Saturday, April 25, 2026

BAA, BAA, BAA...

A long, long time ago, I took a look at the Topps Baseball Achievement Awards.  This was the reward system, still active in some form, that succeeded the more well-known (and so-called) Rookie Banquets that were documented in very collectible programs from 1959-66. These ceremonies were highlighted by the bestowment of the Rookie All Star Awards, as memorialized the following season, where the batter or top hat trophy was added to the winner's cards (except when Topps screwed up). They still hand out the award and put the little top hat trophy on the card, although I don't know if there's still a banquet anymore.

Topps stopped with the Rookie All Star Team (proper name) programs in 1966 and then sometime thereafter changed the name to the Baseball Achievement Awards (BAA), likely due to the fact they started recognizing a wider circle of people, such as Team Scouts, and more players beyond the Annual Rookie Team winners. It's not clear when this initiated but by the late 1970's this was how the ceremony and associated recognition was handled. I believe it's this period that saw the BAA first have a program made up but can't be exactly sure which year marked the beginning.  I have several 1980's BAA programs in my collection but as we will see, 1978 seems to be the earliest year that can presently be traced. Like so:


You can see some of the various awards that were awarded during the ceremony on the cover, including the Rookie All Star trophy that Topps had been putting on the various winners cards from 1973, when the cup replaced the fancier (and likely more expensive) "top hat" trophy.

You can see the 1978 program was designed as a foldout:


We got your positional winners right here, ten in all.  Sorry for the blurry images, it's all I've got.  I can't really see any HOF level talent in the various Minor League Player -of-the-Month winner; a good chunk of these guys never played in the bigs.  Even Minor League Player of the Year Champ Summers, despite 11 seasons in MLB, had already played for the A's and the Cubbies, won the award as a 32 year old (not a typo) in AAA ball after being sent down by the Reds. He did play until 1984 with a couple good seasons mixed in but overall was undistinguished. His career WAR was 3.0, ouch!


There were ten winners as a lefty and righty pitcher were named, in this case John Johnson and Rich Gale, respectively. Johnson bounced around after his 1978 A's debut and last pitched in the majors for the 1987 Brewers. Gale also bounced to and fro, concluding with Boston in 1984.

The rest of the squad was a mixed bag. Bill Nahorodny had a 1976 cup of coffee in Philly, then another sip in 1977 with the White Sox. Mostly a backup catcher after his award-winning 1978 season, he last played with the Mariners in 1984.  As for Dave Revering at First Base, he started his career strong but after a midseason trade to the Yankees in 1981, flamed out a year later after splitting time in New York, Toronto and Seattle.

The strength of the selections was clearly up the middle in the infield. Paul Molitor at 2B and Ozzie Smith at SS was a HR for sure. Bob Horner at 3B was no slouch either and had a solid career, almost all with the Braves. He was the rare player who never spent a day in the minor leagues and once hit four homers in a single game, so not too bad a selection there.

The outfield was not nearly as talented as the infield. Bob Molinaro had come up with Tigers in 1975, drank coffee for them in '76 and again with the White Sox in '77. His 1978 season was OK but he simply had no power.  He was eventually picked up on waivers by Baltimore but curiously the Chisox grabbed him back off waivers two years later and he finished up where he started, with the Tigers in 1983.    

Rick Bosetti was in 13 games for the Phillies in 1976 and then 41 games for the Cardinals in 1977. His 1978 selection as a Blue Jay stretches the limits of "rookie" if you ask me.  Bosetti's last season was in Oakland, in 1982.  And around in right, we have Hosken Powell, who played six big league seasons  before hanging up his spikes in Toronto in 1983.

All in all, a fairly representative batch of players from the All Star Rookie selection committee.

You can see the the foldout nature of the program more clearly here:


Compared to the superb run of 1959-66 Rookie Banquet programs, the BAA versions were very much lacking in production values.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Topps Topics: Studies in Uncut Sheet Arrays - 1958 to 1960

 

Presenting part two 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. Today Mark Pekrul is looking at the 1958 to 1960 press sheets for the annual Topps Baseball sets. 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.  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 (baseball, football, hockey, basketball and non-sports) were printed on sheets containing two large blocks of cards, 11x12 cards each.  Creating groups of 132 cards each, in many cases this gave 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.

