
If
you're thinking that Joe Wallis does not look like a major league
baseball player, you're not really wrong. Wallis would never play a
major league game after this card hit the stores.
Not
incidentally, Wallis didn't always look like this. He broke into the
big leagues in 1975 with a well-trimmed goatee and collected 16 hits in
56 at bats for a respectable .286 average. One of the hits even
garnered Wallis his single shred of enduring notoriety as it broke up a
Tom Seaver no-hit bid with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning.
In 1976 and 1977, Joe Wallis sported long incurving sideburns and a
thick mustache and hit .254 the first year and .250 the next. That
style of facial hair devolved into a disorganized stubble and mustache
look in 1978, when his average sunk to .249 while he split time between
the go-nowhere Chicago Cubs and the thoroughly gutted Oakland A's.
During 1979, as the stubble expanded toward the unruly beard shown
here, Wallis's average guttered to .141.
He moved outside the
realm of recorded history after this, but anecdotal evidence suggests
that his beard grew longer and longer throughout the 1980s, and as it
did so Joe Wallis eliminated from his life more and more of what he
came to see as the entrapments of a thoroughly corrupt modern
civilization. He threw his television out a 12th story window in 1982,
stopped using electricity in 1984, ceased showering in 1987, began
living in a tipi in 1991, and some time in the mid-1990s disappeared
altogether, maybe or maybe not partially or fully responsible for
occasional sightings in the forests of the Pacific Northwest of a
profoundly hairy humanoid creature unable or unwilling to respond to
verbal inquiries or hit a curveball.
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