 1974 Phillies appearing on other teams in the 1974 Topps set - #431 Gene Garber (Royals), #506 Ed Farmer (Tigers), #534 Eddie Watt (Orioles), #544 Ron Schueler (Braves) and #625 Ollie Brown (Angels).  Reliever Pete Richert appears in the base set (#348) with the Dodgers and in the Traded series (#348T) with the Cardinals.  Richert was traded to the Cardinals in December 1973 and purchased by the Phils in June 1974.
What’s he doing here:  In December 1973, Monteagudo was shipped to the Phillies as the player to be named later in the Denny Doyle for Grabarkewitz swap.  He never played a game for the Phillies, or any of their minor league affiliates, yet Topps featured him in its Traded series.
Cards that never were candidates:  Johnstone, Taylor, Hernaiz and Linzy.
Favorite Phillies card:  I've always liked Bowa's card as it looks as if he's being shot out of a cannon from home plate.  The Carlton card has long been a favorite too, given Lefy's intense glare and the blurry Veterans Stadium outfield wall in the background.

1974 Topps #492, 2004 Topps All-Time Fan Favorites #20,
2005 Topps All-Time Fan Favorites #109, 2007 Multi-Ad Reading Phillies #14
Other Stuff
Recycled:  The 2007 Reading Phillies team set pays tribute to the original with its design.  Over at the Dick Allen Hall of Fame, I love the series of Familiar Faces/Strange Places series also utilizing the 1974 Topps design.  And the 2010 Chachi cards used the design for each of the 74 cards in the set.
Blogs/Websites:  As evidence of the set's popularity among collectors, there are two excellent blogs out there chronicling the set - 1974 Topps - Pennant Fever and the 1974 Topps Set blog.
Did You Know?:  Among the 13 of you who voted, the Mike Schmidt rookie card will now be known as the best 1973 Topps Phillies card.  Schmidt's card received nine votes, Luzinski's three and Carlton's one.  The 1973 Topps Willie Montanez card didn't receive any votes.