I received this card, and several others from the 1988 Star Vero Beach Dodgers set, in the latest envelope from reader and trader Dave S.
I've known about this card for quite awhile and have always received conflicting information about it. Gordon Hershiser, the various stories went, was either related or not related to the much more well-known Orel Hershiser.
I didn't bother to look into it more, it's not like Gordie made the majors. So I assumed that it was just one of those coincidences that you come across in baseball every once in awhile.
Turns out my assumption was wrong. Gordon Hershiser is actually the younger brother of Orel Hershiser. He was drafted three years after his brother and made it as far as Double A in 1990. But the back of Gordie's card doesn't even bother to fill me in on that notable connection.
So, anyway, he's not one of the ballplayers with the distinctive name who is not related to another player with the same distinctive name.
For example, like this:
J.A. Happ and Ian Happ are not related -- at least not according to any publicly known information. J.A. is from Illinois. Ian is from Pennsylvania. They are the only "Happs" to play in major league baseball in the history of the league, and they came along at basically the same time.
That is so bizarre to me. But it's happened quite a bit. So much that it can't be a coincidence right? They must be related distantly somehow?
The first time I became aware of this phenomenon was in 1976. I had known about Astros shortstop Roger Metzger ever since I pulled his card out of pack of 1975 Topps. Then, a year later, someone named Butch Metzger starts making noise in the newspapers. He ends up sharing the Rookie of the Year award with the Mets' Pat Zachry. Roger and Butch must be related, right? Showing up so soon after each other?
Nope. Roger hails from Texas, Butch from California. Not that that means anything but there's nothing out there saying they are blood relatives. But for crying out loud, Roger played from 1970 to 1980 and Butch played from 1974 to 1978 and they are the only two MLB players ever named Metzger!!!
In 1981, a pitcher named Bob Stoddard arrived in the majors with the Seattle Mariners. I'm pretty sure I did a double-take right there in the bedroom reading my Sporting News. Did Tim Stoddard get traded to the Mariners?
I had known about Tim Stoddard since the late 1970s. He was a prominent player in the 1979 postseason. The guy was 6-7. You couldn't miss him. But this Bob Stoddard guy was just 6-1, and it turns out he's not related to Tim, again at least not according to any of the main baseball sites.
Oh, by the way, all of the Stoddards to play major league baseball appeared in the big leagues between 1975 and 1989, and they were named Tim and Bob. That's it! (OK, according to baseball-reference there was a guy just named "Stoddard," no first name, who played in 1875).
This one stunned me in 1984. I pulled the Onix Concepcion card out of one of the few packs of 1984 Donruss I bought that year (note that the top edge has yellowed). I had been following Davey Concepcion with the Reds ever since 1975 and it was the only time I had ever seen the Concepcion name. Now there was this guy named Onix, also a shortstop, who was not related to Davey! (But he is a cousin of Jose Lind).
Granted, Spanish surnames are different than English ones, so maybe there is a connection there somewhere, I'm just not up on that, but it kind of blew my mind in '84.
The one that everyone cites. For obvious reasons.
I was watching baseball peacefully for the first 10 years or so, fully confident for most of those years that Steve Ontiveros was an infielder for the Giants and the Cubs until 1980, then went to Japan to play for five years and then ... I open a pack of 1986 Topps and what's this? Steve Ontiveros is BACK????
You can't blame me for thinking he had unretired and become a pitcher.
Obviously it was a different Steve Ontiveros -- unrelated to the original Steve Ontiveros. No matter the similarities.
I mean stuff like this is just borderline freaky. Lance Blankenship I knew as a backup infielder for the A's during the late 1980s. Until he showed up, he was the only person I knew with the last name of Blankenship (this was long before "Mad Men").
But then in the very same Upper Deck set there is another player named Blankenship! No, they're not related! Just happen to have the same last name! The first time that last name has showed up in Major League Baseball in 70 years but, yeah, sure nothing weird about two guys named Blankenship both debuting in 1988 and claiming they aren't family.
And what about this? In the same set, on the same team, there are two guys named "McCutchen." I remember when everyone had to correct people who didn't realize that Andrew McCutchen didn't spell his name "McCutcheon" because when had you ever heard of someone spelling it "McCutchen"? Well, Daniel McCutchen had heard of spelling it "McCutchen," that's who! And he's his teammate for goodness sake!
How? How does this happen?
There are other examples. 1950s shortstop Don Blasingame and and early '70s pitcher Wade Blasingame. Not related. Jarret and Micah Hoffpauir (OK, they're distant cousins). Clay and Taylor Buchholtz (wow, they're distant cousins, too).
They're are several other examples, but I need to calm myself down after that, so here are some more late '80s Vero Beach prospects:
Jay Ray is like a Toronto-Tampa Bay series in Florida all in one name.
None of these guys other than David Hansen reached the majors.
And, no, Dave Hansen is not related to Ron Hansen or Craig Hansen. At least not the ones who played in the majors.
At least I don't think he is.
Comments
I think I remember seeing on the back of one of his cards that Orel Hershiser had a brother pitching in the Dodgers system.
https://www.comc.com/Cards,so,=Jeff+d~e2~80~99amico+2001+topps
Have you been to a Blue Jays game this year? Right now I'm watching the Yankees-Jays game on MLB.TV, played in Buffalo. Yanks are winning 3-2 and turned a triple play, as I'm sure you will be elated to know. :)
By the way... I just looked up Masahiro Yamamoto to see if he was Jordan's dad. Doesn't look like it (unless he changed his name to Larry).
There have been just 3 Ron... Johnson's in the MLB. All 3 played for the Royals -- Ronald Johnson (1982-83 Royals, 1984 Expos), Rondin Johnson (1986 Royals), & Rontrez Johnson (2003 Royals).
If you're interested in more details about him, you can check out a post I did on him when he retired.
At the same time Sabres had a goalie Roger Crozier, no relation to head coach Joe Crozier.
I discovered your blog about a month ago. Very enjoyable. Thank you.
Not quite the same thing, but arguably the two most valuable players on the 1996 Yankees world championship team were the only two Marianos to play major league baseball (Rivera and Duncan).
Here's another spooky one: One year after Mets manager Gil Hodges dies, the Mets call up a catcher named Ron Hodges. Up until that time, the only "Hodges" in MLB were a couple of wartime players who lasted only one year. And Gil and Ron weren't related!
"Oh, you can call me Ray or you can call me Jay, but you doesn't has to call me Johnson."
I also forgot James and Brian McCann, who were both major league catchers from 2014 through 2019. (Brian has been around before that; James is still playing.) I'm sure they are both in lots of sets.