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I might watch

 
 
You may have heard that there is a new documentary out on artist Dick Perez, who is well-known for drawing the Diamond King cards for Donruss through the 1980s and 1990s.
 
I've seen the trailer for the movie and I might watch the whole documentary, but it's not appointment-viewing for me. "Diamond Kings" are a big part of childhood for collectors of a certain age and SABR has been hyping the project, but I've never been interested in the Diamond Kings.
 
I wrote about this once before, 13 years ago now, and my thoughts are still the same mostly. As a short recap, I first viewed Diamond Kings in 1982 as a 16-year-old when I bought packs of Donruss. I was instantly puzzled by seeing drawings on baseball cards, which had always been photos since I started collecting. I didn't like it, I didn't like the cards. They didn't seem like a full card to me.
 
I've come around a little since then, mostly by appreciating the first two editions of Diamond Kings, which were in 1982 and 1983. But the others don't interest me enough to collect them unless I'm trying to complete a whole set.
 
There's no questioning though that DKs became part of baseball card lore over the years, appearing year after year to kick off Donruss' sets. Inspired a bit by a mention of the Expos' Diamond Kings (and the lack of a Tim Wallach) over on the Tim Wallach blog, I decided to look at the Dodgers player featured each year of Diamond Kings.
 
In the documentary teaser, Dick Perez, who is the Baseball Hall of Fame's official artist, said the plan at the beginning was to feature the best player from each team with the sets. So let's see how well they did with the Dodgers.
 
 

1982: Steve Garvey
1981 Best Player: Fernando Valenzuela
 
Fernando Valenzuela was a nationwide sensation in 1981 and the Dodgers' best player. Steve Garvey, it could be argued, wasn't even the Dodgers' best position player that year they won the World Series. But he was the established star, so he was the first Dodger Diamond King.
 
 

1983: Fernando Valenzuela
1982 Best Player: Pedro Guerrero
 
No sophomore slump for Fernando in 1982, but the Dodgers' best player in 1982 was Pedro Guerrero.
 
 

1984: Pedro Guerrero
1983 Best Player: Pedro Guerrero
 
Got the right guy for the 1984 set, although seems like the Diamond Kings were a year behind at this point. This is the first Diamond Kings set with borders and like I mentioned in the previous DK post, I think these cards worked better with no borders. Border illustrations take away from the illustration itself.
 
 

1985: Mike Marshall
1984 Best Player: Alejandro Pena
 
Donruss focused on Marshall's team-high 21 home runs in 1984 but that's nothing to shout about. Starting pitcher Alejandro Pena led the league in ERA and threw four shutouts.
 
 

1986: Orel Hershiser
1985 Best Player: Pedro Guerrero had the best season of his career in 1985 but I can see not wanting to repeat subjects. Hershiser was also the talk of the team, going 19-3 and finishing third in the Cy voting.
 
 

1987: Steve Sax
1986 Best Player: Steve Sax batted .332 in more than 600 at-bats, finishing behind only Tim Raines in the NL batting race. It was between either him or 20-game winner Valenzuela and since Fernando already appeared, Sax is the wise choice. I don't know about that action inset drawing though.
 
 

1988 Bob Welch
1987 Best Player: Bob Welch. Only Guerrero could match him as far as the rest of the team.
 
 

1989: Kirk Gibson
1988 Best Player: Kirk Gibson.
 
No doubt that Kirk Gibson was the best of the Dodgers in '88, he and Hershiser got an otherwise average team a World Series title. This is around when I sense a dip in quality with the Diamond King art, or maybe it's those bizarre lightning bolts in the background.
 
 

1990: Willie Randolph
1989 Best Player: First, that's not a great Randolph depiction. Yes, it's much better than anything I could do, but I write for a living. Second, Willie Randolph being the Dodgers' best player sums up the disappointment of the 1989 season for L.A., which finished fourth. Orel Hershiser was still the Dodgers best guy but you saw him in 1986.
 
 

1991: Ramon Martinez
1990 Best Player: Probably Eddie Murray, but Ramon Martinez had a hell of a season and won 20 games.
 
This is my least favorite Dodger Diamond King by far. It looks shoddy in comparison to the early '80s DKs. I don't dislike Perez's artwork, I'm more confused about its appeal. But if every DK card looked like this, I'd sound like this.
 
 

1992: Brett Butler
1991 Best Player: Brett Butler is an easy pick. I'm not crazy about this card either.
 
