1969 Topps Cards from the MLBPA Boycott of 1968by Dave Sosidka - 337 cards (Last updated on Apr 7, 2024) |
Thanks to Jack Webster for his detective work in helping me track some of these down.
93. 1969 Topps #135 Tommy Davis
You can argue that expansion teams get a bit of a pass, given the fact uniformed photos are impossible until the last few series come out. Now we know the REST of the story. |
Comments
Nice observations here. For me personally, I only stick with the initial player photo from the '68 Topps set, and skip any duplicate photos from the '69 set. There were a lot of big names too which is unfortunate, and another one that comes to mind is Ernie Banks. | ||
Thanks- I added the Banks. | ||
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Nice work. Hmmm, 1968 and 1969 are the next two sets I intended to complete after this year. Perhaps I can combine them, and save myself a great deal of money. I'm not sure I completely buy every one of your assertions, but you're dead-on for about 65 or 66 of them. Cool, sad, list. v3 | ||
Johnson has been added. Thanks. | ||
This is fascinating. Thank you for explaining the reasons why there are so many duplicate or similar photos in this era. I had no idea the reason. | ||
Here is a great article on the subject. https://sabrbaseballcards.blog/2017/01/03/the-1967-68-player-boycott-of-topps/ | ||
Tremendous job of research. I never realized so many were the same picture or obviously the same photo session. | ||
And to think that I blamed it all on budget cuts to the photography department. It all makes sense now. | ||
So did Larry Haney throw left or right handed lol | ||
For your consideration. The NY Mets wore the New York World's Fair patch only during the 1964 and 1965 seasons. 1969 Topps #649 Al Jackson, photo from 1964 or 1965. 1969 Topps #127 Kevin Collins, photo from 1965. | ||
Wonderfully entertaining thread! I just hate that I can't remember seeing remarkable ambidextrous catcher Larry Haney play! | ||
This was a lot of fun to look at. I tried to find a reason to dispute any of these, and I couldn't. And as much as I like this classic stuff, it gave me a new-found appreciation of modern cards with action photography. | ||
Thorough article and informative, but very misleading. It implies that only the 1969 Topps set borrows from the 1968 Topps and earlier issues. One comment posted says the 1968 Topps used initial photos. Not entirely true. The boycott actually went into effect during the 1967 season. The 1968 Topps uses over 100 capless ballplayers or about 30 blacked out caps. Quite a bit was the boycott fully in effects preventing the updated A's for the later series and the Astros logo dispute. However, the 1968 Topps Wille Mays is a duplicate of his 1965 Topps card. The 1968 Topps cards of Gary Bell, and Jerry Adair who joined the Red Sox in June 1967 are shown with older photos (capless) and there are others. Only one 1968 Topps card in the later series was new: #584 Larry Shepard (he was a Pirates manager and not affected by the boycott. By the end of the 1968 season the boycott ended and in series four of 1969 Topps new photos began appearing finally showing the A's without the caps greened or blacked out and the four expansion teams and the updated Senators uniforms. Considering the boycott, the four expansion teams and the Astros logo dispute all working against them, I feel the 1969 Topps is a great effort against all those obstacles and is underrated. It has been described as having a clean look like 1967 Topps with the team name at the bottom, and since it used quite a few photos from 1967, it's a great way to have the look of that terrific set without it breaking the bank for you. | ||
Very misleading? | ||
Mel Nelson #181: photo is from 1962 at the latest. Cardinals last wore dark blue caps in 1964. Nelson started in the Cardinals system. He played for them in 1960 and was sold to the Angels in October 1962. He later played for Cardinals in 1968 and 1969 when they only wore red caps. | ||
Bill White #588: This pic was taken at Shea Stadium in 1965 wearing a red cap and #12. When he returned to the Cardinals in 1969, he wore uniform #7. | ||
1969 #102 Jim Davenport image is same as 1967 #441 Jim Davenport. | ||
You could add the 1964 Steve Hamilton (#206) as a dupe of his 1969 card. | ||
The Brooks Robinson cards of 1969 and 1967 are dupes. I'm guessing that these card sets are from the same photo shoot: Bobby Wine (1969, 68 and 67 ... notice strong wind blowing tree in two of them!) Chuck Hinton (1969 and 1966 ... looks like Cleveland Municipal Stadium) Jesse Gonder (1969 and 1965 ... the yellow seats of Shea Stadium) | ||
Jim Lemon was a coach and manager during late 1960s, so he didn't go on strike against Topps ... his 1968 card (#341) must have been taken at spring training in '68 because he never wore that type of Senators uniform as a player or coach at any other time. The 1968 Gil Hodges (#27) must be from his Mets playing days, as this card # is so low that this series was probably released before spring training that year. |
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This list was created by site member Dave Sosidka. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the Trading Card Database.