When we hear the term “uncut sheet” today, we typically think of a roughly 2' x 4' sheet of 132 cards. However, a full standard-sized uncut sheet was twice as large, and included 2 groupings of 132 cards (as above).  The 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

And away we go…

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1958 Topps Baseball – 494 Total Cards in Set

Series 1: 1-110, 110 different cards

1958 was the first of many times a set’s first series would contain 110 cards.  To accommodate 10 different rows of 11 cards on a 24 row full sheet, it was necessary for each row to appear twice and for either one of those rows to appear four additional times, two to appear two additional times, or four to appear one additional time.  

In later years, for which we have images of 110-card sheets, we know it was the rule that four rows would appear one additional time each.  While we have no images of 1958’s series one sheets and reconstructions have yet to be made, we do have several partial sheet images.  This permits us to identify with a high degree of certainty that two of the four over-printed rows, in which each card will appear in quantities 50% greater than the other series 1 cards, are arranged thusly, as per the head card in each:

Don Drysdale (25)

Jim Landis (108)

Don Mossi (35)

Del Ennis (60)

Billy Hoeft (13)

Bobby Richardson (101)

Hank Aaron (30)

Tim Thompson (57)

Duke Snider (88)

Early Wynn (100)

Willie Mays (5)

 

and

Jim Rivera (11)

Von McDaniel (65)

Giants Team Card (19)

Bob Lemon (2)

Billy Hunter (98)

Al Kaline (70)

Cal Neeman (33)

Billy Pierce (50)

Don Zimmer (77)

Gil McDougald (20)

Morrie Martin (53)

 More research is needed to identify which other two rows were overprinted.

Series 2: 111-198, 87 different cards.  What should have been the 88th card, #145, Ed Bouchee, was never issued due to, um…legal problems he encountered in January, 1958.  Card #115, Jim Bunning took #145’s place on the series 2 press sheet, in addition to its own, and was printed in double the quantities of the other series 2 cards. 

Series 3: 199-286, 88 different cards

Series 4: 287-374, 88 different cards

Series 5: 375-440, 66 different cards

Series 5 was arranged in the 66-card pattern, and each slit was identical.  Here is an image of slit B, which also shows column 11 from slit A, with the gutter in between:

                                       

Series 6: 441-495, 55 different cards

As it is a 55-card series, one of the five rows had to have been printed only three times, to the other four rows’ four times each.  While we have images of each series 6 row, they are all disembodied from sheets or slits, and we do not have enough information to know which row of 11 cards was short-printed.

The series 5 press sheets do contain a curiosity, however.

Here are two rows – anything seem unusual?

 

                                                                                            

Notice how the All Star cards of Stan Musial (476) and Mickey Mantle (487) appear three times each on the same row.   Musial was a key last minute signing by Topps and we can only surmise that they wanted to provide kids with a greater chance of obtaining cards of two of the most popular stars of the day by making each of these cards available in greater quantities than the other series 6 cards. 

While no images exist, we know that for some of its total print run series 6 included only the usual one of each per row, and that the four other spaces were taken up in one row by Carroll Hardy (446) and Preston Ward (450) and in the other by Billy Harrell (443) and Gary Geiger (462).   So, these four are seemingly available in lesser quantities than other series 6 cards and possibly in far lesser quantities than the Mantle and Musial All Stars.

 

1959 Topps Baseball – 572 Total Cards in Set

Series 1: 1-110, 110 different cards

As with all other 110-card series, we know that 44 of these cards were over-printed by 1/2, but we have no images or reconstructions to allow us to know which specific cards these were.

 

Series 2: 111-198, 88 different cards

Series 3: 199-286, 88 different cards

Series 4: 287-374, 88 different cards

Series 5: 375-440, 66 different cards

Series 6: 441-506, 66 different cards

Series 7: 507-572, 66 different cards

Series 2-4 were arranged in the 88-card pattern, and those in series 5-7 in the 66-card pattern.

1959 was Topps’ largest set yet.  They increased from 1958 by nearly 100 cards, and added a 7th series.  Topps sets would include seven series from here through 1970.

