Saturday, June 20, 2026

Topps Topics: Studies in Uncut Sheet Arrays - 1965 to 1968

  

Presenting part four of an ongoing series examining the use of short prints and double prints by Topps in their vintage era; part one can be found HERE, part two HERE and part three HERE. Today Mark Pekrul is looking at the 1965 to 1968 press sheets for the annual Topps Baseball sets. This includes the 1967 highs, which have confounded collectors for several decades. There are other oddities and several questions still among the arrays in other years too. Mark, who posts as “deweyinthehall” on Net54 Baseball  has dug into these along with a couple of other stalwarts over there and worked to reconstruct most of the print arrays for all Topps Baseball series from roughly 1955 to 1970 (1971 and 1972 are mostly known but will be covered here nonetheless).  This work has essentially been compiled independently of anything I’ve posted previously. Mark maintains a website that covers Topps Baseball sets from 1965 to 1994 in some commendable depth as well,  CLICK HERE to be transported.

As a reminder, from 1957 through 1995, all Topps standard-sized (i.e. 2.5 x 3.5 inches) sets, sports and non-sports alike, were printed on sheets containing two large blocks of cards, 11 columns by 12 cards each.  This created discrete groups of 132 cards, in many cases giving us complete set counts which are very recognizable today – 132, 264, 396, 528, 660 and 792.  Some early hockey and football sets, as well as many non-sports sets, had only 66 cards – exactly half of 132.

Therefore, when we hear the term “uncut sheet” today, we typically think of a roughly 2' x 4' array of 132 cards. However, a full standard-sized uncut sheet was twice as large, and had 2 groupings of 132 cards (as above).  The outside margins were white (even for sets with colored borders, such as 1971 or 1962) and contained various notations including positioning and cutting guides and other errata.  They eventually even featured commodity codes, just like Topps used for cases, boxes and packs.

Down the middle ran a thick white space called the “gutter” – full sheets were sliced down the gutter before each half-sheet, or ‘slit’, was then fed into a cutter. 

Each slit contained 12 rows of 11 cards.   For ease of reference, we can label the rows A-L and columns 1-11. Any card position can then be designated as A-1 (far upper left), L-11 (bottom right), and so forth, as shown below.

             SLIT A                                                                      SLIT B

Let's take a peek...

1965 Topps Baseball – 598 Total Cards in Set

Series 1: 1-109, 109 different cards plus an extra 1st series checklist

Series 2: 110-196, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 2 checklist from series 1

Series 3: 197-283, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 3 checklist from series 2

Series 4: 284-370, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 4 checklist from series 3

Series 5: 371-446, 76 different cards plus a repeated series 5 checklist from series 4

Series 6: 447-522, 76 different cards plus a repeated series 6 checklist from series 5

Series 7: 523-598, 76 different cards plus a repeated series 7 checklist from series 6

We know the row pattern of one series 1 slit is A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, H, I, J.  So, again, rows A and B are two of the four overprinted rows.

These are:

A

N.L. ERA Leaders (8)

Steve Boros (102)

Orioles Rookie Stars (49)

Mike Shannon (43)

Ty Cline (63)

Felix Mantilla (29)

Pedro Gonzalez (97)

N.L. RBI Leaders (6)

A.L. Batting Leaders (1)

Billy Bryan (51)

Bill Virdon (69)

 

B

Tony Kubek (65)


Fred Gladding (37)


Cardinals Team Card (57)


Don Buford (81)


A.L. Home Run Leaders (3)


Gerry Arrigo (39)


Les Narum (86)


Gene Oliver (106)


Bill Rigney (66)


Sam McDowell (76)


Jim Bouton (30)

eBay population counts clearly indicate the remaining over-printed cards are:

C

Astros Rookie Stars (16)

Bob Tiefenauer (23)

Bill Mazeroski (95)

Roy McMillan (45)

Del Crandall (68)

Bobby Wine (36)

Nelson Mathews (87)

Claude Raymond (48)

Don Mincher (108)

Dick Bertell (27)

Nate Oliver (59)

 

D

Turk Farrell (80)

Barney Schultz (28)

Cubs Team Card (91)

Jim Kaat (62)

Pedro Ramos (13)

Bill McCool (18)

Johnny Romano (17)

Chico Salmon (105)

George Thomas (83)

Rich Rollins (90)

Deron Johnson (75)

 

 

Series 2-4 feature the typical 88-card series pattern.

