
Here's
the closest I ever got to Cardboard God nirvana. In 1975, my first year
of baseball card obsession, I nearly gathered every player for an
entire team. From Bibby, Jim to Tovar, Cesar, I slowly but steadily
accrued every Texas Ranger except one.
Topps card number 412. Hands, Bill/P
My
brother owned this card. I can't remember clearly, but he may have even
had doubles. However, it was not at all customary to simply hand over
surplus cards. I understood this and was in a strange way even glad
about it. The game had rules, and rules helped create a world with
meaning. He proposed to trade me Bill Hands for my one and only 1975
Carl Yastrzemski. I was tempted, but somehow even at age seven I knew
that if I made such a deal I'd feel as if I'd been punched in the
stomach for months afterward.
I gripped tight to Yaz and decided
to take my chances with the random gatherings within each new pack of
cards. Probably the first time I ever prayed was in my silent
pack-opening pleas for Bill Hands. Bill Hands never did show up,
obviously. At some point I did get doubles of Yaz but by then my
brother had Yaz, too, so that deal was no longer on the table.
Eventually the general store in town stopped carrying the 1975 cards.
Hands,
a former 20-game winner, went 6--7 for the Rangers that year and was
traded in the offseason to the Mets for George Stone. Neither he nor
Stone ever appeared in another major league game or on another baseball
card. Many years later my brother sold his Bill Hands or Bill Handses
along with all his other cards for money to buy a used pair of downhill
skis. He was in his mid-twenties, broke, fleeing the wreckage of a
failed relationship. He staved off starvation by getting a job selling
lift tickets at a ski area and in his off hours either partied with
others in the migrant ski area work force or flung himself at great
speeds down the mountain on his baseball card skis.
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