Showing posts with label Horlen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horlen. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

#480 Joel Horlen - Chicago White Sox


Joel Edward Horlen
Chicago White Sox
Pitcher

Bats:  Right  Throws:  Right  Height:  6'0"  Weight:  170
Born:  August 14, 1937, San Antonio, TX
Signed:  Signed by the Chicago White Sox as an amateur free agent before 1959 season
Major League Teams:  Chicago White Sox 1961-1971; Oakland Athletics 1972

Joel Horlen, known as Joe to his friends, had an impressive run with the White Sox through the entire decade of the 1960s during which he was one of the most underrated starting pitchers in the American League.  Horlen won at least 10 games in seven straight seasons between 1963 and 1969, and his 2.32 ERA between 1964 and 1968 led all American League pitchers.  His career year came in 1967 when he made the All-Star team, finished with a 19-7 record and led the league with a 2.06 ERA and six shutouts.  One of the those shutouts was a no-hitter thrown on September 10, 1967 against the pennant-contending Tigers.  Horlen finished second in the Cy Young voting behind Jim Lonborg (#573) and was fourth in the overall league MVP voting.

He pitched for four more seasons with the White Sox and signed with the Athletics in April 1972.  In his final season in the majors, Horlen was one of the more frequently used relievers out of the Oakland bullpen, pitching mainly in long relief, and his 84 innings pitched were second only to closer Rollie Fingers.  Horlen saw postseason action in 1972, and capped his career with a World Series ring when the Athletics downed the Reds in seven games.  In 361 career games, Horlen was 116-117 with a 3.11 ERA and 1,065 strikeouts.  He'd stay in baseball throughout the early 2000s as a minor league pitching coach within the Indians, Mets, Royals, Giants and Padres organizations.

Building the Set

December 4, 2021 from The Philly Show (Uncle Dick's Cards, Babylon, NY) - 
Card #455
You'll be seeing this particular passage on my 1965 Topps blog for quite some time as we added a whopping 97 cards to our set during the December Philadelphia Sports Collectors Show.  If I'm ambitious and compose posts for five cards a week, I should be completely caught up by the end of May.  If I'm not as ambitious, I might still be going through this stack by the time we hit July.  Either way, I'll enjoy the process and I'm looking forward to taking my time.  I've posted a complete summary of this fantastic show over at The Phillies Room.

After securing Doug's Jim Thome autograph, I returned to Uncle Dick's and their neon green shirts, pulled up a chair, and settled in.  Over the course of 45 minutes or so, I found 79 cards needed for our set, including this Horlen card which was a little less than $4 after the dealer discount.  I was surrounded by six or seven other seated collectors, all who looked similar to me, with a touch of gray, focused on their individual quests.  I wiped out Uncle Dick's two 1965 Topps commons binders, paid for my haul and then retreated to a table with Doug to update our checklist.

The Card / White Sox Team Set
Horlen first appeared in the set way back on card #7 with 1964 American League ERA leader Dean Chance (#140).  Oddly enough, the leaders card shows Horlen's 1964 ERA as 1.92, while this card contains the correct 1.88 number.  His nine complete games are highlighted in cartoon form on the back, and Topps also alludes to his poor run support from the White Sox offense, given his 13-9 record in 1964.

1965 Season
The White Sox were in a pennant race all season and Horlen was arguably the staff ace.  He started 34 games, tops on the team, and was 13-13 with a 2.88 ERA.  His 219 innings pitched led the pitching staff and Tommy John (#208) had one more strikeout than Horlen - 126 to 125.  He was a victim of poor run support throughout the season, with the White Sox scoring two runs or fewer in eight of his losses.

1962 Topps #479
1963 Topps #332
1967 Topps #107
1970 Topps #35
1972 Topps #685

Other Notable Baseball Cards

First Mainstream Card:  1962 Topps #479
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (11):  1962-1972
Most Recent Mainstream Card:  1994 Fleer ProCards #1537

98 - Horlen non-parallel baseball cards in the Beckett online database as of 2/21/22.

Sources:  
Baseball Reference
Beckett Database
SABR
The Trading Card Database

Thursday, October 22, 2020

#7 1964 A.L. ERA Leaders - Chance & Horlen


Beginning in 1961, Topps started including league leader cards in its sets and there are 12 league leaders cards kicking off the 1965 Topps set.

Building the Set
August 21, 2020 from Charleston, SC - Card #141
In my largest (by volume) purchase to date, I spent an enjoyable hour or so in mid-August browsing the eBay store of seller mantlerulz and clicking Add to Cart on 30 different cards.  We had previously added 29 cards to our set back in February from the Philly Show.  The 30 cards, all commons, cost me $52 total (before shipping and taxes) with the cards ranging in prices from $1 to $6.  I love this haul and I found the seller's store by accident when I was browsing eBay in an attempt to add a few more cheap cards from the set's first series.  With the exception of the cards for Dick Howser (#92) and manager Birdie Tebbets (#301), along with the few former Phillies in the lot, most of the players featured on these cards are unknown to me.  In the coming weeks, I'll go through each of these new cards for our set in detail, and we've now passed the quarter mark for completion of the complete set.  We still have a long way to go, and quite a few pricey cards to add but any day I can add 30 commons in excellent shape and at a low prices is a great day.

This league leaders card was $2.50, and we now have 9 of the 12 league leaders cards in the set.

The Card
I'm assuming to be consistent with the N.L. ERA Leaders (#8) card, featuring only Sandy Koufax (#300) and Don Drysdale (#260), Topps decided to feature only the top two A.L. ERA Leaders here as well.  That means Whitey Ford (#330) and his 2.13 ERA got the shaft here, all because Chris Short wouldn't sign a contract with Topps and couldn't be featured on the N.L. ERA Leaders card.

This is the third and final appearance for Dean Chance (#140) on an A.L. leaders card, as he's also on the A.L. Pitching Leaders (#9) and A.L. Strikeout Leaders (#11) cards.  Chance's four appearances on four different cards in the set has to make him one of the most represented players (if not the most represented) in the entire 598-card run.  This was the only time Chance led the league in ERA during his 11-year career.

Joel Horlen (#480) finished second twice in ERA with a 1.88 mark in 1964 and a 2.43 mark in 1966.  He finally topped the league in 1967 with a 2.06 ERA over 258 innings pitched - a career high for him.  The 1964 White Sox starting pitching rotation boasted three different pitchers in the top five for ERA in 1964 with Horlen at second, Gary Peters (#430) fourth and Juan Pizarro (#125) fifth.

Angels Team Set / White Sox Team Set

Prior Card:  #6 1964 N.L. RBI Leaders