Anyways... I figured it would be fun to read up on #42 and see if I could connect him with my favorite player of all-time... Mr. Anthony Keith Gwynn Sr.
So let's get it started...
So let's get it started...
1956 Topps #30
On Sunday, September 30th, 1956... Jackie Robinson hit a home run in his final regular season MLB game against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Standing out in right field for the Pirates was a twenty-two year old Puerto Rican by the name of Roberto Clemente. Two weeks before Robinson passed away, Roberto Clemente played in his final MLB game against the Cincinnati Reds and The Big Red Machine in Game 5 of the 1972 NLCS.
The Reds were down by a run heading into the bottom of the 9th, but Johnny Bench led off the inning with a home run to tie the game. Later in the inning... they scored another run to end the Pirates' season.
Johnny Bench hit 389 home runs during his seventeen year career. Twelve of those home runs were hit off of Don Sutton. And twelve more were hit off of my favorite pitcher growing up... Steve Carlton. That's the most home runs Lefty gave up to any single batter during his career.
But don't let those twelve home runs give you the wrong idea. Carlton was one of the best pitchers of his era. In fact in 1982, he became the first pitcher in MLB history to win four Cy Young Awards.
Thirteen years later... another favorite pitcher of mine... Mr. Greg Maddux became the 2nd guy to win four Cy Young Awards. Only Maddux accomplished the feat in four consecutive years.
And connecting the last link in this game of Six Degrees of Separation... is my favorite player of all-time. How are Greg and Tony connected? Well... they both played for the San Diego Padres... but not at the same time. They started three MLB All-Star Games together, but that's kind of a stretch. I'm a huge fan of both of these guys and collect both of these guys' cards... but that's not necessarily a baseball link.
So let's go with this very cool statistic. The Professor struck out 3,371 batters over his twenty-three season career and faced Mr. Padre one hundred seven times. Guess how many times Gwynn struck out. Go ahead. Guess. If you said "zero"... pat yourself on the back.
Gwynn collected thirty-nine hits, drew eleven walks, and had a career batting average of .415 against Maddux. Impressive, no?
Well there you have it. Jackie Robinson to Tony Gwynn. It's amazing how much information has been documented on baseball-reference.org. I had a lot of fun researching this post. There's just so much interesting baseball trivia out there. My goal is to turn this into a series, which will give me a chance to show off some cards, while learning a little bit about the sport we all love.
If so... leave a link to your post down below. I'd love to read some of the connections you produce and I'm sure others would too. C'mon... who doesn't love a little Blog-Bat-Around?
Let me guess... you need an incentive. Okay. Let's turn this into a contest.
Everyone who participates gets one entry. If you mention this contest in your post, I'll give you an extra entry. The prize? How about a small flat rate shipping box filled with baseball cards and wax packs? And if we can get 20 participants... I'll award two prizes.
Since a lot of us are on tight schedules... I'll run the contest throughout the month of February. That gives you guys a little over three weeks to produce a post.
Happy Thursday and sayonara!
The Reds were down by a run heading into the bottom of the 9th, but Johnny Bench led off the inning with a home run to tie the game. Later in the inning... they scored another run to end the Pirates' season.
Johnny Bench hit 389 home runs during his seventeen year career. Twelve of those home runs were hit off of Don Sutton. And twelve more were hit off of my favorite pitcher growing up... Steve Carlton. That's the most home runs Lefty gave up to any single batter during his career.
1982 Topps #481
But don't let those twelve home runs give you the wrong idea. Carlton was one of the best pitchers of his era. In fact in 1982, he became the first pitcher in MLB history to win four Cy Young Awards.
1995 Topps Cyberstats #158
Thirteen years later... another favorite pitcher of mine... Mr. Greg Maddux became the 2nd guy to win four Cy Young Awards. Only Maddux accomplished the feat in four consecutive years.
2002 Topps #99
And connecting the last link in this game of Six Degrees of Separation... is my favorite player of all-time. How are Greg and Tony connected? Well... they both played for the San Diego Padres... but not at the same time. They started three MLB All-Star Games together, but that's kind of a stretch. I'm a huge fan of both of these guys and collect both of these guys' cards... but that's not necessarily a baseball link.
So let's go with this very cool statistic. The Professor struck out 3,371 batters over his twenty-three season career and faced Mr. Padre one hundred seven times. Guess how many times Gwynn struck out. Go ahead. Guess. If you said "zero"... pat yourself on the back.
Gwynn collected thirty-nine hits, drew eleven walks, and had a career batting average of .415 against Maddux. Impressive, no?
Well there you have it. Jackie Robinson to Tony Gwynn. It's amazing how much information has been documented on baseball-reference.org. I had a lot of fun researching this post. There's just so much interesting baseball trivia out there. My goal is to turn this into a series, which will give me a chance to show off some cards, while learning a little bit about the sport we all love.
Anyone else up to the challenge?
If so... leave a link to your post down below. I'd love to read some of the connections you produce and I'm sure others would too. C'mon... who doesn't love a little Blog-Bat-Around?
Let me guess... you need an incentive. Okay. Let's turn this into a contest.
Everyone who participates gets one entry. If you mention this contest in your post, I'll give you an extra entry. The prize? How about a small flat rate shipping box filled with baseball cards and wax packs? And if we can get 20 participants... I'll award two prizes.
Since a lot of us are on tight schedules... I'll run the contest throughout the month of February. That gives you guys a little over three weeks to produce a post.
Happy Thursday and sayonara!
11 comments:
Awesome work Fuji, really enjoyed this post!
It does sound like a challenge. We'll see. and hey there's an extra day this month.
Great post! 0 strikeouts in over 100 plate appearances is impressive enough against any major league pitcher, but against Maddux? it just boggles the mind. I wonder which guy got the benefit of the doubt from the umpire on borderline strikes?
As a blogger who knows writer's block all to well, I dig this idea.
I hope it'll be a contest, but it'll be fun to try either way.
This could turn into a series. Try to connect any two players.
Might have to become a regular poster!
Actually, we can make the link in three moves:
1. Jackie Robinson played with Roger Craig for the 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers
2. Roger Craig played with Rick Wise for the 1966 Philadelphia Phillies
3. Rick Wise played with Tony Gwynn for the 1982 San Diego Padres
Lest you think I am some genius, Baseball Reference has a feature they call the Oracle of Baseball that does the whole Kevin Bacon thing.
http://www.baseball-reference.com/oracle/link.cgi?n1=robinja02&n2=gwynnto01
Good idea! I decided to do one:
http://dawgdaycards.blogspot.ca/2016/02/six-degrees-fuji-challenge.html
Great idea hope I can get one out by end of the month. Would be worth it to win just to get a Fuji card :-)
shoeboxlegends - thanks... hopefully others will join in on the action
john miller - thank goodness for leap year!
brian - great question. two first ballot hall of famers... not sure who'd get the call.
stealing home - do it bro! the more the merrier.
gca - i hope you do. thinking about making it a series myself
carlsonjok - yeah, i remember seeing that feature a while back. but i'm glad i didn't use it this time around. i learned a few cool things during the writing process.
angus - thanks for participating. you did a great job!
steve - i'll send you one of my cards either way... but i really hope you'll write up a post.
Hope it's not too late - here's my 6 degrees post:
http://alltradebait.blogspot.com/2016/02/six-degrees-of-blogging-separation.html
This was a challenge, but mission accomplished: http://1975baseballcards.com/1975-baseballs-six-degrees-of-separation-fuji-style/
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