Monday, December 12, 2022

#289 Gordy Coleman - Cincinnati Reds


Gordon Calvin Coleman
Cincinnati Reds
First Base

Bats:  Left  Throws:  Right  Height:  6'3"  Weight:  215
Born:  July 5, 1934, Rockville, MD
Signed:  Signed by the Cleveland Indians as an amateur free agent before 1953 season
Major League Teams:  Cleveland Indians 1959; Cincinnati Reds 1960-1967
Died:  March 12, 1994, Cincinnati, OH (age 59)

Gordy Coleman played parts of nine seasons in the majors and was the regular first baseman for the 1961 National League pennant-winning Reds.  Coleman's best year professionally came as a member of the Mobile Bears of the Southern Association, an Indians minor league affiliate, in 1959.  After missing two full seasons due to military service, Coleman returned to baseball in 1959 and won his league's triple crown, batting .353 with 30 home runs and 110 RBIs.  He appeared in only six games for the Indians before he was dealt to the Reds with Billy Martin and Cal McLish for Johnny Temple in December 1959.  Coleman saw regular playing time with the Reds between 1961 and 1963, and his home run in Game 2 of the 1961 World Series against the Yankees helped lead to the only Reds win of the series.

He'd lose playing time to Deron Johnson (#75) and then Tony Perez (#581), last appearing in the majors in 1967.  In 773 big league games, Coleman batted .273 with 98 home runs and 387 RBIs.  Coleman was elected into the Cincinnati Reds hall of Fame in 1972, and he'd work for the team over the next several decades first in their public relations department as director of the speakers bureau, and later as a color commentary on Reds television broadcasts between 1990 and 1994.


Building the Set
December 3, 2022 from The Philly Show (Bob Lennon) - Card #596
This was the second of four final cards acquired for our set at The Philly Show, the Philadelphia Sports Collectors Show, held within the Greater Philadelphia Expo Center in Oaks, Pennsylvania.  We arrived at the show in a steady rain right after doors opened at 9am, secured our autograph tickets and started walking the floor prior to the arrival of most of the crowd.  My goal for the show was simple:  Find the last four cards needed to complete our 1965 Topps set.  I wrote a full summary of the show in this post over at The Phillies Room.

The first two cards needed to complete our set took a while to find, but I eventually added the Orlando Cepeda (#360) card and this Coleman card within the first hour of walking around.  I still have no idea why the Coleman card proved to be so elusive.  I had seen the card at various shows throughout the past few years, but all copies seemed to be banged up with soft corners.  This card is the best version of the card I had come across.  Spying a great looking 1969 Topps Roberto Clemente (#160) card at the same table I found the Coleman card, I swung a deal to add that card as well.  I told the dealer the Clemente card marked our first big purchase for our new 1969 Topps set, which seemed to genuinely make his day.  Two down, two to go.

The Card / Reds Team Set
The back of the card highlights Coleman's big World Series home run.  With the Yankees holding a 1-0 advantage, Game 2 started with three scoreless innings.  Coleman connected for a two-run home run in the fourth off Ralph Terry (#406) with Frank Robinson (#120) scoring ahead of him.  The home run would become somewhat moot a half inning later when Yogi Berra (#470) hit a two-run home run of Reds' pitcher Joey Jay (#174) to tie the score.  A big hit from Johnny Edwards (#418) in the sixth gave the Reds a 3-2 lead and they'd go on to win their only game with the Yankees ultimately winning in five.

This is the last common card to be added to our set and therefore the last common card I'll post about on this blog.  One of the side effects of blogging through 598 cards is I've picked up a lot of baseball knowledge from the mid-1960s I would have otherwise never had.  Guys like Coleman need to be appreciated and remembered, and I'd be remiss if I didn't acknowledge what an unbelievably important resource the SABR website is.

1965 Season
Coleman was again the Reds' opening day first baseman, and he'd settle into a platoon with the right-handed hitting Perez.  Coleman totaled 87 starts at first base, with Perez making 66 starts.  In 108 total games, Coleman batted .302 with 14 home runs and 57 RBIs.

1960 Topps #257
1961 Topps #194
1962 Topps #508
1964 Topps #577
1967 Topps #61

Other Notable Baseball Cards

First Mainstream Card:  1960 Topps #257
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (8):  1960-1967
Most Recent Mainstream Card:  1967 Topps #61

49 - Coleman non-parallel baseball cards in the Beckett online database as of 12/4/22.

Sources:  
Baseball Reference
Beckett Database
SABR
The Trading Card Database

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