until I opened the pack.
Ah, yes. I see these all the time when I'm digging in the 5 for a dollar bins.
I know these are minor league players before they've made it to the Bigs, but it seems that I never find a card of a guy that I'm sure has made it to the Majors, even as a "minor star".
Let's see if any of these have.
Steve Foster - yep 1991-1993 Reds.
Anthony Dela Cruz - nope.
Ken Lewis - nah.
Pedro Munoz - 7 years, 6 with the Twins. There's my minor star I suppose.
Mike House - nope.
Jaime Roseboro - never made it.
Lem Pilkenton - Only 2 Lems and 1 Lemmie have ever played in the MLB and this guy wasn't one of them.
Chris Butler - no.
Michael Maksudian - He doesn't look like a Major Leaguer, but he is! 1992-1994.
Ed Zambrano - Yes, 2 years with the Cubs, 1993-1994.
And the back of Steve Fosters card so you can see what the back looks like.
A little background from the 2010 Standard Catalog of Baseball Cards says that with the first series Star became the first card company to venture into minor league cards.
So this is the second series to the trailblazing first issue.
Cool.
Michael Maksudians Wikipedia page says the following: He was famous for consuming insects in the Jays' bullpen during his time as a backup catcher
ReplyDeleteI found this too: During his World Series speech at the dome, despite virtually nobody in attendance knowing who the hell he was, Maksudian vowed to tattoo a Toronto Blue Jays logo on his buttocks. To see if he delivered, re-watch the 1992 World Series video. You might notice a partially naked rear being spanked at the end. Well done Mike, well done.
ReplyDeleteJamie Roseboro is Johnny Roseboro's son.
ReplyDeleteI got to see Munoz play a lot as a member of the Portland Beavers (AAA - Twins) back in the day.
ReplyDelete