Herm Wehmeier’s 1952 Topps Card
High expectations followed the local sandlot star in Cincinnati.
High expectations followed the local sandlot star in Cincinnati.
Gus Niarhos had one of the most impressive eyes for the strike zone.
I picked up most of this card in my early 2022 return to a card shop had not been visited since childhood. I say “most” because there is a missing corner which could still be floating around in a shoebox somewhere.
Picked up by the Braves on the results of a coin toss, Vern Bickford threw a no-hitter that would be in line with modern pitch counts.
The story behind the wooden fence appearing in the background of so many 1950s Pittsburgh Pirates cards.
Paul Minner had been playing off and on in the Majors since 1946, though it would take the expanded checklists of 1952 for him to finally get rookie cards from Topps and Bowman.
Bob Friend was durable. He was never on the disabled list at any point in his career, but that didn’t stop him from hanging around the office of the team doctor. He married the resident nurse.
He’s wearing a Yankees cap. There’s a Yankees logo in the lower left corner. He pitches for the Washington Senators.
Searching the background of a 1952 Topps common to find Mickey Mantle.