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This
1977 card signals the passing of the halfway point of both my childhood
and Mario Guerrero's itinerant career. Early in the preceding season,
Mario Guerrero was traded by the St. Louis Cardinals to the California
Angels for a minor leaguer named Ed Jordan and a player to be named
later. The player to be named later turned out to be another minor
leaguer named Ed Kurpiel. So by the time he posed for this picture,
Mario Guerrero had been a player to be named later, had been traded for
a player to be named later ultimately named Willoughby, and had been
traded for two minor leaguers, one named Ed right at the start, the
other also named Ed, but later. Still, Mario Guerrero seems happy and
hopeful here. This makes sense, in a way. Despite his constant
involvement in trades seemingly designed to highlight his
insignificance, he had proven himself to be a useful major leaguer,
averaging well over 200 at bats a year while playing ably at second
base and shortstop, arguably the two most important defensive positions
on the field. He had, in fact, just completed his best season to date,
leading the anemic, league-worst offense of the Angels in batting
average with an admirable .284 mark while also somehow swatting his
first major league home run.
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