
|
Mario Guerrero, 1974
2006-11-20 10:21
This
weekend I went on a 13-mile run, kayaked the length of the Chicago
river while sighting and cataloging four rare species of birds, wrote
eleven new songs for my forthcoming album, incorporated my many
investment and charitable interests into a robust crossplatform
transnational web of proactive revenue-generating synergies, kept up a
constant string of brilliant witticisms, cobbled my own shoes,
performed life-saving CPR not once, not twice, but thrice, punched a
guy, weighed a run for public office, rebuilt the engine of an
automobile, aided the bereft, oozed rugged, manly charisma, won a
javelin-hurling competition, translated a volume of ancient Sanskrit
poetry, and took out the garbage.Actually, all but one of the above things may be an exaggeration. What I really spent most of my time doing this weekend was thoroughly organizing my baseball cards and then searching through them ceaselessly (to the point where I actually began to develop some sort of dust- and obsession-related migraine) for a single set of six cards of the same guy (any guy) from the six years, from 1975 to 1980, in which I spent all my allowance on baseball cards. Why did I do this? What did I hope to gain? In the end I didn't succeed in my "quest"; I kept getting close but ultimately all I found were gaps. (I've also just been informed on this early Monday morning after my weekend of futile searching that I do not smell very good.) I do have a few cards from the border years of 1974 and 1981, and eventually I responded to my failure to find a complete set of six by idiotically expanding my hopes to that of finding a miraculous run of eight cards of the same guy. This just led to even more gaps. But it also led me to Mario Guerrero. Mario Guerrero was a presence for much, if not all, of my childhood. This 1974 Mario Guerrero is among the first cards I ever owned. The year I got it my father moved to a small apartment in New York City and the rest of my family moved from New Jersey to Vermont. That was also the year I got a baseball encyclopedia from my uncle for Christmas and the year I began having what we called nightmares at the time but which I found out many years later are known as night terrors. When I learned what night terrors were I did a little research on them and discovered that they most often occurred to children from ages six to twelve (exactly the range of my baseball card collecting years), and though they haven't been identified as being caused by any particular psychological trauma they often seem to occur to children involved in significant familial changes. I've tried and failed for years to describe these night terrors from a first-person point of view (contrary to the claims in some of the research books on the subject, which state that the child experiencing night terrors will not recall them in the morning, I remembered all but one or two of these nights in vivid detail). Here's the third-person view: the boy wakes up in the middle of the night and runs through the dark house wide-eyed and screaming at the top of his lungs. Nobody can do anything to help him. I just spent the last several minutes trying to augment the above third-person view with yet another in my endless stabs at a first-person account of the experience. I deleted the text because as usual it didn't get anywhere near it. But I'm sure I'll try again some other time. All I can say now is that the world looked wrong and this terrified me. Part of the fear was that I was never going to get back to seeing things "normally," that the wrongness was infinite. It's probably not a coincidence that I began filling my days more and more with the memorizing of concrete, finite statistical information from my brand new baseball encyclopedia and with the collection and perusal of cards such as this 1974 Mario Guerrero. Topps placed Mario Guerrero (I mispronounced his name--unintentionally at first but then intentionally as well, then as ever after grasping at the shreds of the infantile--as a rhyme: "Mario Guh-rario") in a classic middle infielder pose. Topps often seemed to enjoy humiliating the light-hitting utility infielder types by making them pose this way, as if the subjects were in the woods trying to take a dump while simultaneously preparing to ward off the advances of a porcupine or a wild boar.
|
Voice of the Mathematically Eliminated
Hot from the Toaster
Search
Archives
About The Author
Team Archives
Atlanta Braves
Hank AaronBarry Bonnell Bobby Cox Adrian Devine Jamie Easterly Carl Morton Rowland Office Jim Wynn Baltimore Orioles
