May 25, 2013

THT Essentials:
Fangraphs Player Search:


And here's the full roster.

Now available


You can now purchase the Hardball Times Baseball Annual 2013, with 300 pages of great content. It's also available on Amazon and Kindle. Read more about it here.



Or you can search by:

THT E-book


Third Base: The Crossroads is THT's e-book, available for $3.99 from the Kindle store. The good news is that anyone can read a Kindle book, even on a PC. So enjoy the best from THT in a new format.



Get your very own THT merchandise from our CafePress store. We've got baseball caps, t-shirts, coffee mugs and even wall clocks with the classy THT logo prominently displayed. Also, check out the THT Bookstore. Please support your favorite baseball site by purchasing something today.


Creative Commons License
All content on this site (including text, graphs, and any other original works), unless otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Card Corner: Dave Cash and the Baseball Reliquary

by Bruce Markusen
August 07, 2009

image
On Thursday, the National Baseball Hall of Fame celebrated the 100th anniversary of the famed T-206 Honus Wagner card by offering a series of informative card-related programs. As in interested spectator, I learned that there are plenty of myths surrounding the card.

First off, Wagner did not tell the tobacco company to stop production of the card because of his disapproval of cigarettes and cigars; the exact reasons for Wagner halting the card’s production remain unknown. Furthermore, the Wagner card is not the rarest card in existence, since there are anywhere from 40 to 100—including two at the Hall of Fame—still populating this earth. But it is the most valuable, and remains the Holy Grail to most card collectors.

While the Wagner card carries the highest monetary sum, one of my most cherished cards carries a value of about a buck and a quarter, if that much. In July, the Baseball Reliquary featured my thoughts on that card as part of an exhibit at the Pasadena Library. The following is the text that I submitted for the exhibit’s description of that card, which stands as my personal version of the T-206 Wagner.

This was the first card. On a spring Saturday in 1972, I made the 15-minute walk from my house on 80 Hereford Road to the village of Bronxville, N.Y. Stopping at Gillard’s Stationery Store, which was practically the first store one came across upon entering the village, I purchased my first pack of baseball cards. Lying on the top of the pack was a 1972 Dave Cash (No. 125 in the Topps set), which thus earned bragging rights as the first official card in my collection. At the time, the ’72 Cash was a good card to have; he was the starting second baseman for the defending World Champion Pittsburgh Pirates, who had confounded the baseball community by defeating the powerhouse Baltimore Orioles in a classic seven-game World Series.

Little did I realize at the time, but I would eventually develop two common bonds with Cash. Fifteen years later, during the spring of 1987, I would begin my first job, working as a sportscaster for WIBX Radio in Utica, N.Y.—the same upstate town where Cash had spent his formative years in the '50s and '60s.. There was no way I could have known that I would end up working in that small city in central New York. Heck, I was only seven years old and hadn’t even heard of Utica in 1972.

I remained at the radio station until March of 1995, when I fulfilled a dream by taking a position at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown. Dave Cash had also forged a link with Cooperstown. As a standout amateur playing American Legion baseball in central New York, Cash had made several trips to play organized games at Cooperstown’s historic Doubleday Field. It was a ballpark that Cash would return to as a professional, playing for the Pirates in the annual Hall of Fame Game at Doubleday Field. Cash played at Doubleday in the summer of 1973—the year of Roberto Clemente’s election to the Hall of Fame and just one year after I collected my first baseball card.

Dave Cash will never make the Hall of Fame as a player, and he’s probably little known to most fans who were born after the game’s free agent era began in the mid-1970s. Yet, to this fan of our great game and this collector of baseball cards, Dave Cash will always remain an important name in the Markusen household.




**WRITE DESCRIPTION HERE** (Icon/SMI)


Bruce Markusen is the author of seven books on baseball, including the award-winning A Baseball Dynasty: Charlie Finley’s Swingin’ A’s, the recipient of the Seymour Medal from the Society for American Baseball Research. He has also written The Team That Changed Baseball: Roberto Clemente and the 1971 Pittsburgh Pirates, Tales From The Mets Dugout, and The Orlando Cepeda Story.

Comments

Bob (BlftBucco2) said...

Funny,

I still use my Dave Cash model baseball glove.  It’s still in great shape after nearly 35 years of use!

I began collecting cards in 1972 also.  It’s strange how as a seven year old, you think some players are great players.

I remember thinking when I got my 1972 Maury Wills that he was one of the all time greats of the game, second only to Babe Ruth!

I had a minor fascination with the ‘72 Cash card along with a few others like Glenn Beckert, Bobby Murcer, Roy Foster, Dock Ellis, and Jerry Johnson.

There just seemed something magical about these players and their cards.

Posted 08/07  at  10:29 AM
UberMitch said...

Oooooh!  Did they have the Billy Ripken “#### face” card?  Because that one is my all time fav.

Posted 08/08  at  01:04 AM
UberMitch said...

F-word screening?  Are you kidding me?  This is the internets, right?

Posted 08/08  at  01:06 AM
Page 1 of 1
Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.



     Next Article:  THT Daily: Job Security>> <<Previous Article:  Treading and retreading