Posts Tagged ‘St. Louis Cardinals’

1933 Goudey: Eddie “Doc” Farrell

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009 by Nerdicus Finch

eddie-farrell

From the back of the card: “Eddie is a registered dentist, besides being a high grade major league baseball player.”

I’ll give Goudey a pass on the “high grade” player thing because it is pretty impressive that Doc Farrell was a dentist. One of the fascinating things about reading about old-timey players is how many of them had professions other than baseball. I’ve read about two that were lawyers (including Moe Berg, who was a lawyer and spy for the U.S. during World War II).

Farrell probably should have stuck with dentistry, though. Over nine seasons in the major leagues, he got into just under 600 games and posted a career OPS+ of 66 as an infielder for the New York Giants, Boston Braves, St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago Cubs, New York Yankees, and Boston Red Sox. In 1927, he placed 18th in the MVP voting by hitting .316 and driving in 92 runs, though he only slugged .389 that season.

Following the 1934 season, Farrell was traded by the Yankees, along with 4 other players, to San Francisco of the Pacific Coast League for Joe DiMaggio and players to be named later. Farrell refused to report to his new team and was eventually traded back to the Yankees as one of the players to be named later.

1933 Goudey: Heinie Schuble

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009 by Nerdicus Finch

schuble2

From the back of the card: “One of the fastest runners on the Detroit Tigers is Heinie Schuble.”

There are a shocking number of players in the 1933 Goudey set that have the name or nickname “Heinie.” There are four, including a guy named Heinie Meine.

Schuble broke into the majors at age 20 in 1927, but didn’t have much a career. Over the course of seven seasons with the St. Louis Cardinals and Detroit Tigers, Schuble had just over a 1000 plate appearances, primarily as a shortstop and third basemen. The qualified praise of his speed from the back of the card must have been referring to going from first to third because Schuble stole only 19 bases in his career (in 26 attempts).

Brian Barber

Thursday, October 8th, 2009 by Nerdicus Finch

Click the stars to vote: 1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (20 votes, average: 4.40 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

brian-barber

When I was growing up and living with my parents, I stored all of my baseball cards in a closet in the TV room. Recently, my parents began renovating this room and had to empty out the closets. Upon doing so, my Mom made it clear to me that I had to store my baseball cards in my own house. This has resulted in tens of thousands of (mostly worthless) baseball cards sitting in boxes in my sunroom.

I was flipping through some of the cards the other day and found Mr. Barber, one of many 1992 Topps Draft Pick cards that features really awkward photos straight out of school picture day. Barber was selected in the first round (22nd overall) in the 1991 draft by the St. Louis Cardinals. From 1995-99, he got into 26 games for the Cardinals and Royals, going 5-8 with a 6.77 ERA.

1933 Goudey: Leroy Mahaffey

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009 by Nerdicus Finch

leroy-mahaffey

From the back of the card: “Fast ball pitcher.”

Last week, I posted that I was beginning a collection of 1933 Goudey baseball cards, with the intention of completing the entire 239 card set within half a decade or so. Here’s the first card.

(more…)