Monday, January 27, 2014

Ty Cobb

The Topps trading card company included ten 'All-Time All-Stars' with their 1976 set. One of those ten players was Ty Cobb.



I had heard of Ty Cobb by the time I was nine years old. I knew he had a kick ass lifetime average of .367, because it said so right there on the back of his card. 



This told me he must have been pretty good. However, I had a hard time believing that, based on the front side.

It seemed like I'd get a Ty Cobb card within every other pack. I clearly remember having at least twenty of them. My best friend and main (i.e.-'only') trading partner Jeff had at least a dozen of them too, so his trade value was essentially worthless in my neighborhood. Every time I'd spot him when flipping through a newly purchased pack for that first time, I'd groan.

My nine year old mind was full of skepticism when it came to Ty Cobb, beginning with his running ability. Did he even know how to run properly? It appears he's turning the corner at third base and about to head towards home, but his balance seemed questionable at best and on top of that, his eyes look like they're closed in the photo. Seriously, who runs like that?

On top of that, it's not completely clear he's even on a baseball field. There does appear to be an outfield wall in the distance and there may in fact be dirt defining the basepaths, but a part of me wondered if they dressed him in a Tigers uniform, then took this picture while he was running through Farmer Brown's cow pasture. Is he trying to score a run or avoid a bull?

Babe Ruth was in the set of ten greats. I never questioned his greatness because, well, what kid didn't know about Babe Ruth? Lou Gehrig and Walter Johnson were both included and they too were unquestionable legends in my mind. When I got duplicates of those cards, I added them to my collection without complaint.

But this guy Ty Cobb? I didn't understand how he was considered an all time great. As a nine year old boy who could run swiftly with balance (not to mention with his eyes open!) and one who spent his free time on baseball fields and not cow pastures, I wasn't buying into it. 

Baseball cards helped shape my world in the '70's. 

Those shapes didn't always fit with reality.




Thursday, January 23, 2014

Soulmates

Soulmate-A person with whom you have an immediate connection the moment you meet--a connection so strong you are drawn to them in a way you have never experienced before.

Usually the definition above applies to one's romantic partner. For me, it was different. My soulmate is my oldest son.

I met my soulmate in a Janesville apartment in the spring of '95. I had gone out with his mother however many times before, and now she decided it was time for me to meet her children, so I drove from Beloit to her apartment to meet them.

Her daughter (age 11) was home sick from school that day. Her son was also home. He was four years old.

I wasn't there long before I sat down on the couch. A minute or so after that, this little boy had positioned himself with his back to me and he was walking backwards toward me with a book in his hands. It was obvious he wanted to sit on my lap and have me read to him, so I picked him up and did just that. Shortly thereafter I noticed his mother staring at us with her mouth agape.

I was immediately concerned that I was doing something upsetting to her, so I paused from reading the book to him and said, 'Am I doing something wrong?' She said, 'No. It's just that he doesn't do that with strangers. Ever.'

A special relationship was born.

My oldest son was born with cognitive delays. When I met him, he was a lot like a two year old boy developmentally. He has never had a specific diagnosis (i.e.-autism) and I've never thought there really was a need for one. His brain simply works differently than most. It takes him longer to grasp some concepts, other concepts are quite difficult for him to understand, and critical thinking skills have always been problematic for him.

I fell in love with that little boy over time and after I married his mother, I adopted both of my wife's children and shared with them my surname and unconditional love.



Over the years I have witnessed more landmark moments in his life than I can count. Some of those moments had added significance, considering his cognitive challenges. Each and every time he has reached one, I've cried tears of pride and joy.

One of those moments occurred in early October of 2012. You see, my boy made one of his dreams come true when he moved into his own apartment. He has proven he can handle the responsibility, as it's now been over a year and he continues to live there.

Today he is a lot like the third graders I teach when it comes to his cognitive abilities. He works part time, takes the bus around town when need be, does his own chores/laundry, and loves life and the important people he has in it. He is as friendly of an individual as you'll ever meet, and you may find yourself being given a hug for no reason when talking with him sometimes, just because that's who he is.

 To say he loves his independence would be a vast understatement and he is so proud that he'll tell random people when we're at the grocery store or out to eat together, with statements out of the blue such as, 'I have my own apartment!' The excited tone in his voice remains a year plus later and it'll probably be there 20 and 30 years from now too.

I love all of my children equally, unconditionally, and immeasurably. With my oldest son though, there's the added feeling that I was just *meant* to find him in this crazy world, and that he was meant to find me.

I know many, many good people in life. Some of those people have said things such as, 'He is so lucky to have you' to me over the years. While I appreciate the compliment and understand its nature, I feel like they have it backwards. You see, I'm the lucky one to have him. Sure, I've taught him many things about life, from his ABC's to playing baseball and much more. However, I can say this without hesitation:

Tyler has taught me more about life than anyone I've ever known. Oh yes, I am most definitely the lucky one to have found him.