 

For series 5, we actually have an image of a full sheet.  The row patterns presented are:

Slit A – A, B, C, D, E, A, F, G, B, C, D, E

Slit B – B, C, A, F, G, B, C, D, E, A, F, G

The 33 over-printed cards are therefore those in rows A, B and C:

A

John Bateman (433)

Curt Simmons (373)

Giants Team Card (379)

Johnny Klippstein (384)

Tom Tresh (440)

Johnny Edwards (418)

Rocky Colavito (380)

Lee Maye (407)

Dave Wickersham (375)

Jim Grant (432)

Jim Landis (376)

 

B

John Blanchard (388)

Don Demeter (429)

Red Sox Team Card (403)

Al Lopez (414)

Wayne Causey (425)

Harmon Killebrew (400)

Jim Hannan (394)

Denny Lemaster (441)

Angels Rookie Stars (374)

Gary Bell (424)

Hal Reniff (413)

 

C

Moe Drabowsky (439)

Bob Friend (392)

Jim Brewer (416)

Carl Yastrzemski (385)

Jesse Gonder (423)

Chico Cardenas (437)

Ed Kirkpatrick (393)

Bob Saverine (427)

Twins Rookie Stars (421)

Ed Brinkman (417)

Willie Stargell (377)

Series 6 is a real puzzle.  Only in recent months has a semblance of a partial reconstruction been possible – miscuts of series 6 cards seem harder to come by than those from any other set’s series.   We still have work to do to have a finished product, but work to date has allowed us to recreate the 3 11-card 4x rows.  It is believed that these rows are A, B and C.  This is supported by eBay card counts, by the fact it would fit with the known vertical miscuts we do have, and because it would match the series 5 arrangement.  They are:

A

Jim Owens (451)

Phil Gagliano (503)

Indians Rookie Stars (501)

Earl Battey (490)

Ken Boyer (475)

Don Pavletich (472)

Lee Stange (448)

Billy O’Dell (476)

Ed Rakow (454)

Sam Mele (506)

Dodgers Rookie Stars (453)

 

B

Elston Howard (450)

Hank Aguirre (522)

Yankees Team Card (513)

Gene Stephens (498)

Ken Harrelson (479)

Frank Kostro (459)

Nellie Fox (485)

Tony Cloninger (520)

Angels Rookie Stars (486)

Joe Azcue (514)

Julian Javier (447)

C

Joe Horlen (480)

Manny Mota (463)

Cardinals Rookie Stars (477)

Gary Geiger (452)

Ron Locke (511)

Sammy Ellis (507)

Ron Piche (464)

Ken Rowe (518)

Jerry Grote (504)

Joe Cunningham (496)

Vern Law (515)

We have an image of one of the series 7 slits, which features a row pattern of A, B, C, D, E, A, F, G, B, C, D, E.  This is identical to one of the slits from series 5, and it matches what we now believe one of the series 6 slits looks like based on reconstruction work to date.  If the other series 7 slit matches the other known slit from series 5 (and based on eBay card counts it should), then the 33 series 7 overprinted cards are:

A

Joe Gaines (594)

Lou Brock (540)

White Sox Rookie Stars (541)

Jimmie Hall (580)

Hector Lopez (532)

Jim Maloney (530)

Billy Moran (562)

Tommie Aaron (567)

Julio Navarro (563)

Mel Nelson (564)

Lenny Green (588)

 

B

Al Downing (598)

Joe Sparma (587)

Mets Team Card (551)

American League Rookie Stars (577)

Jose Santiago (557)

Dick Stigman (548)

Julio Gotay (552)

Hank Fisher (585)

National League Rookie Stars (581)

Camilo Carreon (578)

Ron Taylor (568)

 

C

Johnnie Wyatt (590)

Roy Sievers (574)

Indians Rookie Stars (546)

Eddie Bressoud (525)

Harry Bright (584)

Jose Pagan (575)

Don Lee (595)

Boog Powell (560)

Dodgers Rookie Stars (561)

Mike Brumley (523)

Tommie Sisk (558)

 

 

