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Card of the Day: 1968 Topps Manny Sanguillen

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Today’s Card of the Day is the rookie card for one of the Pittsburgh Pirates all-time fan favorites. If you look through Manny Sanguillen’s Topps cards throughout the years, many of them show that trademark smile the fans are used to seeing still to this day when Mr Sanguillen is around Pirate City or PNC Park. My favorite card of him just happens to be his rookie card, showing the young catcher in a staged “action” photo, looking up into the sky with his mask off, looking for a foul pop up.

Here’s the front of the card:

I love the pose and look on his face in this shot. He sells the action part of the card well, which didn’t always happen with these photos. Sanguillen was probably 23 years old when this photo was taken. The 1968 set came well below the season started, so the photo would be from 1967 most likely, though with a March 21st birthday, he still may have been a few days shy of age 23 because it appears to be a Spring Training photo when you look at the background.

A closer look at that background shows some interesting airbrush work. I can’t tell exactly when they were trying to get rid of in the back, but the blue on blue is hard to not notice once you first see it. It might appear as if someone wrote on this particular card, until you see that all of his 1968 cards have that airbrushing. You also see the patches of color randomly standing out around the faint images of people, adding the backdrop. Sanguillen clearly takes the focus of the card in one of the better poses from the entire set.

Here’s the back of the card:

Topps predicted that Sanguillen would became a big league regular, saying that the Pirates were very high on him. That came true, though they did get something wrong in their statement. He wasn’t a familiar sight at Forbes Field for years to come because Forbes was nearing the end of its time. Sanguillen played a total of 112 games at Forbes and 538 at Three Rivers Stadium. Obviously Topps didn’t know that Forbes wouldn’t be around that long, but it’s interesting to look back on now that we know what happened.

The trivia question at the bottom shows a fact that I didn’t know until I read the card. Pete Mikkelsen set the team record with 71 appearances in 1966, breaking the mark set and then tied by Elroy Face (68 in 1956 and 1960). Mikkelsen held that record until it was topped by both Goose Gossage and Kent Tekulve in 1977. It has since been topped 39 more times.

If you want this card of Sanguillen, it can be purchased on eBay for $5-10 in decent shape, ungraded. There are three graded examples deemed to be perfect in every way (PSA 10), which are being sold for $550-$589. The demand for PSA 10 cards by some set collectors drives the prices of those cards much higher than other examples. A PSA 5, which is still a very nice looking card, can be had for $18.

Here are the previous Card of the Day articles. Eventually we will have a better way to organize them once we launch Pittsburgh Baseball History, as opposed to just a continuously growing list at the bottom of each article:

1913 T200 Fatima team card

2020 Topps Living Set Josh Bell

2020 Roberto Clemente Topps Throwback

1982 Topps Tim Foli

1887 N172 Old Judge Art Whitney and Dog

1973 Topps Willie Stargell

1981 Topps Pirates Future Stars

1936 R312 Honus Wagner and Arky Vaughan

1959 Topps Buc Hill Aces

1982 Donruss Harvey Haddix

1991 Upper Deck Jose Lind

1982 Topps Traded Pirates set

1974 Topps Bob Johnson

1909 E90 Dots Miller

2005 Bowman Heritage Andrew McCutchen

1961 Topps Gino Cimoli World Series Highlights

1969 Topps Richie Hebner/Al Oliver

1920 W516 Wilbur Cooper

1887 N172 Sam Barkley (guest submission)

1976 Topps Pie Traynor

2020 Topps 206 Roberto Clemente

1957 Topps Bill Mazeroski

1998 Topps Jose Guillen (guest submission)

1948 Bowman Ralph Kiner

1987 Donruss Opening Day Barry Bonds/Johnny Ray Error

1955 Bowman Frank Thomas

1982 Fleer Mike Easler

1984 Topps NL Career Batting Leaders: Bill Madlock/Dave Parker

1979 Hostess Willie Stargell

1933 Goudey Paul Waner

1888 N29 Allen & Ginter George Miller

1965 Topps Pirates Rookie Stars

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John Dreker
John Dreker
John started working at Pirates Prospects in 2009, but his connection to the Pittsburgh Pirates started exactly 100 years earlier when Dots Miller debuted for the 1909 World Series champions. John was born in Kearny, NJ, two blocks from the house where Dots Miller grew up. From that hometown hero connection came a love of Pirates history, as well as the sport of baseball. When he didn't make it as a lefty pitcher with an 80+ MPH fastball and a slider that needed work, John turned to covering the game, eventually focusing in on the prospects side, where his interest was pushed by the big league team being below .500 for so long. John has covered the minors in some form since the 2002 season, and leads the draft and international coverage on Pirates Prospects. He writes daily on Pittsburgh Baseball History, when he's not covering the entire system daily throughout the entire year on Pirates Prospects.

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