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  #1  
Old 11-17-2021, 08:01 AM
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Default Dolf Luque

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Originally Posted by Roland 49 View Post
Now I show the cover of a notebook with a musical score of in Danzón (Cuban musical genre) that was composed for Adolfo Luque
Adolpho D. "Dolf" Luque. Pitcher for four MLB teams betwen 1914-1935. 194 wins and 29 saves in 20 MLB seasons. 2-time World Series champion -- 1919 (Cincinnati) and 1933 (New York Giants). MLB wins leader in 1923. 2-time MLB ERA leader. Member of the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame. Member of the Cuban Baseball Hall of Fame and one of Cuban baseball's most famous figures.

From Luque's SABR biography: Yet despite this . . . surprisingly early trickle of Cuban players northward, there was but a single Cubano who garnered even moderate attention in the US leagues during pro baseball’s initial three-quarters of a century. Racial barriers had almost everything to do with this, of course. The grandest of the early Cuban hurling and slugging phenoms were simply too black in skin pigment ever to penetrate America’s exclusively white-toned national sport during the race-driven eras of Adrian “Cap” Anson and Kenesaw Mountain Landis.

Thus just one lonely pioneer – Adolfo Luque (LOO-kay), a fireplug right-hander who debuted with Boston’s National Leaguers in 1914 and was already a veteran mound-corps mainstay with the Cincinnati club when the infamous 1919 Black Sox World Series rolled around – was left to carry the Cuban big-league banner throughout the half-century preceding World War II. Perhaps more embarrassing for Cuban baseball than the mere isolation of Luque’s big-league career was the persistent flavor of his negative image in Chicago, Boston, New York, St. Louis, and all points north. Unfortunately, this light-skinned if dark-tempered Cuban idol maintained a lasting reputation with big-league fans and ballpark scribes alike that was never quite as “fair and balanced” as most Cuban fans would have wished for back home.

Adolfo Luque today, of course, holds a rare place in Cuban baseball lore – the only Caribbean islander to earn even a modicum of big-league fame during the first half-century of modern major-league history. Between Nap Lajoie and Jackie Robinson, the few dozen Cubans who worked their way north were either brief curiosities in Organized Baseball (journeyman “coffee-tasters” like receiver Miguel Angel “Mike” González with the National League Boston and St. Louis outfits, and erratic outfielder Armando Marsans with Cincinnati) or else passing shadows who barely tasted the proverbial cup of big-league coffee (altogether forgettable names like Rafael Almeida, Angel Aragón, José Acosta, and Oscar Tuero). Numerous others – including some of the most famous and talented back home in Havana (Martin Dihigo, Cristóbal Torriente, and José Méndez head the list) – toured with black barnstorming outfits that rarely, if ever, passed before the eyes of the white baseball press.

By sharp contrast, Luque was something altogether special. His big-league credentials would by career’s end nearly approximate the numbers posted by many of his contemporaries destined for Cooperstown enshrinement once the game decided to formalize its history with a sacred hall of immortals. Twice (with the Reds in 1919 and the Giants in 1933) he experienced the pinnacle of World Series victory. As a near-200-game winner, he blazed trails that no other Latin ballplayer would approximate for decades. And back in Cuba he generated a feverish following for the big-league game and in the process carved out as well a lasting loyalty for “our beloved Reds” (“nuestros queridos rojos”) among baseball-crazy Habaneros. Yet, for all that, his career was destined to be cursed by the fate that eventually became a personal calling card for nearly all early Latin American ballplayers blessed with appropriate talent and skin tone to make their way to the baseball big-time. Among North American fans and writers Dolf Luque would always remain a familiar stereotype – a cartoon figure rather than a genuine baseball hero. At least this was the case at all stops north of Key West or Miami.

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Old 11-17-2021, 08:55 PM
Roland 49 Roland 49 is offline
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George, very good your publication of Adolfo Luque, keep doing it, now I show rare cards from La Mallorquina, Luque, Levis and Rosell.
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  #3  
Old 11-19-2021, 07:42 PM
Roland 49 Roland 49 is offline
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Now I show the most difficult card of Caramelos Felices 1945-46, # 73 of Napoleón Reyes, this copy will see that it does not have signs Above the photo, but there are several signs example: 1-WITHOUT PREMIUM, 2- ONLY TO COLLECT WITHOUT PREMIUM, 3-EL DEL PREMIUM WITH THE SIGNATURE OF THE MANAGER and the date in a quadrangular shape. There are also ads in dark blue and others in black, all are a rarity.
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Old 11-20-2021, 08:37 PM
Roland 49 Roland 49 is offline
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Martin Dihigo and Eufemio Abreu enjoying the music of Sirique's Trova, in the photo they were all baseball players.
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  #5  
Old 11-22-2021, 06:25 PM
Roland 49 Roland 49 is offline
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Default Adolfo Luque --Tomas Gutiérrez 1924

Now I show Adolfo Luque's card from the Tomas Gutiérrez 1924 Collection, with the Cincinati team
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  #6  
Old 11-23-2021, 10:26 AM
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Default Eufemio Abreu

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Martin Dihigo and Eufemio Abreu
Eufemio Abreu was a Cuban baseball catcher in Negro league baseball and the Cuban League. He played from 1918 to 1925 with the Cuban Stars (West), Almendares, Habana, and the Indianapolis ABCs.

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Old 11-23-2021, 04:54 PM
Roland 49 Roland 49 is offline
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Luis Tiant (junior) today is Tiant's 81st birthday, I show a photo from 1957 with the Cuban youth team in Mexico, the photo is signed from behind by all the players.
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