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Old 01-31-2024, 12:01 PM
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ValKehl ValKehl is offline
Val Kehl
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Join Date: May 2009
Location: Manassas, VA (DC suburb)
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Default 50 Years ago today was a very sad day for Wash., DC, baseball

Here are the first few paragraphs from a good read in today's Wash. Post re the relocation of the San Diego Padres to DC, which never happened and which resulted in 30+ years of my life passing without having a local MLB team to root for. I've mellowed somewhat about this ever since the Expos relocated to DC in 2005 and gave us DC fans a WS Championship in 2019. Here's the link to this piece, and I don't think you will encounter a paywall; if you do, send me a PM with your email address, and I will copy and paste this piece and email it to you: https://wapo.st/3Oo3Guu

Fifty years ago, baseball was back in Washington, D.C. — until it wasn’t
By Frederic J. Frommer
January 31, 2024 at 5:30 a.m. EST

"A half-century ago, the San Diego Padres were so close to relocating to the nation’s capital that longtime Washington Post sports columnist Shirley Povich sent a two-word telegram to Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, a D.C. native who had championed a new team for his hometown: “MAZEL TOV.”

The traditional Jewish congratulations came after National League owners approved the team’s move to Washington in December 1973, Kuhn recalled in his autobiography.

Earlier that year, Joseph B. Danzansky, president of the Giant supermarket chain, had signed a deal with the troubled owner of the Padres to purchase the team for $12 million and place it in the nation’s capital to replace the Washington Senators, who had relocated to Texas the previous season.

But a lawsuit by the city of San Diego, followed by McDonald’s chairman Ray Kroc swooping in to buy the team and keep it in Southern California, wound up sinking the D.C. effort. The conclusion came Jan. 31, 1974 — 50 years ago Wednesday — when NL owners unanimously approved the sale of the team to Kroc.

“So Ray Kroc got the Padres as spring training approached and Washington’s window of hope closed again,” Kuhn recalled in his memoir. “There would be only robins and Redskins at RFK Stadium.”

It represented a stunning switcheroo, coming less than two months after the mazel tov-inducing vote approved the team’s relocation to D.C. And it set up decades of heartbreak for Washington baseball fans, who lived with fleeting hope and constant uncertainty for more than 30 years before the arrival of the Washington Nationals in 2005 finally ended the city’s baseball drought."


There is this brief mention in this piece re Topps producing cards for the new Washington team. I have the Willie McCovey's Washington version of this card somewhere, but I'm unable to quickly locate it.

"The Post reported that Washington would open the 1974 season at RFK Stadium for a 2:30 p.m. game against the Philadelphia Phillies, a day before the rest of MLB’s teams started their season. That winter, Topps printed a 1974 set of baseball cards of 15 San Diego players with “Washington Nat’l Lea.” printed on them."
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1974 Topps #250 Willie McCovey - front.jpg (153.7 KB, 255 views)
File Type: jpg 1974 Topps #250 Willie McCovey - back.jpg (179.8 KB, 257 views)
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Seeking very scarce/rare cards for my Sam Rice master collection, e.g., E210 York Caramel Type 2 (upgrade), 1931 W502, W504 (upgrade), W572 sepia, W573, W575-1 E. S. Rice version, 1922 Haffner's Bread, 1922 Keating Candy, 1922 Witmor Candy Type 2 (vertical back), 1926 Sports Co. of Am. with ad & blank backs. Also T216 Kotton "NGO" card of Hugh Jennings. Also 1917 Merchants Bakery & Weil Baking cards of WaJo.
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