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The kings of the '80s

  
More than five years ago, I wrote a post titled "The Kings of the '70s" in which I determined which players had their own Topps cards for every year of the 1970s -- 1970 through 1979.
 
I've wanted to do the same for the 1980s ever since I wrote that post. I realized doing the '70s post that while I adore that decade as the one in which I discovered baseball and I have great fondness for the players from that time, I don't know many of those players' earlier history. For instance, I never knew Woodie Fryman as a Tiger. He was an Expo! Lou Piniella was a Royal? No way, he was a nasty Yankee!
 
Diving into all the players with a Topps card for every year of the '80s would truly cover all the players I knew -- from the start of their career til the end of the 1980s. Guys who started mid-1970s -- think Keith Hernandez -- were there through the entire '80s.
 
Like when compiling the '70s list, I was surprised by the number of players who received a card every year of the '80s. The first guys who spring to mind are Rickey Henderson, George Brett, Mike Schmidt, Andre Dawson and the like.
 
 

But there are plenty of players who don't spring to mind or who are even lost to the passage of time who were there for every single year of the 1980s, guys like Jim Clancy, Steve Trout, Mark Clear, Dwayne Murphy, Mike LaCoss and Ron Hassey.
 
You might be interested to know whether any of the players who appeared on a card every year of the 1970s also appeared on every card of the 1980s.
 
I found three.
 

Tommy John
Pete Rose
Nolan Ryan 
 
Maybe some would eliminate Rose because he didn't appear as a player late in the 1980s but I count it.
 
In total I found 86 players who showed up every year in Topps. I disregarded prospect cards, they must have had a solo card each of those years. Like last time, I researched this very informally. I'm not writing a program to figure out this stuff. It's definitely possible I missed a few names. Last time I did this I came up with 87 names and it turned out there were 98 in total.
 
So if you see a missing name mention it in the comments.* I didn't miss it on purpose. There's a lot to this blogging -- like for instance a recent browser update caused me to have to save images two or three times per image before uploading. Sweet!
 
But enough crabbing. Here's the list:
 
Doyle Alexander 
Neil Allen 
Tony Armas 
Alan Ashby 
Floyd Bannister
Don Baylor
Buddy Bell 
Bert Blyleven
Bob Boone
Tom Brookens
George Brett 
John Candelaria 
Gary Carter
Rick Cerone 
Jim Clancy 
Jack Clark 
Mark Clear 
Danny Darwin 
Andre Dawson 
Rick Dempsey 

Bo Diaz 
Brian Downing 
Dennis Eckesley 
Dwight Evans 
Carlton Fisk
Mike Flanagan 
Bob Forsch 
Jim Gantner 
Rich Gossage 
Alfredo Griffin 
Greg Gross 
Ron Guidry
Ron Hassey
Mike Heath 
Rickey Henderson 
Keith Hernandez
  
 
Willie/Guillermo Hernandez
Rick Honeycutt 
Bob Horner 
Charlie Hough 
Tommy John 
Terry Kennedy 
Bob Knepper 
Mike Krukow 
Mike LaCoss 
Carney Lansford 
Chet Lemon 
Jeffrey Leonard 
Fred Lynn 
Denny Martinez 
Lee Mazzilli
Paul Molitor 
Jack Morris
Dwayne Murphy
Dale Murphy 
Eddie Murray 
 Ken Oberkfell
Dave Parker 
Lance Parrish
Larry Parrish 
 
 
Terry Puhl 
Willie Randolph 
Jerry Reuss 
Rick Rhoden 
Jim Rice 
Don Robinson
Pete Rose 
Nolan Ryan 
Scott Sanderson 
Mike Schmidt 
Ozzie Smith 
Chris Speier 
Bob Stanley 
Dave Stieb 
Jim Sundberg 

 
 
Rick Sutcliffe 
Bruce Sutter 
Frank Tanana 
Garry Templeton 
Alan Trammell 
Alex Trevino 
Manny Trillo 
Steve Trout 
Claudell Washington 
Lou Whitaker 
Frank White 
Willie Wilson 
Dave Winfield 
Joel Youngblood 
Robin Yount  
 
Those are my guys. Once the '90s started, my players started cycling out and by the middle of that decade, my interest was waning. Not a surprise. Nobody from when I started watching baseball was left.
 
The kings were gone. And nobody who has arrived since has meant as much. 
 
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*The list has been updated with the four names mentioned in the comments, so the total is now 90. (I'm nt including the box bottom guys). I'll update again as other names pop up. 

Comments

robbyt said…
Tom Brookens and Lance Parrish
Why is it Morris, Jack?

This is a fun list and I definitely recognize most of the name as this was when I was in my heydey of childhood and early teen years when baseball and baseball cards, Twinkies and Zebra Cakes, recording songs on cassette off the radio and having Call Waiting were more important than anything else.
John Bateman said…
Don't remember the 70s post will have to go back and read it.

Beside Lance Parrish (did you mean him rather than Larry) and Jack Morris, - A quick scan of the 89 set (easier to work backwards) produced Floyd Bannister
Kin said…
Enjoyed this. The first name that came to mind for me was Dale Murphy. Checked out your 1970s post too. Fun stuff!
night owl said…
Both Larry and Lance Parrish belong on the list. Morris' name just didn't get transposed when I was alphabetizing them. I'll add Bannister when I update the post tomorrow.
Old Cards said…
Even as a 60's child, I remember most of these guys. I also checked out your 70s post which I am sure I read back then. Counting Rose definitely makes sense.
bryan was here said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
Don said…
Darrell Evans may need an asterisk. He does not have a regular 89 card but has a box bottom cards and is in the traded set that year.
RJ Sahl said…
Really creative list. That must have taken a lot of research. Enjoy the hobby all!
Fuji said…
Great post. I wasn't collecting back in 1980, but I was ripping open packs of Topps the rest of the decade so all of these names are familiar and bring back memories.
Jimetal7212 said…
Love getting awaken to a Dewey card front and center. Bill Buckner gets the same asterisk treatment and Darrell Evans.
Jason T. Carter said…
My first thought was that you missed Ron Oester. He had a 1979 prospects card but was omitted from the 1980 set. I guess I'll need to make a custom... when I have time.
Brett Alan said…
Just for fun, I chose the all-star team from this list (in order of postion):

Gary Carter
Eddie Murray
Paul Molitor
Ozzie Smith
Mike Schmidt
Rickey Henderson
Andre Dawson
Dave Winfield
Nolan Ryan

Bruce Sutter can be the closer. If we're doing DH George Brett and Jim Rice can platoon. Hall of Famers all. And since Topps didn't do manager cards throughout the decade I guess Pete Rose is the player-manager. Would Whitey Herzog have had a 1980 card if there were manager cards in that set? He managed the Royals in 1979, lost his job after the season, and took over the Cardinals during the 1980 season.
POISON75 said…
If you included managers the only 2 would have been Sparky Anderson & Tommy Lasorda they had cards from 1980 through 1989
Anonymous said…
Don Sutton fits in the same category as Darrell Evans. He doesn’t have a base card in 1989 Topps but he does have a 1989 Topps box bottom card to supplement his run of regular 1980-1989 Topps cards.
Don said…
Add Kent Tekulve to the asterisk list. He also has a box bottom cards in 89 but no card in the base set.
Nick Vossbrink said…
Giants loved old guys like this and the 89 team was full of them (Gossage, Kennedy, Knepper, Krukow, LaCoss, Oberkfell, Reuschel (who I discovered has no 1983 cards), Don Robinson, and Speier all had 1980T cards). Caveman is the only one who slipped through your research though.
Jafronius said…
Fun post, thanks for the research!