In this edition of “Covering the Bases” we are discussing the 1989 Topps All-Star Rookie cup card dedicated to outfielder Dave Gallagher.
The chief reason I chose to cover Gallagher here is that he recently discussed his Topps All-Star Rookie Cup on Twitter – spoiler alert, I was a little bummed with his feedback.
1989 Topps #156
Lets open by discussing the card which is Gallagher’s Topps debut. A couple of observations:
1) This appears to be a Spring Training shot – note the chain link fence and treeline beyond Gallagher’s left shoulder.
2) In 1988 Chicago sported their uniform numbers on the front of the left pant leg, It is mostly obscured by the “White Sox” script on the card but you can still make out what is the top of Gallagher’s #17 here.
3) Gallagher is apparently holding some sort of BP bat. At first I thought Gallagher was using a bat sleeve – but 1988 seems sort of early historically. Looking closer I think what we are dealing with here is Bat Tape. I am guessing that the idea is to extend the life of a BP bat, perhaps the tape also acts as a visual cue to help a batter to target the sweet spot.
1988 Topps All-Star Rookie Cup
Of course the reason team Phungo took an interest in this card is that it falls under the umbrella of our obsession with Topps All-Star Rookie Cards. This past September SABR Member Brian Frank had posted via twitter a snapshot of the card on Gallagher’s 59th birthday. Gallagher acknowledged the posting noting the day is also his Wedding Anniversary. I later jumped on the thread posing the following question:
I wanted to hear that Dave Gallagher was a big fan of baseball cards, has a collection that he considers very special and that getting a Trophy from Topps Chewing Gum Co was the highlight of his playing career.
Well, that wasn’t the answer I received. Gallagher’s reply was sobering and quite prudent.
THROWN OUT!
As a Topps All-Star Rookie Cup obsessive I was momentarily crushed. But it makes sense, I am sure there have been several dozen trophies that a player like Dave Gallagher has accumulated in a 20 year professional career. Keeping them all likely borders on hoarding. And his point of maintaining a separation of career and home also seems wise.
More Gallagher Cards
While researching Dave Gallagher cards I came across his 1989 Topps Big card
1989 Topps Big #310 Dave Gallagher
Which is a fine card but what really interested me was something on the back
1989 Topps Big #310 Dave Gallagher (b-side)
Check out the middle panel on the cartoon. It is not a Baseball Card Patent but Dave Gallagher does have a Baseball related Patent. His invention is known as the “Stride Tutor” or according to the Patent Office “Apparatus for improving the hitting technique of baseball players.” It is essentially a set of foot cuffs (with a longer plastic chain) that are designed to train a batter to make a consistent stride in their swing. The device was written up in a 1989 Sports Illustrated article.
Gallagher’s patent application is pretty interesting citing SIX Hall of Famers: Johnny Bench, Mel Ott, Joe DiMaggio, Reggie Jackson, Nolan Ryan, and Joe Torre plus Pete Rose and Hitting Guru Charlie Lau.
There you have it, Covering all the Bases on a single (well two) Topps card leads you to the US Patent Office and Joe DiMaggio.
Sources and Links
Twitter @DaveGallagher22
HERD Chronicles (SABR Brian Frank)
Phungo 1989 Topps All-Star Rookie Cup index
COMC Check Out My Cards
Sports Illustrated (1989 May 22 pg 81)
I have that Gallagher rookie card with Dave’s autograph. He lives near us, and my son attended his baseball camp about 20 years ago. I know he had a jersey from each of the teams he played for up on a wall at the camp. I hope his wife hasn’t thrown them out!
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Really enjoyed this post. The twitter response about his wife is priceless.
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“Topps All-Star Rookie Cup obsessive” . . . I like that! Who knew all these years that there was a psychological term for what I’ve been since I was 10 years old and first pulled Jim Nash’s card out of a pack of 1967 Topps first series cards.
I always liked this card as well. As a White Sox fan, I always enjoyed seeing a Sox player make the All-Star Rookie team in any given year, and this one was a particularly nice posed shot. And the story about Gallagher and his wife and his trophies is as priceless as it is cringeworthy. Clearly this is a man who knows how to go with the flow in his relationship; it’s no doubt a component in staying together for nearly four decades . . .
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I love my wife with all my heart but if she ever through my stuff out it would be lawyer time, babee.
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That is probably the greatest Twitter post of all time.
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Mrs. Gallagher can throw away the cups and trophies, but she can’t throw away this SABR Baseball Cards blog tribute post. Dave Gallagher’s greatness lives on forever here! (Or at least till Mark stops paying the bill.)
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Tossing out a spouses stuff without permission is not the sign of a healthy relationship in MHO.
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