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T206 Players with 3 or more cards in the set
Curious as to everyones opinion on why some players who are not HOFers were given 3 different cards in the T206 set.. i would think the more cards a player has the more popular of a player he would have been at that time..
I would have expected a majority of the players with 3+ cards in the set to be HOFers..... For reference here are the 25 players with 3 or more cards in the set...the players in Bold are the HOFers which represent only 13 of the 25. Do you think these popular players didnt finish strong enough to be in the HOF?.... maybe some of these non HOF players were the "snubbed players of their day" who didnt make it in.. (im excluding 4 players with variations/errors, namely elberfeld, kleinow frank smith, and magee.. the 3rd card for each of these 3 players was due to a team switch or error, not because the player was popular)
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Jamie, I think you hit the nail on the head. They were strong/polular players circa 1909-1911 (warranting 3+ poses), then either petered-out, declined, got injured, died (maybe I'm exaggerating), or got thrown out of the game. We know, for instance, Hal Chase would've very likely been a HOFer, but gamblers got to him first.
Cool thread, I'll try to post a few cards later tonight. |
Hal Chase was one of the better players of the era; however, his ties to gambling (and allegedly throwing games) make it unlikely he'll ever be inducted into the HOF.
ETA: someone beat me to it. |
Are most of those players on specific teams? For example, NY Giants?
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If They made a T206 set for baseball players in 1990, Doc Gooden would have many examples. Not a hall of famer. Not all of the great players during the years 1907-1910 (likely the time period a player's merits were considered for the T206 set) ended up having HOF careers (or they were amazing players but also bad dudes, like Hal Chase).
I do find it interesting those players with 4 examples. I understand Cobb , and of course Tinker was bigtime around them, but McGraw and not Matty, Young, or Lajoie? |
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Jamie, at the very least I would put an asterisk next to Frank Smith since his Chicago and Chicago & Boston cards are the exact same image and the only difference is the caption team change. Also if you credit Smith with three cards you would need to include Elberfeld and Kleinow.
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Cool thread. It's neat to see these anomalies noticed. Oddly enough, when I envision some kid on the street looking for cards back in 1909-1911, for some reason I always think of NY. Not sure why that is. I'm not even from that coast.
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I think during the time they were great well-respected stars. As a few has mentioned they didnt have a Hall of Fame Career as time went on. Personally, I believe Mullen should be in the Hall of Fame.
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Mike Donlin was HOF-caliber (.333 lifetime batting average), but gave up the game to try a career on Broadway (in the theater), and then Hollywood.
Steve |
Orval Overall went 23-7 in 1907, and 20-11 in 1909, both with the Cubs. He was also 3-0 pitching in the 1907 and 1908 World Series, both times the Cubs beating the Tigers. He only played seven seasons though in the majors, so he's not eligible for the hall of fame.
Howie Camnitz was 25-6 in 1909, 20-15 in 1911, 22-12 in 1912. In 1913, he dropped to 9-20, and then he went 14-19 in 1914, and was finished. Steve |
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JB- this thread needs some cards :)
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Cy Seymour is still the Reds all time batting average leader with a lifetime average of .332!!!
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Although he was a proficient pitcher on some bad teams, Joe Lake is the player that sticks out to me as being the least deserving of those having 3 T206 cards. I can understand his New York card in the 150 series, and his St. Louis Browns (no ball) card in the 350/460 series. But why another card in the 460 only series? The only reason I can think is that ATC wanted more representation of the St. Louis Browns in the later series, and Joe was sadly one of the top Brownies among slim pickings. Harry Howell (hands at waist) is the only other Browns player in the 460 only series.
Brian |
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Looking at the list, almost all of the players with 3 cards played for teams in New York or Chicago, the country’s two largest cities. Followed by players from Pittsburgh and Detroit, large cities and two of the best teams of the era.