Mark BelangerAl Bumbry Mike Cuellar Rich Dauer Tippy Martinez Jim Palmer Boog Powell Sammy Stewart Boston Red Sox
Jack Brohamer, 1979Bill Buckner Bill Campbell Denny Doyle Dwight Evans Mario Guerrero, 1974 Mario Guerrero, 1975 Bill Lee, 1977 Fred Lynn Mike Paxton (with Don Aase) Jim Rice George Scott Bob Stanley Luis Tiant, 1975 Mike Torrez Ted Williams Larry Wolfe Carl Yastrzemski, 1975 Carl Yastrzemski, 1977 Carl Yastrzemski, 1978 Carl Yastrzemski, 1980 Carl Yastrzemski, 1981 California Angels
Don Aase (with Mike Paxton)Lyman Bostock Ken Brett Andy Etchebarren Mario Guerrero, 1977 Mario Guerrero, 1978 Bob Jones Rudy Meoli Rick Miller Jerry Remy Nolan Ryan Frank Tanana Chicago Cubs
Larry BiittnerBill Buckner Jose Cardenal Cubs, 1977 Ivan DeJesus Carmen Fanzone Bruce Sutter Geoff Zahn Oscar Zamora Chicago White Sox
Cy AcostaBucky Dent Brian Downing Rich Gossage Fred Howard Ron Santo Ron Schueler White Sox Future Stars White Sox, 1977 Wilbur Wood Cincinnati Reds
Johnny BenchDave Concepcion George Foster Joe Morgan, 1976 Joe Morgan, 1979 Dale Murray Pete Rose Champ Summers Cleveland Indians
Larry AndersenJack Brohamer, 1976 Jackie Brown Bernie Carbo David Clyde Ed Crosby Dennis Eckersley Toby Harrah John Lowenstein Sid Monge Rick Waits Rick Wise Detroit Tigers
Ed BrinkmanMark Fidrych John Hiller Lerrin LaGrow Ron LeFlore Ron LeFlore (update) Ben Oglivie Dick Sharon Houston Astros
Astros, 1978Ken Forsch Bo McLaughlin Joe Niekro Randy Niemann Gene Pentz Gene Pentz (flipped) Gordy Pladson Terry Puhl J.R. Richard, 1977 J.R. Richard, 1978 J.R. Richard, 1979 Bob Watson Kansas City Royals
George BrettJim Colborn Clint Hurdle Hal McRae Marty Pattin Dan Quisenberry U.L. Washington Willie Wilson Jim Wohlford Los Angeles Dodgers
Steve Garvey, 1976Steve Garvey, 1978 Tommy John Davey Lopes Johnny Oates Team Picture, 1980 Derrel Thomas Bob Welch Milwaukee Brewers
Hank Aaron, 1976Hank Aaron, 1975 Kurt Bevacqua, 1976 Bob Coluccio Bob Hansen Von Joshua Sixto Lezcano Gorman Thomas, 1975 Gorman Thomas, 1980 Clyde Wright Minnesota Twins
Vic AlburySteve Braun and Steve Brye Tom Burgmeier Ray Corbin Dave Johnson Ken Landreaux Jose Morales Harmon Killebrew Montreal Expos
Stan BahnsenDennis Blair Dave Cash Nate Colbert Pepe Frias and Pepe Mangual Ed Herrmann Tom Hutton Bill Lee, 1980 New York Mets
Bob ApodacaBruce Boisclair Steve Henderson Dave Kingman Len Randle Tom Seaver Craig Swan? Joe Torre New York Yankees
Ron GuidrySteve Howe Reggie Jackson, 1977 Alex Johnson Sparky Lyle Billy Martin Rudy May Gene Michael Thurman Munson Lou Piniella Luis Tiant, 1980 Cecil Upshaw Oakland A's
Vida BlueDick Bosman Mario Guerrero, 1980 Rickey Henderson Reggie Jackson, 1975 Mickey Klutts Paul Mitchell Joe Wallis Herb Washington Philadelphia Phillies
Warren BrusstarSteve Carlton Terry Harmon Bud Harrelson Tom Hilgendorf Greg Luzinski Garry Maddox, 1976 Ron Reed Pete Rose Pittsburgh Pirates
Mike EaslerDock Ellis Tim Foli Richie Hebner Grant Jackson Tim Jones Doc Medich Bob Moose Ed Ott Willie Stargell Kent Tekulve St. Louis Cardinals
Rich FolkersBob Gibson Mario Guerrero, 1976 Bake McBride Reggie Smith Garry Templeton Mike Tyson John Urrea San Diego Padres
Paul DadeRollie Fingers Danny Frisella Willie McCovey Vicente Romo Ozzie Smith Bobby Valentine Dave Winfield San Francisco Giants
Jack ClarkJohn D'Acquisto Darrell Evans Vic Harris Garry Maddox, 1975 Greg Minton Bobby Murcer Joe Strain Seattle Mariners
Kurt Bevacqua, 1977Bruce Bochte Pete Broberg Larry Cox Skip Jutze Larry Milbourne Mike Parrott Texas Rangers
Jim BibbyBert Blyleven Jeff Burroughs Leo Cardenas Bill Hands Bill Hands (correction) Jim Sundberg Bump Wills Toronto Blue Jays
Bob BailorRick Bosetti Bob Davis Luis Gomez Dave Roberts Tony Solaita and Craig Kusick Otto Velez Behold The Unsortable
Big League BrothersBobby Bonds Mitch Cohen The Cardboard God All-Stars Carmen Fanzone? Father & Son Mario Guerrero, 1979 Mike Kekich and Fritz Peterson Eddie Leon Cory Lidle Paul Lindblad Major League Leading Firemen, 1975 1976 Victory Leaders Dick Pole and Peter LaCock '78 Checklist '78 Rookie Outfielders Turn Back the Clock Roundball Interludes
The Basketball Kid, Part 1The Basketball Kid, Part 2 The Basketball Kid Takes a Stand Bucks '80-'81 Team Leaders Darryl Dawkins Gerald Henderson Swen Nater Mike Newlin Dennis Johnson Magic Johnson Wayne Rollins Play Ball!
Love versus HateThe World Is a Cardboard Rectangle
The World Is a Cowhide Sphere
The World Is Wide
Syndication
About the Toaster
Baseball Toaster runs on some experimental software called Fairpole. It's still under development. For more information, please visit the Fairpole blog, or read the FAQ. |
To comment, please log in.
Not a member? Register!