1966 Topps Baseball – 598 Total Cards in Set

Series 1: 1-109, 109 different cards plus an extra 1st series checklist

Series 2: 110-196, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 2 checklist from series 1

Series 3: 197-283, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 3 checklist from series 2

Series 4: 284-370, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 4 checklist from series 3

Series 5: 371-446, 76 different cards plus a repeated series 5 checklist from series 4

Series 6: 447-522, 76 different cards plus a repeated series 6 checklist from series 5

Series 7: 523-598, 76 different cards plus a repeated series 7 checklist from series 6

In series 1, the row patterns are:

Slit A: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, F, G

Slit B: H, I, J, F, G, A, B, C, D, E, A, B

So, the over-printed cards are those in rows A, B, F and G:

A

Bob Duliba (53)

Sandy Koufax (100)

Jim Fregosi (5)

Don Mossi (74)

Woody Woodward (49)

Hal Reniff (68)

Fred Whitfield (88)

Ted Abernathy (2)

Lou Johnson (13)

Sandy Valdespino (56)

Willie Horton (20)

 

B

Mets Rookie Stars (67)

Jim Gentile (45)

John Tsitouris (12)

Jerry Zimmerman (73)

Ron Nischwitz (38)

Dan Napoleon (87)

Jim Hunter (36)

Jim Lonborg (93)

Howie Koplitz (46)

Luis Aparicio (90)

Athletics Rookie Stars (107)

 

F

Richie Allen (80)

Don Nottebart (21)

Braves Rookie Stars (84)

Dick Groat (103)

Adolfo Phillips (32)

Jim Pagliaroni (33)

Billy Herman (37)

Jim Grant (40)

Dave Wickersham (58)

Johnny Stephenson (17)

Mickey Mantle (50)

 

G

Pete Rose (30)

Frank Linzy (78)

Chuck Schilling (6)

Larry Brown (16)

Gordon Richardson (51)

Johnny Orsino (77)

Buc Belters (99)

Floyd Robinson (8)

Bob Bolin (61)

Pete Richert (95)

Series 2 Checklist (101)

 

Series 2-4 utilize the typical 88-card pattern.

 

The series 5 row patterns, based on an image of one slit and a reconstructed other, are:

Slit A: A, B, C, D, E, A, B, F, G, C, D, E

Slit B: C, A, B, F, G, C, D, E, A, B, F, G

Over-printed cards are in rows A, B and C:

A

Howie Reed (387)

Donn Clendenon (375)

Harvey Kuenn (372)

Ken McMullen (401)

Ken Boyer (385)

Tommie Sisk (441)

Turk Farrell (377)

Alvin Dark (433)

Lee Stange (371)

Bob Locker (374)

Fred Talbot (403)

 

B

Angels Rookie Cards (417)

Paul Schaal (376)

Al Downing (384)

Jim Kaat (445)

Max Alvis (415)

Len Gabrielson (395)

Pirates Team Card (404)

Sam Bowens (412)

Phil Gagliano (418)

Ron Brand (394)

Lee Thomas (408)

 

C

Bill Monboquette (429)

Pedro Ramos (439)

Sandy Alomar (428)

Bob Heffner (432)

Giants Rookie Stars (373)

Brooks Robinson (390)

Don Drysdale (430)

George Brunet (393)

Cardinals Team Card (379)

Juan Marichal (420)

Dick Tracewski (378)

  

With the absence of sheet or slit images, series 6 proved almost has hard to reconstruct as the 1965 series 6 is currently proving to be.  However, after a lot of research, it was accomplished.  The resulting row arrangements are:

Slit A: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C, D, E

Slit B: D, E, F, G, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A

Cards in rows A, D and E are over-prints:

 A

Hank Aaron (500)

Mickey Lolich (455)

John O’Donoghue (501)

Jerry Buchek (454)

Eddie Stanky (448)

Dick Stigman (512)

Roy Face (461)

Bo Belinsky (506)

Bobby Bragan (476)

Joe Azcue (452)

Series 7 Checklist (517)

 

D

Tony Gonalez (478)

Jim Wynn (520)

Hoyt Wilhelm (510)

Curt Simmons (489)

Lenny Green (502)

Phil Linz (522)

Dick Radatz (475)

