Showing posts with label Richie Hebner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richie Hebner. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2024

OPC IMAGE VARIATIONS: 1977 RICHIE HEBNER

Good day all!

On the blog today, we take another closer look at an image variation between OPC and Topps, this time the 1977 cards for the "Gravedigger", Richie Hebner:

OPC version

Topps version

I'm particularly fond of the cards where OPC just airbrushed the image Topps used on their card into the new uni for their card, in this case going from the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Philadelphia Phillies.
Hebner played the bulk of his career with the Pittsburgh Pirates, with whom he came up to the Big Leagues, and had some solid seasons lost amid the years of the Roses, Stargells et al.
After putting in the first nine years of his career with the Pirates, Hebner signed as a Free Agent with the N.L. East rival Phillies in December of 1976, just in time for OPC to work their magic and airbrush the beauty you see here.
A solid player who'd go on to play 18 seasons under the Major League Sun, the third baseman hit as many as 25 homers, which happened in 1973, while also driving in as many as 82 runs, which he did for the Detroit Tigers in 1980.
By the time he retired in 1985 after a couple of seasons with the Chicago Cubs, he finished with a .276 batting average, with 1694 hits over 6144 at-bats in 1908 games, while also hitting 203 homers and driving in 890 runs.
Those numbers are actually pretty good considering the era he played in!
After his playing career, Hebner went on to coach, as well as do some managing in the Minors, all the way through the 2010 season at last check, a baseball lifer with an admirable Big League career.

Sunday, July 22, 2018

NICKNAMES OF THE 1970'S- RICHIE HEBNER, AKA "THE GRAVEDIGGER"

Here’s a fun card to add to my long-running “Nicknames of the 1970’s” series: a 1973 card for “The Gravedigger”, Richie Hebner, who put together a very nice 18-year career between 1968 and 1985:


He got the nickname because of his job (which players needed back then!) of working at a cemetery in the off-season that was run by his family.
Hebner played the bulk of his career with the Pittsburgh Pirates, with whom he came up to the Big Leagues, and had some solid seasons lost amid the years of the Roses, Stargells et al.
The third baseman hit as many as 25 homers, which happened in 1973, while also driving in as many as 82 runs, which he did for the Detroit Tigers in 1980.
By the time he retired in 1985 after a couple of seasons with the Chicago Cubs, he finished with a .276 batting average, with 1694 hits over 6144 at-bats in 1908 games, while also hitting 203 homers and driving in 890 runs.
Those numbers are actually pretty good considering the era he played in!
After his playing career, Hebner went on to coach, as well as do some managing in the Minors, all the way through the 2010 season at last check.

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