If you know him, you already know how special he is. If you have yet to meet him, I hope that maybe I've helped you learn how this world is a better place because he's in it.


Saturday, January 18, 2014

'One day' has arrived!

After an almost 40 year wait (http://kevburgh23.blogspot.com/2014/01/1974-topps-baseball.html), I am the proud owner of the 1974 Topps Baseball Set as of today. And I must say.............

                                                                             I



                                                                             am


                                                                             head


                                                                              over

 
                                                                             heels


                                                                               in


                                                                      LOVE!!!!!!!!!!!!


Wednesday, January 15, 2014

1977 Topps

Once upon a time, two team's baseball cards mystified me.




On November 5th, 1976 the Toronto Blue Jays and Seattle Mariners added the first players to their rosters via an expansion draft.

I was nine years old at the time.

I had read about this development in the newspaper, but those were just words in print. I didn't see any photographic evidence of the league's expansion until I saw Toronto and Seattle cards from the 1977 Topps Baseball set for the first time.

The league's expansion became a reality for me on that day. Then, as if to remind me that it wasn't a dream, I would get a Mariner or Blue Jay card in nearly every pack I purchased. Repeatedly seeing cards for these two new franchises slowly helped me realize that it was all true. There really were two new teams born in the off season and I was getting a sneak preview of their roster and uniforms within seemingly every pack of cards I opened that winter.





These franchises named their managers and they each received a card in the '77 Topps set, more evidence that these teams would indeed take the field come that April.




I remember announcing to my friend Jeff that the Blue Jays would be better than the Mariners because they had a much cooler logo on their caps and their team uniforms had 'better colors'. You'd expect a nine year old to decide on the better team in a different way?

It's now 37 years later. I understand the world a lot more clearly than I did in early 1977. I understand that expansion means more money for the league. I understand that teams don't perform any better or worse than another based on their team logo or uniform colors. I understand that I didn't fully understand how two new teams could be created out of thin air as a nine year old boy.

Today Toronto and Seattle are just two teams amidst a league that expanded two more times in the 1990's. I don't think about the Mariners or Blue Jays all that often today. However, when I do think of them, I think of how their existence mystified me all those years ago. 

I think about how baseball cards helped me to understand the world a bit more clearly.







Saturday, January 11, 2014

1974 Topps Baseball

I began collecting baseball cards somewhere around late 1976 or early 1977. I can remember going to High Street Pharmacy in Aurora, Illinois, where they had countless packs of cards in a bin near the checkout counter, each for a mighty 25 cents.

My best friend Jeff lived across the street and he too was a card collector. I have vivid memories of us spreading our cards out in the garage or bedroom, flipping through the team stacks, making trades, and marveling at the wonders of seeing our baseball heroes on cardboard.

One summer day a year or two into collecting Jeff and I had our cards spread out in his garage. A boy a couple of years older than us named Guy was riding his bike in the cul-de-sac and when he saw us, he rode up to the garage.

Guy took in what we were doing, looked over some of our cards, and then said, 'I want you two to come with me. I want to show you something.' So we headed just down the block to his house.

He went into the house while we waited in his garage. He came out with a couple of shoe boxes, opened one, and pulled this out:


When I saw it, my jaw dropped.

The action shot of Green turning the double play was nothing short of spectacular, and it was a sideways card! Absolutely brilliant!

Shortly thereafter, Guy pulled this card out of the box:



The city displayed at the top. The team nickname at the bottom. Marichal's photo snapped at the very peak of his leg kick.

It was love at first sight.

Guy explained that the cards were from the 1974 Topps Set. We flipped through his boxes and he did trade me a handful of his doubles, but neither Dick Green or Juan Marichal was among them.

In the 1970's there was of course no ebay, no internet, and if there were card shops in town, I was unaware of them. The stores like High Street Pharmacy only sold the current year's edition. Thus, I had no other way to see or buy cards from the past as a child. Guy was my sole link to the 1974 set back then.

I stopped collecting cards in 1982 and my interest waned through the teen years and beyond. In my 30's I found myself thinking more and more about my incredible childhood and with that, my interest in cards was rekindled. It's now possible to buy complete sets at card shops and of course on ebay and I've done some purchasing on the latter over the past ten years or so.

Today I have the complete Topps sets from 1976-1981, each of the years I was into card collecting. However, I have one more gap to fill in my collection and that gap is 1974. I've taken a look at auctions for it over the years, but the prices have always been too rich for my blood. 'One day' I've told myself over and over. One day I will own the 1974 set too.

I recently won some money thanks to some NFL games falling my way. Ever since, I've had that 'found money' feeling and have decided that this is a prime opportunity to purchase that much longed for set after all of these years. I've been watching various '74 auctions on ebay and a few days ago, thought I had one in the bag. Alas, someone jumped in and snagged it from me with a mere two seconds left in the auction. My disappointment lingers but I have certainly not given up hope.

There will be others.

And one of them shall be mine.

 Hopefully sooner rather than later.