Johnny Klippstein (493)

Dick McAuliffe (495)

Dick Stuart (480)

Steve Hamilton (503)

 

E

Joe Nuxhall (483)

Al Ferrara (487)

Dennis Bennett (491)

Dick Ellsworth (447)

Bill McCool (459)

Steve Barber (477)

Rich Rollins (473)

Tommy John (486)

Joe Gibbon (457)

Jim Hannan (479)

Series 6 Checklist (444)

 

Both slits from series 7 have also been reconstructed:

Slit A: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C, D, E

Slit B: C, F, G, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B

Over-prints are in rows A, B and C:

A

Tony Taylor (585)

Robin Roberts (530)

Joel Horlen (560)

Dave Roberts (571)

George Smith (542)

Larry Jackson (595)

Bob Sadowski (523)

Garry Roggenburk (582)

John Sullivan (597)

Andre Rodgers (592)

Senators Rookie Stars (549)

 

B

Chico Salmon (594)

Willie Davis (535)

Earl Wilson (575)

Billy Williams (580)

Willie McCovey (550)

Jerry Adair (533)

Orioles Rookie Stars (579)

Herman Franks (537)

Dick Bertell (587)

Joe Cunningham (531)

Rookie Stars (553)

 

C

Jim Northrup (554)

Athletics Rookie Stars (568)

Yankees Rookie Stars (587)

Tony Martinez (581)

Mets Rookie Stars (534)

Red Sox Rookie Stars (558)

Derrell Griffith (573)

Dick Egan (536)

White Sox Rookie Stars (529)

Bob Priddy (572)

Mets Rookie Stars (574)

 

On a side note, even though both the Grant Jackson/Bart Shirley N.L. Rookie Stars card (591) and Horace Clarke (547) are printed 3 times each (along with the majority of cards in the series), nothing in this exercise can help explain their seeming scarcity nor the out-sized prices asked/paid for them. 

 

1967 Topps Baseball – 609 Total Cards in Set

Series 1: 1-109, 109 different cards plus an extra 1st series checklist

Series 2: 110-196, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 2 checklist from series 1

Series 3: 197-283, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 3 checklist from series 2

Series 4: 284-370, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 4 checklist from series 3

Series 5: 371-457, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 5 checklist from series 4

Series 6: 458-533, 76 different cards plus a repeated series 6 checklist from series 5

Series 7: 534-609, 76 different cards plus a repeated series 7 checklist from series 6

For series 1, we have an image of one slit, and have reconstructed the other.  The row patterns are:

Slit A: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, D, E

Slit B: F, G, H, I, J, A, B, C, D, E, H, I

Rows D, E, H and I were over-printed:

D

Bob Johnson (38)

Mickey Lolich (88)

Ken McMullen (47)

Jim Brewer (31)

Ron Hansen (9)

Elston Howard (25)

Ron Fairly (94)

Yankees Rookie Stars (93)

Curt Simmons (39)

Pat Corrales (78)

Don McMahon (7)

 

E

Tom McCraw (29)

Whitey Ford (5)

Art Shamsky (96)

Tribe Thumpers (109)

Ralph Terry (59)

Felix Millan (89)

Earl Battey (15)

Manny Mota (66)

Gene Brabender (22)

Joe Nuxhall (44)

Bob Saverine (27)

 

H

The Champs (1)

Jim Barbieri (76)

Gene Oliver (18)

Eddie Stanky (81)

Dooley Womack (77)

Paul Schaal (58)

George Altman (87)

Barry Moore (11)

Tom Haller (65)

George Scott (75)

Frank Robinson (100)

 

I

Sonny Siebert (95)

Ken Berry (67)

Mike Cuellar (97)

Rick Reichardt (40)

Tommie Sisk (84)

Lindy McDaniel (46)

Ken Johnson (101)

Phillies Team Card (102)

Al Kaline (30)

Gordy Coleman (61)

Roy Face (49)

 

Series 2-5 were arranged in the typical 88-card pattern. 

