When I completed the 1969 Topps set eight months ago , I was certain that I was finished with trying to build vintage sets. I had been through my share and I wasn't getting any younger and it wasn't getting any easier. That's still where I'm at -- not going to take on any other set big projects, nope, not doing it, not never, not never again. Still ... If I was to build a vintage set again, there is one that makes the most sense -- 1968 Topps is right there. Now, before you get all "but the Nolan Ryan rookie" on me, here is why this set makes sense to build: -- It's the next set in the line of complete Topps sets in my collection. You can go in either direction for that. The next set on the front end is 1993 Topps, which is far easier but also holds zero interest for me. 1994 is more interesting but not enough to leap over another year. So, the back end is 1968 and finishing that would wrap up 25 complete sets in a row for me. -- It woul...
There are a lot of baseball card poses that were common on cards when I was collecting as a youngster that have mostly disappeared from cardboard. One of them is the pitcher's "hands-over-head" wind-up pose. This pose used to appear on dozens of cards every year but it's been a long time since I've seen it in a current set. Maybe a one-off here and there. Pitchers mostly have scrapped the long, drawn-out wind-up and did so beginning with the 1970s, or so I'm told. But I just reviewed a small sampling of game footage from the 1970s and here are the pitchers that were using that wind-up in the videos I watched: Bruce Kison, Jerry Garvin, Steve Baker, Vida Blue, Jerry Koosman, Rudy May, Andy Hassler, Bob Knepper, Don Sutton, Dickie Noles, Jim Bibby, Eddie Solomon, Jim Rooker, Mike Cuellar, Don Robinson. Here are the ones who weren't: J.R. Richard, Jim Merritt, Steve Rogers. So it was still prevalent in the 1970s. Today it's still used...