Saturday, December 11, 2010
#393 - Gary Gentry
Card fact: This is the final Topps card issued of Gary Gentry during his career.
What I thought about this card then: I remember this card came to me in a big trade with a friend. I recall being quite fascinated with it. I don't know why. Probably the mustache.
What I think about this card now: I like how there are many of the elements of a stadium in the background. Bleachers, backstop, press box. Cool.
Other stuff: Gentry's claim to fame came during his rookie season with the New York Mets in 1969. Gentry pitched the division-clinching victory in September, pitched the league championship-clinching win against the Braves, and won Game 3 of the World Series, adding a two-run home run. He was truly an amazing part of the Amazing Mets.
Gentry pitched well for the Mets the next few years, then was traded to Atlanta with Danny Frisella in exchange for Felix Millan and George Stone. Gentry suffered an elbow injury soon after the trade, and it led to the end of his career. He was finished not even two months into the 1975 season.
Back facts: You can see that Gentry barely played in 1974. He pitched three games. It makes me wonder why Topps produced a card of him for the '75 set. I have a suspicion he was a late fill-in for an unknown player who may have retired. That suspicion has to do with the card that will be featured in the next post. (Ah, suspense!)
Other blog stuff: The last three orange-yellow bordered cards all have had Mets connections. There is Gentry, and before that was Tom Seaver, preceded by Ray Sadecki.
Looks like the Mets re-signed him in 1975 and he went to AA Jackson. He started one game, walked a batter, and that was that. The batter eventually scored for his ERA to finish at infinity.
ReplyDeleteIf I didn't know better, I'd think that was a modern card and the picture was taken at a Marlins game...but that's a cheap shot and I don't play that way.
ReplyDeleteI love suspense, but since it's Sunday night/Monday morning and the next card is already posted, I won't have to wait long!
If Gentry had played in more recent times, he would have been known as Gary "Ask The Local" Gentry....
ReplyDeleteThe Gentry-for-Millan trade was a re-do or make-up of a trade of a few years earlier between the same two teams that just about came off, but didn’t. The earlier trade was Nolan Ryan-for-Joe Torre, and, I guess, a few other guys thrown in. From what I’ve read, that trade was all but done when the Mets backed out. Then the Braves sent Torre to St. Louis for Orlando Cepeda. You could write a whole book of "what might have beens" over this non-trade. Torre, of course, did finally end up on the Mets, but by that time he was washed up as a player. But he hit over .360 as a Cardinal in 1971 and won the MVP, and maybe that could have been enough to get the Mets another pennant. When they finally did trade Ryan, they got back a whole lot less.
ReplyDelete