As it had for the 1966 set, and is now with the 1965 set, series 6 of the 1967 set proved very difficult to reconstruct.  For whatever reason, the 6th series of many of these sets lack any extant sheet or slit images.  Even some of the vaunted high number series of this era have surviving images.  For 1967, reconstructions of both series 6 slits reveal row patterns of:

Slit A: A, B, C, D, E, F, A, B, G, C, D, E

Slit B: E, F, A, B, G, C, D, E, F, A, B, G

Cards in rows A, B and E were over-printed:

A

Bird Bombers (521)


Jack Fisher (533)


Denis Menke (518)


Jim Hicks (532)


Fred Talbot (517)


Ron Hunt (525)


Lee Thomas (458)


Juan Marichal (500)


Jim Merritt (523)


Jose Santiago (473)


Jim Palmer (475)

 

B

Gary Bell (479)


Smoky Burgess (506)


Dan Coombs (464)


Bill Rigney (494)


Don Wert (511)


Willie McCovey (480)


Felipe Alou (530)


Dodgers Team Photo (503)


Orlando McFarlane (496)


Indians Rookie Stars (499)


Dennis Ribant (527)

 

E

Felix Mantilla (524)


Max Alvis (520)


Ted Davidson (519)


Hill Aces (463)


Tom Reynolds (487)


Jim Landis (483)


Orlando Martinez (504)


Bill Mazeroski (510)


Sam Bowens (491)


Senators Rookie Stars (459)


Willie Horton (465)

 

1967’s 7th series is considered one of the hardest high-number series to complete these days.  There are stories about how some areas of the country never even saw these cards in 1967, and even one about someone opening a vending box back in the day and not pulling even a single Brooks Robinson.  As far back as the first edition of the Sport Americana Price Guide in 1979, the Robinson was listed at $50, while the Tom Seaver rookie was $5 and commons were all under $1).  

A single full slit image survives, but is of low quality.  The image on the right below is a reconstruction of that image created for clarity.  A partial image of the other slit exists, which shows the top several rows, and research has allowed us to reconstruct the rest – this appears on the left below. 

Note the repeat of the first two rows on slit A?  This sets up an overall row pattern of: 

Slit A: A, B, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C

Slit B: A, D, E, F, G, A. B, C, D, E, F, G

This results in row A being printed 5 times, row B four times and the other rows three times each.  EVERY other Topps 77-card series features 3 rows printed four times and 4 rows printed three times, and NONE feature a repeat of the first two rows as below on the A slit.  What’s more, no Topps series of any size is known to have featured cards printing in more than two different quantities.

Slit B is to the left here:

We have to conclude that in 1967, someone at Topps goofed, and that the third and fourth rows on the first slit should not have been repeats of the first and second. 

More on this below, but this error resulted in these row A cards being WAY more common than most cards in this series (this is borne out but eBay card counts, as well as by my own experience when completing the set):

A

Vada Pinson (550)


Tony Gonzalez (548)


Jim Owens (582)


Cubs Rookie Stars (608)


Gary Geiger (566)


Doug Camilli (551)


Bob Duliba (599)


Chuck Estrada (537)


Dick Tracewski (559)


Dave Ricketts (589)


A.L. Rookie Stars (569)

 

Row B cards appear four times each:

Red Sox Rookie Stars (547)


Johnny Klippstein (588)


Astros Rookie Stars (564)


Hank Bauer (534)


Steve Blass (562)


Bill Bryan (601)


Dick Egan (539)


Athletics’ Rookie Stars (542)


Al Weis (556)


Andre Rodgers (554)


Galen Cisco (596)

 

Of course, the most expensive and hardest-to-find cards in the series (Seaver, Carew, Robinson, Red Sox Team, Shannon, Bunning, etc.) all appear in one of the 5 rows printed three times.

 

If, as must be the case, slit A was formatted in error, it raises the question of how was it meant to be arranged?  There is no way to know for sure, but I believe that, based upon patterns in some other 77-card series, the following may have been the intended pattern:

 

Slit A: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C, D, E

Slit B: F, G, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C

 

By lead card this would be:

 

Slit A:

Vada Pinson

Red Sox Rookie Stars

Orioles Rookie Stars

Al Ferrara

N.L. Rookie Stars

Rocky Colavito

Series 7 Checklist

Vada Pinson

Red Sox Rookie Stars

Orioles Rookie Stars

Al Ferrara

N.L. Rookie Stars

 

Slit B:

Rocky Colavito

Series 7 Checklist

Vada Pinson

Red Sox Rookie Stars

Orioles Rookie Stars

Al Ferrara

N.L. Rookie Stars

Rocky Colavito

Series 7 Checklist

Vada Pinson

Red Sox Rookie Stars

Orioles’ Rookie Stars

 

Cards in the rows headed by Pinson and the Red Sox and Orioles Rookie Stars would have appeared four times, and those in the rows headed by Ferrara, Colavito, the checklist and the N.L. Rookie stars would have appeared three times.

