The Inevitable 1969 Topps Johnny Podres
And just why did the Red Sox never trade for Daryl Boston??
1969 Topps Johnny Podres (#659) - Card of the Day
Johnny Podres had a date with destiny.
See …
Some baseball matchups just seem inevitable.
Like Yankees v. Dodgers in the World Series.
Or Scott Hatteberg lining up with the Oakland A’s.
Or Ken Griffey, Jr., coming “home” to the Cincinnati Reds.
Or Bert Blyleven serving up a home run “now and again.”
Or …
Well, here, take a look at this baseball card and tell me this wasn’t destined to happen …
To get to that hunk of cardboard, though, Johnny Podres first had to cut his teeth in the fire of great expectations as a young lefthander for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the early 1950s.
Just 20 years old when he came to Ebbets Field in 1953, Podres acquitted himself well, posting a 9-4 record with a 4.23 ERA in 33 appearances as a sort of swingman.
By the next spring, Podres was part of the Dodgers’ rotation, with an occasional relief stint thrown in here or there, and he only got better and better.
Indeed, Podres was a key member of a Bums squad that won pennant after pennant in the middle of the decade, and he was even named MVP of the 1955 Fall Classic when the Dodgers finally took down the hated Yanks.
In 1958, pitching in the glare of the California sun for the first time after the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles, Podres made the first of four All-Star appearances.
He would remain a workhouse in the Dodgers rotation into the mid-1960s, but an elbow injury in 1964 at age 31 began a decline phase that culminated with a May 1966 trade to the Detroit Tigers.
In Motown, Podres put together two middling campaigns back in his old swingman role before the Tigers released him after the 1967 season.
That seemed to be all she wrote, but then in May of 1968, with Podres on the shelf, the announcement came — San Diego would get an expansion team.
Not long after, they adopted their name — “Padres.”
Now, everyone knows it’s a struggle for expansion teams to fill their rosters, but maybe the most difficult bit of that task is to find able arms.
New clubs usually cast their nets far and wide in the search for guys who can throw the ball over the plate and keep it in the yard.
Sometimes, that even includes looking at players no longer on active rosters — easy pickings from a contractual standpoint, right?
And, when the Padres went casting about on the eve of their first Opening Day in 1969, still looking to fill out their roster and their rotation, who would have thought their net would land on their own name.
Pertnear, anyway.
And, so, Johnny Podres started the Padres’ second-ever game on April 9, 1969, a 2-0 victory over the Houston Astros at San Diego Stadium.
Podres would stick with his new team through June before embarking on a long coaching career, beginning there in San Diego.
Late in the summer, though, there was one more reminder of the eponymous mound pairing when Topps issued that gorgeous, inevitable baseball card: “Podres Padres.”
Podres, who passed away in 2008, was born 92 years ago today.
Eureka! He’s a Hall of Famer!
You know who else was born on September 30?
Well, plenty of folks, I’d imagine, but especially relevant for us is Hall of Famer Robin Roberts, who made his grand entrance on this date back in 1926.
The Phillies signed him as an amateur free agent out of Michigan State University before the 1948 season. He was in the majors for good by June after going 9-1 with a 2.06 ERA for the Class-B Wilmington Blue Rocks.
It was eureka! development for the Phils, who would benefit from the fruits of the future Hall of Famer’s mound labors for more than a decade.
The next year, 1949, collectors also had a eureka! Roberts moment — if they were lucky and vigilant. Read all about right here.
—
In case you didn’t notice, yesterday was the last day of the baseball season (mostly). The good news for those of us mourning another summer gone and dreading a long, ringless winter for our teams is that we now get to dig in to an October that will hopefully leave us breathless.
And we also get the chance to realign our rooting interests for the postseason. So…who you pulling for this October?
It’s Mudville all the way for me, standings be darned.
Thanks for reading.
—Adam
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I was at the game he passed Stan Musial for the most hits by an N L player right after the 1981 strike.
In October, in the AL, I’ll be rooting for … the Orioles and the AL Central … while in the NL … pretty much any of them. Mostly I’ll be hoping for good baseball out of any of those ten teams. The other two … umm … not really.