
In
the last post I claimed the '75 Bill Hands that I was never able to
acquire was the last Bill Hands card ever produced. I wasn't sure about
this but I figured I'd just say it anyway. Turns out I was wrong, and
here's the proof, a 1976 Bill Hands. I also claimed that the guy Bill
Hands was traded for, George Stone, didn't have a 1976 card, but he
did. I don't have the 1976 George Stone card, but I see the name next
to a blank box on the Mets' 1976 team card checklist.
I know all
this now because yesterday I turned a corner in my ongoing departure
from sanity by taking several hours to sort my entire scrambled
collection back into teams, in part so I could begin to investigate the
veracity of claims such as that George Stone and Bill Hands, who by
then had both played their last major league games, did not have 1976
cards ghosting their respective vanishings. My wife, who as a very
young child once organized her grandma's sprawling "miscellaneous"
drawer into neat piles of paperclips and rubber bands, helped me sort
for a few minutes before losing interest. When she later saw me sorting
the cards of individual teams into different years, she withheld
comment, but when still later she looked up from her social-work
textbook and saw me subjecting cards for an individual team and
individual year to even more sorting, she fixed me with an incredulous
stare.
"Are you putting those into alphabetical order?"
"What? No. Of course not," I said. I forced out a snort of laughter meant to sound dismissive. "Please."
"Mm hm," she said. She'd already turned back to her book.
Anyway,
I don't know how I didn't remember this card. It must have made an
impression when I found it in a pack. Finally, I'd acquired a Bill
Hands, but it was the wrong Bill Hands, a year too late.
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