 

Such an arrangement would have had the Seaver rookie as an over-printed card.  Ah…if only. (EDITOR'S NOTE-It seems possible the G row on one slit, likely on the bottom of the slit, had some kind of production issue affecting it due to the comparative difficulty of cards in that row.). 

 

1968 Topps Baseball – 598 Total Cards in Set

Series 1: 1-109, 109 different cards plus an extra 1st series checklist

Series 2: 110-196, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 2 checklist from series 1

Series 3: 197-283, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 3 checklist from series 2

Series 4: 284-370, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 4 checklist from series 3

Series 5: 371-457, 87 different cards plus a repeated series 5 checklist from series 4

Series 6: 458-533, 76 different cards plus a repeated series 6 checklist from series 5

Series 7: 534-598, 65 different cards plus a repeated series 7 checklist from series 6

After adding a single additional row in 1967 to crack a set total of more than 600 cards for the first time, Topps dialed it back to 598 in 1968.

Series 1 row patterns are thus:

Slit A: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, H, I, J

Slit B: C, D, A, B, H, I, J, C, D, E, F, G

This creates over-prints in rows A, B, C and D:

A

Bob Locker (51)


A.L. Strikeout Leaders (12)


Ralph Houk (47)


Bob Tolan (84)


Ron Hunt (15)


Joe Gibbon (32)


Jim Ollum (91)


Jerry McNertney (14)


N.L. Batting Leaders (1)


Vern Fuller (71)


Larry Haney (42)

 

B

Jim Merritt (64)


Tom Seaver (45)


Darrell Brandon (26)


Frank Kostro (44)


Don Pavletich (108)


A.L. ERA Leaders (8)


Gene Alley (53)


Reggie Smith (61)


Ken Holtzman (60)


Gary Sutherland (98)


Juan Pizzaro (19)

 

C

N.L. RBI Leaders (3)


Orioles Rookie Stars (56)


Ted Kubiak (79)


Vada Pinson (90)


Dave Ricketts (46)


Tony Cloninger (93)


Ted Uhlaender (28)


A.L. RBI Leaders (4)


Chico Cardenas (23)


Don Lock (59)


Don Sutton (103)

 

D

Rocky Colavito (99)


Ron Willis (68)   


Bobby Locke (24)


Tommy John (72)


Jake Gibbs (89)


Dan Schneider (57)


Ed Brinkman (49)


Al Ferrara (34)


Gaylord Perry (85)


Tony Pierce (38)


N.L. ERA Leaders (7)

  

Series 2-5 appear as typical 88-card series.

In series 6, row patterns are:

Slit A: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C, D, E

Slit B: E, F, G, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A, B

Cards in rows A, B and E are over-printed:

A

Dick Tracewski (488)


Cardinals Team Photo (497)


Jimmie Schaffer (463)


Jim Lonborg (460)


Luis Tiant (532)


Bill Kelso (511)


Don Shaw (521)


Lew Krausse (458)


Hank Bauer (513)


Dick Simpson (459)


Ken Berry (485)

 

B

Jerry Stephenson (519)


Joe Niekro (475)


Walt Alston (472)


Wade Blasingame (507)


Paul Schaal (474)


Steve Hamilton (496)


Chuck Hiller (461)


Jeff Torborg (492)


Wally Bunker (489)


John Wyatt (481)


Bill Freehan (470)

 

E

Frank Robinson (500)


Lou Brock (520)


Grant Jackson (512)


Russ Nixon (515)


Jim Davenport (525)


Duke Sims (508)


Pete Mikkelsen (516)


Phil Roof (484)


Steve Blass (499)


Jim McGlothlin (493)


Jose Pagan (482)

 

Each series 7 slit was arranged in the typical 66-card pattern.