This is the checklist and it's worth noting the set appears in issued, die-cut form and also in proof form, which are thinner and have no die cuts. Either is hugely difficult as these are among the rarest Topps cards ever issued:
1. Pete Rose - Outfield - Cincinnati Reds
2. Gary Peters - Pitcher - Chicago White Sox
3. Frank Robinson - Outfield - Baltimore Orioles
4. Jim Lonborg - Pitcher - Boston Red Sox
5. Ron Swoboda - Outfield - New York Mets
6. Harmon Killebrew - 1st Base - Minnesota Twins
7. Roberto Clemente - Outfield - Pittsburgh Pirates
8. Mickey Mantle - 1st Base - New York Yankees
9. Jim Fregosi - Shortstop - California Angels
10. Al Kaline - Outfield - Detroit Tigers
11. Don Drysdale - Pitcher - Los Angeles Dodgers
12. Dean Chance - Pitcher - Minnesota Twins
13. Orlando Cepeda - 1st Base - St. Louis Cardinals
14. Tim McCarver - Catcher - St. Louis Cardinals
15, Frank Howard - Outfield - Washington Senators
16. Max Alvis - 3rd Base - Cleveland Indians
17. Rusty Staub - Outfield - Houston
18. Richie Allen - 3rd Base - Philadelphia Phillies
19. Willie Mays - Outfield - San Francisco Giants
20. Hank Aaron - Outfield - Atlanta Braves
21. Carl Yastrzemski - Outfield - Boston Red Sox
22. Ron Santo - 3rd Base - Chicago Cubs
23. Jim Hunter - Pitcher - Oakland A's
24. Jim Wynn - Outfield - Houston
As noted previously here, Rusty Staub and Jim Wynn are just shown as being with Houston; using the name Astros was a no-no for Topps until 1969 due to a trademark dispute between Monsanto and the team. Houston is an odd choice for two players representing the team as well. I get the extra player from Boston and St. Louis, teams that met in the 1967 World Series and even the Twins, who had been in the Fall Classic in '66 and were a game back in '67 but Houston was a 9th place team!
Also odd is the position distribution. There are no 2nd Baseman at all, the NL is lacking a Shortstop and while they had four Pitchers represented, the AL had no one to catch!
Looking at it a little more closely, every player in the set was a 1967 All Star selection and every team has at least one subject, so that makes sense, but there were 53 All Stars selected that year and if you wanted to overweigh the NL team, the Giants had finished in second in 1967, and while a good ways back in the standings, they were a strong team at the time. The Cubs were also good in '67 and with only a single NL pitcher include and Fergie Jenkins would have been a pretty obvious choice. As an aside, did you know that Jenkins never was on a team that made the postseason?!
So what happened with this set's player selection? My own guess is that Topps loosely planned a second series, although it's debatable whether another 24 players from the All Star rosters would have been all that interesting:
967 MLB All-Star Rosters | |
AMERICAN LEAGUE | NATIONAL LEAGUE |
Rod Carew, MIN | Tim McCarver, STL |
Carl Yastrzemski, BOS | Tony Perez, CIN |
Tommie Agee, CHI | Rusty Staub, HOU |
Max Alvis, CLE | Pete Rose, CIN |
Ken Berry, CHI | Tom Seaver, NY |
Paul Casanova | Fergie Jenkins, CHI |
Dean Chance, MIN | Hank Aaron, ATL |
Tony Conigliaro, BOS | Dick Allen, PHI |
Al Downing, NY | Gene Alley, PIT |
Andy Etchebarren, BAL | Joe Torre, ATL |
Bill Freehan, DET | Ernie Banks, CHI |
Jim Fregosi, CAL | Lou Brock, STL |
Steve Hargan, CLE | Orlando Cepeda, STL |
Joe Horlen, CHI | Roberto Clemente, PIT |
Catfish Hunter | Mike Cuellar, HOU |
Al Kaline, DET | Don Drysdale, LA |
Harmon Killebrew, MIN | Bob Gibson, STL |
Jim Lonborg, BOS | Tom Haller, SF |
Mickey Mantle, NY | Tommy Helms, CIN |
Dick McAuliffe, DET | Denny Lemaster, ATL |
Jim McGlothlin, CAL | Juan Marichal, SF |
Don Mincher, CAL | Willie Mays, SF |
Tony Oliva, MIN | Bill Mazeroski, PIT |
Gary Peters, CHI | Claude Osteen, LA |
Rico Petrocelli, BOS | Chris Short, PHI |
Brooks Robinson, BAL | Jim Wynn, HOU |
Frank Robinson, BAL |
These are courtesy of Keith Olbermann-Catfish Hunter has an airbrushed logo due to the original photo showing him in a KC hat and of course the two Astros had their lids wiped :
Here is a Clemente (proof), from Bob Fisk, another guy with a drool-worthy collection:
Here are the remaining three, courtesy of Al Richter. A couple are proofs and that Cepeda might actually be a repro, although Al warned me it was a low-res scan. Actually every Cepeda I've seen looks like the original picture is pixellated:
PSA has graded a total of 22 of these suckers. Are they the rarest, issued Topps pure baseball set? Could be, could be.
Recently saw a handful of these at a show. Really need to get a Lonborg
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