 

1960 Topps Baseball – 572 Total Cards in Set

Series 1: 1-110, 110 different cards

Series 2: 111-198, 88 different cards

Series 3: 199-286, 88 different cards

Series 4: 287-374, 88 different cards

Series 5: 375-440, 88 different cards

Series 6: 441-506, 66 different cards

Series 7: 507-572, 66 different cards

The 1960 set was constructed in exactly the same manner as the 1959 set.  Again, because we lack imagery from series 1, we cannot tell with certainty which 44 cards were over-printed and exist in quantities 50% greater than the other 66.

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Stay tuned, it get really interesting as we approach the expansion era.

 


Saturday, March 28, 2026

World Baseball Classics

Well two more "1960" Venezuelan Topps Tattoos have surfaced recently and both are true heavy hitters. I'll go in alphabetical order, kicking off with Hank Aaron, courtesy of Friend o'the Archive Josh Alpert:


Also appearing in the US set, the Aaron popped up in a new batch of tats, a mere handful from what I know of it, which also included a third example of the Mantle (that has the same handwritten defacement).

However, the second part of the story is who was also unearthed, again courtesy of Mr. Alpert:


Say hey!  The handwritten names are unfortunate (and point to a single-owner collection) but this brings us closer, hopefully, to determining the full checklist. Presently, this now stands at a possible 35 subjects (16 from the U.S. set, 10 Venezuelan only including the sliver of what must be Versalles, and 9 possible Venezuelan's), assuming all the likely "Guernsey" examples will show up some day: 15/11/10

Hank Aaron
Bob Allison
Ruben Amaro (Venezuelan only)
Luis Arroyo (Venezuelan only)
Bob Clemente (Venezuelan only)
Rocky Colavito
Don Drysdale
Nellie Fox
Tony Gonzales (Venezuelan only)
Dick Groat
Glen Hobbie
Harmon Killebrew
Juan Marichal  (Venezuelan only)
Frank Lary
Vernon Law
Mickey Mantle
Ed Mathews
Willie Mays
Stan Musial
Juan Pizzaro (Venezuelan only)
Vic Power (Venezuelan only)
Pedro Ramos (Venezuelan only)
Tony Taylor (Venezuelan only)
Zoilo Versalles (Venezuelan only) inferred from a miscut sliver, not confirmed but it's somebody with a "Z" given name
Gene Woodling
Early Wynn

The possible Guernsey's subjects remain at 9:

Matty Alou
Luis Aparicio (previously surmised as a possible subject)
Chico Fernandez
Felipe Alou
"Clio" (Elio) Chacon
Felix Mantilla
O. "Cepida" the redrawn Baby Bull
Jose Pagan
Chico Cardenas

We may only be 13 subjects away from the complete list as it's possible, given the likely divisors of 8 and 24, that eight US and four Venezuelans subjects remain to get to 48. There could be more subjects than that, of course but right now 48 looks like a good number.

D'oh! Update 4/3/26: Rick Lyons alerted me I had the U.S. Cepeda in the confirmed list-that was a typo.  I've corrected various counts above to reflect this. Sorry folks!

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Topps Topics: Studies in Uncut Sheet Arrays - Introduction and 1957


The use of short prints and double prints by Topps in their vintage era has always sparked interest from collectors.  Today will be the start of a series by Mark Pekrul looking at the 1957 to 1981 press sheets for the annual Topps Baseball sets. These have been studied here, sometimes in deep detail, sometimes not, by examining known uncut sheets, or portions of them, but never in this specific way. 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.  This work has essentially been compiled independently of anything I’ve posted previously. Here we go…

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As I began collecting baseball cards in 1978, it struck me that while 726 seemed like a nice, sensible amount of cards to be contained in a single set, 725 might have seemed even more sensible.  As the years went by, and I learned that older sets contained differing numbers of cards, I began to get confused – who decided on 787?  They couldn’t scrape up another thirteen players and call it 800?  598, 609 – couldn’t they have (more or less) split the difference and just made it 600? 

A short time later, I learned about short-prints and double-prints.  What sort of quality control did Topps have?  How could some cards be printed in greater or lesser quantities than others?  Was anyone fired because of this?

It was only years later that I discovered the reason behind all this: the press sheets. 

From 1957 through 1995, all Topps standard-sized (i.e. 2.5 x 3.5 inches) sets (baseball, football, hockey, basketball and non-sports) were printed on sheets containing two large blocks of cards, 11x12 cards each.  Creating groups of 132 cards each, in many cases this gave 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.

