Showing posts with label Carlton Fisk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carlton Fisk. Show all posts

Friday, March 23, 2018

#770 - Carlton Fisk


What a card: Carlton Fisk struggled through an injury-plagued season in 1984, appearing in just 102 games. The continued battle with injuries prompted him to overhaul his training routine and in '85 he reached career highs in home runs and RBIs at age 37.

My observation on the front: Fisk with the eternal pissed-off look on his baseball cards.

More opinion from me: I'm still not thrilled Fisk spent so much time with the White Sox. I associated Fisk so much with the Red Sox as a youngster that his appearance in a different uniform may have baffled me more than any other team switch.

Something you might know: Fisk hit one of the most memorable home runs in World Series history, his extra-inning shot off the foul pole in Game 6 of the 1975 World Series. The highlight has remained in so many fans' minds because the camera remained on Fisk as he bounded down the first base line, waving the ball fair. The cameraman was interviewed years later and he said he kept the camera on Fisk instead of following the ball because he was distracted by a rat near him and couldn't move the camera toward the ball.

Something you might not know: At age 43, Fisk singled in the 1991 All-Star Game, becoming the oldest major leaguer to produce a hit in the All-Star Game.


My observation on the back: Fisk appears on the first card in the set, making me wonder if this is the greatest gap between two cards featuring the same player within the same set.

The blog wants to speak now: The Pop Culture tab is updated.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

#1 - Record Breaker, Carlton Fisk


What a card: This card commemorates Carlton Fisk catching all 25 innings of a game on May 9, 1984 against the Milwaukee Brewers. That is a record he still holds and one that is absolutely incredible. Fisk is well-deserved in receiving card No. 1 in this set.

My observation on the front: Fisk's best look is his pissed-off look. It's featured on a number of his cards, including this one. I'm sure he's an excellent father, but you don't want to see that look coming at you from a son/daughter vantage point.

More opinion from me: I do not like the record breaker subset in 1985 Topps. The purple makes it look like it belongs in another set, and the yellow-red "record breaker" design puts me in the mind of a Denny's Grand Slam breakfast.

Something you might know: The White Sox wore their uniform numbers atrociously close to their crotch for seven painful years, from 1982-88.

Something you might not know: Fisk threw out four runners in this 25-inning game. He threw out two in the ninth (Ben Oglivie and Bobby Clark), one in the 10th (Dion James) and one in the 20th (Mark Brouhard).


My observation on the back: That is the largest thumbtack ever.

The blog wants to speak now: Take a look at the tabs at the top of the blog. I will be updating them regularly in an attempt to immerse you into 1985 as much as possible. I was 19 years old in '85 and anyone who is 19 has a love affair with whatever year it happens to be. So you're going to know all about St. Elmo's Fire and Tears for Fears and Pee Wee's Big Adventure.

Get ready.