This is the year that Diamond Kings met the 1990s. Instead of leading off the set as they had done for a decade, they were now an insert and that would continue through the rest of the '90s. I do not like Diamond Kings nearly enough to want to chase an insert.
 
 

1993: Eric Karros and Orel Hershiser
1992 Best Player: Terrible season. The Dodgers' best player in '92 was probably Brett Butler again. Hershiser lost more games than he won for the first time (but then again, every Dodger pitcher did that year). Neither of these illustrations look great.
 
The Dodgers and Brewers got two Diamond Kings this year, as I think separate ones were made for the Rookies of the Year. Karros won the NL award and Pat Listach won the AL award in '92.
 
 

1994: Mike Piazza
1993 Best Player: Mike Piazza. The Dodgers were on their second run of Rookies of the Year and Piazza was a no-brainer pick for this years version.
 
 

1995: Raul Mondesi
1994 Best Player: Best player was Piazza or Butler, but Mondesi won the Rookie of the Year so here you go.
 
This is where I am stopping. After this point, Donruss made Diamond Kings even more exclusive by numbering them. I still don't have the Dodgers from most of these years and like I said, they don't look good enough for me to care to look for them.
 
So I guess the documentary is in the same boat as the cards for me. Yeah if the card drops in my lap, I'll take it. Yeah, if I'm not doing anything, I'll watch it. It is about baseball after all.
 
But I don't know what all the fuss is about.

Comments

Doc Samson said…
Always loved Diamond Kings. One of the greatest subsets ever. It broke my heart when Donruss turned them into a short printed insert set. No wonder Donruss struggled in the 1990s.
I had never seen the 1995 DK before now and I really wish I hadn't. Grosstastic. The who concept is dumb and awful and the "art" is inaccurate and players should've sued him.
AdamE said…
You can rent or buy at Apple, Amazon, Google Play and Kinema, and if you send in your proof of purchase, you will get the whole set of Diamond King photos. Oh, and if you BUY the movie, you will automatically be entered to win all sorts of great prizes.

The above info is from Joe Posnanski, he wrote the narration for the documentary.
bryan was here said…
The Diamond Kings concept was neat for the first few years, but by the end of the 80s he was definitely phoning it in. Those 94s are using fonts later adopted by Fleer Ultra for their '97 sets and the '95s look like hot garbage. Yuck.
Anonymous said…
People who don’t even collect baseball cards love the film because Dick’s life is so inspiring. Maybe 1% of the film covers the actual Diamond King cards.
John Bateman said…
I think the concept of the Diamond Kings different players everywhere and not the best player from the previous year (I think this is what happened until when they became inserts)

Pete Rose was the first duplicate I believe, with his King of Kings card

The Tim Wallach miss was a surprise but the Expos seemed to have a lot of good players.
BillK21093 said…
Greg:

I saw a screening of the Diamond Kings documentary at the National last summer in Cleveland. It is well done and presents a real love for Baseball and the Art of Baseball. It is definitely worth the watch. Every baseball fan should enjoy it. I hope you take the time to give it a chance.
Nick Vossbrink said…
Has been interesting to see how many poeple have come out of the woodwork as being kind of blah about the DIamond Kings. I am admittedly in that boat as well although with a complication of them hitting me in the nostalgia feels even though I never loved them.

Will still probably watch the movie though.
Grant said…
Unrelated, and I'm sure you already know about this, but I read today that Ron Cey consigned his collection for an SCP auction:

https://www.sportscollectorsdaily.com/former-dodgers-stalwart-ron-cey-consigns-collection-to-scp-auctions/

Good luck in your bids!
Fuji said…
A. I was part of the Kickstarter card thing, so I was given an opportunity to watch the movie. Unfortunately I completely forgot. Kinda bummed about that.

B. Early 80's Diamond Kings are easily my favorite. I think my fondness for them is mainly based on nostalgia... but I do like some of the art too.

C. I broke down the A's and Padres DK's a few years ago. Like the Dodgers, the A's didn't get any repeat players from 1982 to 1991. But Gwynn got the nod twice for the Dodgers in 1985 and 1989. I wonder if any player ever received three DK's for a single franchise.
carlsonjok said…
I was out of the hobby all those years, so Diamond Kings holds no sway with me. And that 1990 Willie Randolph looks more like Levar Burton.
Stack22 said…
I was more or less done collecting by '95, beyond grabbing whatever Wallach's fell my way. Didn't realize they were still doing DK's in '95. Add this to the list of years I feel like Wallach was slighted.
Jafronius said…
Fun post. I had the same reaction as you when I first saw a DK card...I want pictures of players, not drawings.