By focusing on Baseball we can explore how the way press sheets were arranged came to define how many cards were in a set (and even in each series within a set) and why short- and double-prints became an unfortunate necessity.  This series will focus on the years 1957-1981, using 1981 more or less as an endpoint for reasons which will be explained.  Finally, we will discuss the efforts of some to recreate how older sheets were arranged to help answer questions which linger to this day.

When we hear the term “uncut sheet” today, we typically think of a roughly 2' x 4' sheet of 132 cards. However, a full standard-sized uncut sheet was twice as large, and included 2 groupings of 132 cards (as above).  The 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.

             SLIT A                                                                      SLIT B

In many cases, we have examples of even very old full- and half-sheets where we can see exactly how cards from any given series or set were arranged.  In other cases, no images exist, but careful review of miscuts, where portions of adjoining cards can be seen, can help us reconstruct what the press sheets looked like with close to 100% accuracy.

With very few exceptions, cards in any given row are fixed.  In other words, if one row of a particular set or series contained 11 known cards left to right, those cards would always appear in those positions on every sheet from which they were cut.  As we will see, the arrangement of those rows vertically often changed based on the total number of cards in the set or series.  Therefore, it is possible to find two miscuts of the same card, each featuring a different card above or beneath.

Even so, for many years, series with both 88 and 66 cards were always arranged in the same fashion. 

88-card series always featured a row pattern ensuring each card appeared three times across a full sheet (the “88-card pattern”):

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

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

66-card series always featured a row pattern which ensured each card appeared four times (the “66-card pattern”):

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

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

Now that we’ve discussed the general lay-out of Topps sheets, let’s take a look at each set to see how it all played out in practice, why sets had the number of cards they did, and why certain cards wound up in greater or lesser abundance than others.

NOTE: The “library” of actual sheet and slit images is very spotty until the late 1960s.  What follows will occasionally reference “images”, which means we have an actual image, or “reconstructions”, which means we have pieced together what the sheet or slit looked like by examining partial half-sheets, miscut cards and card counts at sites like eBay.   An ongoing effort to reconstruct what vintage sheets and slits looked like can be observed here: Net54 Baseball 1955-1970 Topps Virtual Sheets, and help is always welcome.  

1957 Topps Baseball – 407 Total Cards in Set

Series 1: 1-88, 88 different cards

Series 2: 89-176, 88 different cards

Series 3: 177-264, 88 different cards

Series 4: 265-352, 88 different cards

Series 5: 353-407, 55 different cards

Why only 88 cards for those first four series?  Throughout the years, Topps often kept their series at less than the maximum 132 cards permitted by their printing arrangement.  With only 16 clubs, 25 cards per team would place the set at 400 cards. They also wanted to ensure they had enough series “flow” to keep kids coming back and buying new cards all throughout the year. 

Series 1-4 were arranged in the typical 88-card series fashion outlined above as revealed on these series 2 slit images.  The cards in rows A-D and I-L on one slit appear in rows E-H on the other.

            

Then there’s series 5, with only 55 cards.  As they would until 1972, late and particularly final series always contained fewer cards than earlier series.  Again, it was a marketing decision.  These series would debut late in the baseball season, when interest was waning as kids turned their attention to football and other things.

So, a series 5 full sheet in 1957 would run:

Slit A: Rows A, B, C, D, E, A, B, C, D, E, A, B

Slit B: Rows B, C, D, E, A, D, E, A, B, C, D, E

55 different cards creates only 5 different rows.  With 24 total rows in a full sheet, this means one row had to be printed one time less than the others.  In series 5, this was row C, which appears 4 times when all the others appear 5 times.  Therefore, the 11 cards in row C appear 1/5 less than the cards in the other rows, creating a situation where these 11 cards are short-printed. 

The series 5 full sheet has been reconstructed, revealing the following pattern:

According to the work done at Net54, it is a near certainty that the cards which are SPs, row C, are (left to right):

391 Ralph Terry
365 Ossie Virgil
375 Jim Landis
390 Reno Bertoia
357 Earl Torgesen
405 Duke Maas
403 Dick Hyde
362 Roman Mejias
398 Al Cicotte
407 Yankees Power Hitters
406 Bob Hale

When we continue, Mark will examine the 1958-1960 sheets. In the meantime, he maintains a website that covers Topps Baseball sets from 1965 to 1994 in some commendable depth.  CLICK HERE to be transported!

