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The 1974 "Washington Nat'l League" cards are considered errors too, but were corrected during the run. This came about when there was a strong possibility that the San Diego Padres might move to Washington after the 1973 season.
Cal Ripken Sr. replaced the retired Weaver as manager of the Orioles at the beginning of the 1987 season. That year, Ripken Sr. became the first manager to write two of his sons into the lineup card when both Ripken Jr. and his brother and fellow Oriole, Billy Ripken, played in the same game on July 11. [62]
The 1962 cards had a wood-grain design on the borders and had included the All-Star Rookie trophy on team members' cards. Topps brought back the gold cup symbol on the 1987 cards. In 2000, a special 10-card insert set of Topps All-Star Rookies was included in packs of the regular issue. Topps combined a list of All-Star names and holographic ...
Detail on Billy Ripken's 1989 baseball card. [28] In 1989, Ripken's Fleer card showed him holding a bat with the expletive "FUCK FACE" written in plain view on the knob of the bat. [29] [30] Fleer subsequently rushed to correct the error, and in their haste, released versions in which the text was scrawled over with a marker, whited out with ...
Notable card in this set is Cal Ripken's rookie card. [18] Donruss released three baseball card sets in 1983. Its standard 660-card set (with only minimal changes; a glove replacing the ball on the front and the back switching from blue to yellow), a 60-card "Action All-Star" set and a 44-card "Hall of Fame Heroes" set.
Ripken managed Cal Jr. and Billy for the first time on July 11, in a 2–1 loss to the Minnesota Twins. The Havre de Grace Record wrote, "The Ripkens of Aberdeen became the first family of sports." [ 27 ] On September 14, during a 17–3 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays , Ripken substituted Cal Jr. with Ron Washington after the eighth inning ...
Before the start of the first inning, Alex Rodriguez voluntarily elected to switch to third base to allow Cal Ripken Jr. to play at the shortstop position one final time at the All-Star Game, which the crowd gave a standing ovation. [2] The move allowed Ripken to set the record for most MLB All-Star appearances at shortstop (15).
Cal Ripken Jr. 1 1 LaDainian Tomlinson: 1 1 Russell Westbrook: 1 1 Peyton Manning: 0 4 Aaron Rodgers: 0 4 Kobe Bryant: 0 3 Jimmie Johnson: 0 3 Connor McDavid: 0 3 Miguel Cabrera: 0 2 Tim Duncan: 0 2 Nikola Jokić: 0 2 Mario Lemieux: 0 2 Hakeem Olajuwon: 0 2 Shaquille O'Neal: 0 2 Albert Pujols: 0 2 Barry Sanders: 0 2