I think it’s all about advertising and appealing to your customers - more customers in those cities and customers want popular players. Thus, it was likely a combo of prowess, popularity, and domicile/size of city-market. |
That Uzit Mullin has amazing color on the front. A beautiful card on both sides!
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I have a Schlei catching back run with a twist that I'm working on. I have Piedmont 150 with a magenta shift and one with a Howe McCormick stamp, a Piedmont 350 with a factory WST transfer on the front, a Sweet Caporal 150 factory 649 with the factory 649 and 30 showing and a Sweet Caporal 350 factory 30 with a small portion of the factory 30 sheet number on the bottom. I still need to get the Sweet Caporal 150 25 & 30 to complete the back run. I just missed a BIN lot the other day that had a Schlei SC350/30 that had more of the factory 30 sheet number showing than the one I have. Attachment 608541 |
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Thanks Mark, and Pat! Most Uzits seem to have faded or not bold ink...this one is definitely the darkest/boldest printing I've seen on a Uzit.
Pat- great run! Here's a few more cards from the list... ;) |
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Camnitz
Curious about the Camnitz (Howie). I have seen some checklists with the third Camnitz card listed as his brother Harry. I have a Pirates team collage with both of their head shots on the 1909 team. Harry was a bit player for sure but does anyone here know if all three t206 poses are indeed Howie or did Harry sneak in a pose? Thanks.
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Of the 38 HOF'ers in the set :
3 have 4 cards ( Cobb, McGraw and Tinker ). 10 have 3 cards 9 have 2 cards 16 have 1 only card. Complete HOF T 206 contains 38 HOF'ers with a total of 76 cards. Hal Chase, not in the Hall , has 5 cards ! |
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I have a Piedmont Donlin
Star player and WS Champion but alcohol and acting took him away from the game |
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Camnitz earned three appearances in the T206 set for his deadball era dominant pitching. In his first full season with the Pirates in 1907, Howie had a 13–8 record with a 2.15 ERA in 180 innings, including a five-inning no-hitter against the New York Giants on August 23. The next year, he went 16–9 with a 1.56 ERA and 15 complete games in 19 starts. With an excellent curveball, Howie collected three 20-win seasons for the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1909 to 1912, leading his team to the 1909 World Series after winning 25 games in the regular season and tying Christy Mathewson for the National League lead winning percentage (.806). The Pirates won the World Series that year, though Howie pitched poorly in two outings. The Series is best remembered for the amazing play by the two best players at the time, Honus Wagner and Ty Cobb. Howie pitched at least 240 innings for seven consecutive years (1908–14) with a career-high 283 innings in 1909, winning 20 games in 1911 and 22 in 1912. |
some cards
<a data-flickr-embed="true" href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/195798945@N03/52145210975/in/album-72177720299781899/" title="Seymour Broad Leaf 460 PSA 4"><img src="https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52145210975_978e44a7c2_b.jpg" width="598" height="1024" alt="Seymour Broad Leaf 460 PSA 4"/></a><script async src="//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
<a data-flickr-embed="true" href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/195798945@N03/52144959709/in/album-72177720299781899/" title="Seymour Broad Leaf 460 PSA 4 b"><img src="https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52144959709_e0d680e900_b.jpg" width="598" height="1024" alt="Seymour Broad Leaf 460 PSA 4 b"/></a><script async src="//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js" charset="utf-8"></script> <a data-flickr-embed="true" href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/195798945@N03/52144871946/in/album-72177720299781899/" title="Seymour Blank"><img src="https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52144871946_5e388a1a77_b.jpg" width="640" height="1024" alt="Seymour Blank"/></a><script async src="//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js" charset="utf-8"></script> <a data-flickr-embed="true" href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/195798945@N03/52144893868/in/album-72177720299781899/" title="Seymour Blank b"><img src="https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52144893868_d48ab5dd6c_b.jpg" width="622" height="1024" alt="Seymour Blank b"/></a><script async src="//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js" charset="utf-8"></script> |
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