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Simply Splendid

So I was tooling around eBay last week when I noticed a very interesting player ledger kept by Topps back in the pre-digital days.  This one knocked my (Red) Sox off almost immediately:


As far as 1950's Topps hoped-for star power went, Williams was about as impressive a get as you could wish for at Bush Terminal. You will note the main section of the ledger starts in 1957, which at first struck me as odd since Ted famously kicked of with Topps in 1954 as the alpha and omega of that set after signing with the boys from Brooklyn. 

You can see Ted was signed at the end of December 1953 which totally tracks.  He had a five-year deal, which also tracks, as his last appearance with Topps as a player was in the 1958 set and he was off to Fleer for 1959.  Before that, he was in a real potpourri of issues starting with his 1939 Play Ball card and an R303-A Goudey premium. National releasers Bowman snagged him in 1951 but not in 1952, when he was appearing in the muddy looking Berk Ross set, the more colorful Red Man tobacco offering and on some Star Cal decals (a highly underrated set IMHO). He ended up being recalled by the Marines by the end of April '52 and then was a no show in terms of 1953 cards, except as part of the also underrated Canadian Exhibit set due to a late July mustering out. Topps then snapped him up.

However, a closer look at the upper right corner reveals the story there, and then some. Here, I blew it up for easier eyeballing:


Take a look at the box under SIGNED (K); Ted's Topps deal was arranged through his agent, F.J. Corcoran. Whatever deal Corcoran worked out with Topps must have been exclusive for gum cards and ultimately led to two Jimmy Piersall cards and and no "official" Williams cards for Bowman in 1954, although they certainly sold off what they could in packs once ceased-and-desisted. Corcoran can be considered the one of the first true sports agents - possibly even the first - coming to it through the world of golf, a sport with which Williams was well acquainted. We'll come back to him shortly. 

Those five years with Topps saw The Kid lead off three sets (1954, 1957 and 1958) and his time with them was his longest sustained run with any card company. It's also worth noting (again) Williams doesn't have a line entry on the ledger until 1957, when he received $450 from Topps, a significant premium compared to the standard amount of roughly $125 other players made.  Although they had a rudimentary system in place already, 1957 was the first year Topps prepared a merchandise catalog for their ballplayers to choose from if they didn't take the offered cash stipend. Ted would be back with Topps as a manager in 1969 but as you can see, he was getting the standard $250 per season for a new contract in effect at that time upon his return, plus the standard $5 in "steak money" for signing. He took the merch thereafter.

Somewhat, but not completely, surprisingly, there was a bit of a wrinkle to all this, namely this letter forwarded by friend o'the Archive Tony DeMarzio, which was sent by Sy Berger to Corcoran memorializing an extension for Williams for 1958. Maybe the ledger card was only created just around that time, or maybe something else was at play, like an option in the original deal. The October 1st date may be significant as the championship season, which may have been how the original agreement referenced duration, ended on September 29th, with the World Series to follow:


As for F.J. Corcoran, he had several other famous baseball players as clients.  Of particular interest is Stan Musial, another ballplayer whose past reveals a wide range of regional issues and some on the national stage, capped by a 1953 Bowman card. Stan the Man signed a deal and joined up with Topps around the time Williams was exiting in late 1958, only appearing on an All Star card in the nosebleed section. Topps was so excited, they tripled their fun:


Musial would have Topps cards every year thereafter until he retired following the 1963 season; given the probable July-ish production date for the '58 highs, he seems like a signee whose previous exclusive contract (with Rawlings, I believe) had just expired. I wonder if he too got a long term deal?

An old auction lot had some enlightening Musial correspondence with Corcoran circa 1950:

(Courtesy RR Auction)

An interesting comment within those letters concerned Stan returning a 1950 Bowman contract unsigned, via a letter dated February 26, 1950 . That changed of course but you can also see the Rawlings deal was his most lucrative at the time. He did OK with Wheaties too, and an outfit called Palm Beach (maybe the Florida town?):



I'd really like to track down Musial's Topps player ledger and also dive into his deals via Corcoran, I'll start digging in earnest soon.

Saturday, February 14, 2026

1952 In View

Friend o'the Archive Pete Putman recently sent along some very cool and interesting things related to the 1952 Topps Baseball set. With Spring Training kicking off for real right about now, what better time to take a look?

