I've taken a little break from adding 2024 Heritage and '75 buybacks so I can complete some small sets that have been overdue to be finished.
So that means there's not much of a preamble before we get into the countdown this time. Less for you to read on the holiday weekend!
Let's get to it:
180. Rick Reuschel (card 153)
The color borders and photo match incredibly well on this card, right down to Reuschel's reddish/brownish hair. Not a Cubs fans but they've got some good cards in this set.
179. Ken Singleton (card 125)
Another stellar color-matcher. The red-blue combo goes very well with the Expos. I don't know what Singleton is looking at -- UFO?
Great image of Ron Hodges appearing to be pounding his glove and exclaiming "put it here" to the pitcher.
177. John Mayberry (card 95)
John Mayberry was a big man when he played the game and you can just envision the ball flying off his bat here. Mayberry's smiling at the thought himself. Or maybe he's smiling because he just sent the position ball into orbit.
176. Mike Hegan (card 99)
Another back-swing photo that I like and the red-blue borders are the best.
See above. Earl Williams was a favorite of mine as a kid for reasons that only 9-year-old night owl would know. This is an old pic because the Yankees started playing in Shea Stadium in 1974 and that ain't Shea.
174. Dan Spillner (card 222)
As soon as I see this card I am in the summer of 1975. I pulled this card on a hot day. It would be a pleasing card if it wasn't so crazy colorful but thank goodness it is.
173. Merv Rettenmund (card 369)
Another big-time favorite card when I was a kid. I think it's the helmet and those spaceship stands in the background. "Merv Rettenmund" is quite the name to a newcomer to the sport, as I was in 1975, but I didn't bat an eye.
172. Ellie Rodriguez (card 285)
Ellie Rodriguez is making this catching pose work for all its worth, chatting up the photographer, it's really great.
171. Dick Lange (card 114)
One of the better looks of the Twin Buttes that you'll see on cardboard, it's a majestic card and Lange looks like he was shrunken down to fit into the frame. It's a rather unusual-looking card in this set.
170. Wilbur Wood (card 110)
Hey, it's a Wilbur Wood card for the second post in a row! Just a nice-looking shot and the borders match well, too.
169. Manny Mota (card 414)
One of the finer looks you'll get of Dodger Stadium in this set -- oh, heck, it's the finest.
168. Clyde Wright (card 408)
Clyde Wright is demonstrating the classic "pointing" pitching finish on this card. It's an old-school pose that was getting old-fashioned even in 1975, but I've always liked it.
167. 1974 World Series, Game 5 (card 465)
I have every right to place this card at the absolute bottom of the countdown, below the checklists. Had I watched this World Series live, maybe I would have. I mean my favorite player of all-time is pretty glum at the moment that picture was taken. But objectively, this is a cool World Series card that features a moment -- Joe Rudi's home run -- that was the moment of that game. Too many World Series cards do not do that.
166. Steve Ontiveros (card 483)
A rather artistic card. I don't really know what Steve Ontiveros is doing here with his head down, but I know I was attracted to the card. The appearance of Jerry Reuss in the background is a big bonus.
165. Ken Brett (card 250)
The first Brett to show up in the countdown, that's pretty good, both Brett brothers in the final 175 cards.
164. Dave Rader (card 31)
Hmmmmmm. Is this a cool card or a weird card? I've always thought it was cool. The super-close-ups in the 1974-76 Topps sets really appealed to me as a youngster and do now. Rader seems deep in thought about who knows what.
163. Luis Melendez (card 353)
Luis Melendez finely demonstrates the bat in midswing pose. It's a good shot, but we all know Melendez got to where he is on this countdown based on the cartoon on the back.
Well done, Luis Melendez.
That does it for another episode of the '75 worst-to-best countdown. Enjoy the weekend. But if you're one of those people with the extra loud cars/trucks/motorcycles, that wish isn't for you -- for you I hope it rains all the damn days.
Comments
P.S. The Rudi WS card is pretty cool too.
Turns out my area (Midland MI pop 40k) turned out three big league pitchers in the mid 70s. Lange. Jim Kern. Vern Rhule. On his 74 card, it says he lived in Freeland (right next door to me) and was a substitute teacher in the off-season.