So, a lot of people have asked me about the origins of this blog since it started. Sure, “I'm doing it for class” is an accurate answer, but it's not the full answer, and it seems a little reductive. The implication is there that these weekly blogs are the only time I care enough about baseball to write about it, to talk about it, or to remember it. Anyone who knows me knows that this isn't the case. Baseball and music are my biggest passions in life, and I can't imagine my life without either of them.
So, why the name “Common Cards” when the blog has transformed into something beyond mere players? Well, the answer is found in that it was never supposed to transform into something beyond mere players. This was supposed to be a chance for me to remember some of my favorite players from my early days as a baseball fan, a chance to rehash great stories from their past, and a chance to remind baseball fans that baseball really is a team sport. Sure, having a guy like Albert Pujols or Hanley Ramirez on your team is going to help your chances, but it won't be enough to win a World Series. You need those role players.
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| Like the blog? You have this guy to thank. |
Where did the name originate? Well, I have my friend Dave to thank for this. Being the giant baseball obsessives that we are, we would spend the time between baseball seasons (or even between games...especially during the All-Star Break) trying to remember the names of the more obscure players. Once we would shake the rust from whatever lobe of our brain is being used for something like this, we'd move it into minor league guys. (I'm telling you, we're obsessed.) The names we came up with were phenomenal: Delino DeShields, Oil Can Boyd, Mickey Morandini, Gus Triandos. They were the guys you'd trade away to get the Mark McGwire rookie card, or the last card in your 1997 Topps set. (Ironically, you always needed a guy like Matt Williams or Glenallen Hill for something like that.)
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| Cubs fans remember him for all the wrong reasons. |
Card collectors know what those cards are called: Common Cards. Like the name implies, guys like this would populate the majority of the individual packs you'd be spending your allowance or paper route or lemonade stand money on. Sure, every once in a while you'd uncover a gem, (Johnny Damon rookie card, Hank Aaron reprint, Cal Ripken 2131 memoriam) but most of these were going to be the forgotten players. Hee Seop Choi, Bobby Bonilla, Dale Sveum...I have these guys to thank for the basis of this blog, even if me and their families are the only ones who remembers who they are. It's my hope that I'll have the motivation to continue this blog once I finish the class and graduate. Someone needs to remind the world that Milton Bradley didn't just make board games, Coco Crisp isn't just a cereal, and Bobby Hill isn't just a cartoon character. I think I'm the man for the job.