This first one is a bit of a question mark actually, although it was attributed to the 1952 set by Jim Fleck, who was Levi Bleam's (707 Sportscards) business partner until he passed away in 2020. This obviously never came to pass but it would have been something had it been manufactured:

It's unlike the plainly covered small albums Topps offered as premiums for their 1948-49 Hocus Focus (aka Magic Photo) and X-Ray Roundup (aka Pixie) cards and certainly not the same beast as their circa 1958-62 larger premium albums. If anyone knows more about this, I'd love to hear from you.

Pete sent along some print oddities as well.  Here's Gus Zernial, with no black ink on the back:


This is the ghostly reverse:


The star looks like it was hand drawn, doesn't it? Here's a Spahn as well, just for high-kickin' fun:


Finally, here are two very noticeable color variants for Ray Boone.  The first is from the black back run:


While his red back has turned orange!


There can be gradations in these colors on each Boone as well.

There are many, many print anomalies in first series of the 1952 set; it almost seems like the color separations were redone as Topps flipped the backs from black to red. I'm hoping that one of the larger, in-depth projects I understand are presently being worked on by some hobbyists will eventually get around to showing them all, plus all the other variants within. If you study the 1952 Baseball set in depth, the colors and designs used on the fronts, especially in the first three series, it's a pretty wild ride.

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Fours Field

The last time I took a peek at the "1960" Topps Venezuelan Tattoo set, I was marveling at a page from the 1989 Topps Auction at Guernsey's, where a number of potential subjects were included in a lot of original tattoo art, finally noticed by yours truly only 35 years later. Well since then four additional subjects have turned up and expanded the checklist to 25 players.  One of the new subjects hails from the Guernsey's sheet and three appear in the U.S. Baseball Tattoo set, including a real barnburner.

Tony Taylor is our new Venezuelan-only subject, once inferred and now confirmed:

Taylor, a Cuban National, brings the number of possible subjects from the Guernsey's artwork that were likely produced down to nine.

Here is a wrecked Glen Hobbie:


Vernon Law, a key member of the 1960 Pirates squad that shocked the mighty Yankees has survived in far better shape than ol' Glen:


Those three were offered on eBay, along with a couple other previously known subjects.  Heritage Auctions ended up with the big fish though, as the Mick has finally been found:



Mantle was another subject that was previously theorized to be included due to his widespread fame. It's not in great shape but I'll bet it goes for some crazy money when the auction concludes three weeks hence.

Here's the current checklist.  Since the set was produced in such a way that the final count should be divisible by 4/8/24, and factoring in the nine Venezuelan only subjects still lurking to presently land us at 33, it's clear more subjects are out there, and, as I suspect the divisor is likely to be 24, we could get all the way to 48 players.

Bob Allison
Ruben Amaro (Venezuelan only)
Luis Arroyo (Venezuelan only)
Orlando Cepeda (US subject but redrawn for Venezuala)
Bob Clemente (Venezuelan only)
Rocky Colavito
Don Drysdale
Nellie Fox
Tony Gonzales (Venezuelan only)
Dick Groat
Glen Hobbie
Harmon Killebrew
Juan Marichal  (Venezuelan only)
Frank Lary
Vernon Law
Mickey Mantle
Ed Mathews
Stan Musial
Juan Pizzaro (Venezuelan only)
Vic Power (Venezuelan only)
Pedro Ramos (Venezuelan only)
Tony Taylor (Venezuelan only)
Zoilo Versalles (Venezuelan only) inferred from a sliver on a miscut, not yet confirmed but it's somebody
Gene Woodling
Early Wynn

Here's the likely Venezuelan players not yet found:

Matty Alou
Luis Aparicio (previously surmised as a possible subject)
Chico Fernandez
Felipe Alou
"Clio" (Elio) Chacon
Felix Mantilla
O. "Cepida"
Jose Pagan
Chico Cardenas

If we could confirm the US version print group includes all the non-exclusive players found so far in the Venezuelan set, it might help finding the resting point. In fact, the redrawn Cepeda could indicate he was not in the same print group as other known US subjects. Right now we know of eleven Venezuelan only subjects with another nine possible from the Guernsey's sheet. Four more gets us to 24.

The "US" subjects presently total fourteen, so another ten of those could be out there. If I'm correct in my guesstimating, of course.