Friday, January 16, 2026

#45 Tom Umphlett - Washington Nationals


Thomas Mullen Umphlett / Washington Nationals / Outfield
Bats: Right Throws: Right Height: 6'2" Weight: 180
Born: May 12, 1931, Scotland Neck, NC
Signed: Signed by the Boston Red Sox as an amateur free agent before 1950 season
As a Player: Boston Red Sox 1953; Washington Nationals 1954-55
Died: September 21, 2012, Norfolk, VA (81)


Tom Umphlett peaked as a player in his rookie year of 1953, finishing as runner-up to Harvey Kuenn (#132) in the American League Rookie of the Year voting.  In 137 games with the Red Sox, he batted .283 with 27 doubles, three home runs and 59 RBIs, playing as the club's everyday center fielder.  His fortunes quickly changed when Umphlett was packaged with Mickey McDermott (#165) in a trade to the Nationals on December 9, 1953 for Jackie Jensen.  Jensen would be a star with the Red Sox, winning MVP honors in 1958, while Umphlett played two more fairly poor seasons in the majors.  In 224 games with the Nationals over the 1954 and 1955 seasons, he batted .218.  Dealt back to the Red Sox in November 1955 as part of a nine-player deal, Umphlett would be a minor league mainstay for the next 15 years.

1954 Bowman #88
He continued to play, spending time in the Red Sox, Yankees and Twins organizations, finally retiring as a player in 1967.  He last year as a player was his first as a manager, and Umphlett managed in the Twins organization between 1967 and 1970, compiling a 228-250 record.

1955 Season / Washington Nationals
Umphlett was the Nationals' opening day right fielder, and he'd make 83 starts overall - 49 in center, 21 in right and 13 in left.  From his SABR biography, written by Bill Nowlin: 
Things got worse in 1955, both marginally for Umphlett and significantly for the Senators, who lost 101 games and finished in last place.  Umphlett played in 110 games and hit .217, while driving in only 19 runs. In many of the games, he worked as a late-inning defensive replacement.  A few months later, looking back on his two seasons with the Senators, he said, "I don’t know what happened to me when I went to Washington.  But I do know I didn’t do a thing to help their club." 
In November, Tom Umphlett was back with the Red Sox.  The Senators and Sox swung a nine-player deal:  Bob Porterfield (#104), Johnny Schmitz (#105), Mickey Vernon (#46), and Umphlett were traded to Boston for Dick Brodowski, Neil Chrisley, Tex Clevenger, Karl Olson, and minor-league pitcher Al Curtis.  The Boston newspapers focused on Vernon and Porterfield, and made little mention of Umphlett.
Building the Set Card #3
Summer of 1983 or 1984 in Millville, NJ Original 17 from the Magic Box
Last fully retold with the Al Dark (#2) post, this Umphlett card was one of the 17 cards from the 1955 Bowman set contained with the Magic Box.

The Card / Bowman Exclusive Bio on Back / Nationals Team Set
Umphlett had only two mainstream baseball card appearances - his rookie card in the 1954 Bowman set, and this card.  Coach and future Hall of Famer Heinie Manush makes a cameo appearance behind Umphlett, and it looks as if he's hitting fungos to the other Nationals' outfielders.  Manush wore #51 and coached with the Nationals for just one season in 1954, receiving a card in the 1954 Topps set.  The back of the card recaps Umphlett's struggles from the 1954 season, following a successful rookie campaign.

Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card: 1954 Bowman #88
Bowman Set Appearances (2): 1954-55
Topps Set Apperances (0): N/A
Most Recent Mainstream Card: 1955 Bowman #45
Total Cards Listed in TCDB and Top Collector as of 1/6/26: 11 total, enigma1132 has 3

Sources

#44 Danny O'Connell - Milwaukee Braves / #46 Mickey Vernon - Washington Nationals

Friday, January 9, 2026

#14 Gus Keriazakos - Washington Nationals


Constantine Nicholas Keriazakos / Washington Nationals / Pitcher
Bats: Right Throws: Right Height: 6'3" Weight: 187
Born: July 28, 1931, West Orange, NJ
Signed: Signed by the Chicago White Sox as an amateur free agent, June 27, 1949
As a Player: Chicago White Sox 1950; Washington Nationals 1954; Kansas City Athletics 1955
Died: May 4, 1996, Hilton Head, SC (64)


Gus Keriazakos attended Montclair High School in West Orange, New Jersey, and was a three-sport athlete - baseball, basketball and track.  Signed by the White Sox at 17 years old, Keriazakos rose through the White Sox minor league ranks and made his big league debut as the starting pitcher for the club in the final game of the 1950 season.  He lasted 2 1/3 innings in that first outing, allowing five runs on seven hits to the Browns.  Keriazakos spent the next three seasons back in the minors before getting another shot with the Nationals in 1954.  In 22 games, including three starts, he was 2-3 with a 3.77 ERA in 59 2/3 innings pitched.  Traded to the Athletics at the start of the 1955 season, Keriazakos would pitch in his final five big league games with Kansas City.  After an abbreviated season in the minors in 1956, he retired from baseball.

In 28 career games, Keriazakos was 2-5 with a 5.62 ERA, 42 strikeouts and 42 walks in 73 2/3 innings pitched.

1955 Season
 / Kansas City Athletics
On or around May 1st, Keriazakos was traded to the Athletics for lefty reliever Al Sima.  He'd spend the bulk of the season pitching for the Athletics' minor league teams in Columbus and Savannah, going 14-7 with  a respectable 2.61 ERA in 25 games, including 23 starts.  Keriazakos threw 15 complete games, including one shutout, in his 23 starts.  He was a September call-up for Lou Boudreau's (#89) club, pitching in his final five games, and earning a 0-1 record with a 12.34 ERA in 11 2/3 innings pitched.  In his final big league appearance on September 23rd against his original club, the White Sox, Keriazakos allowed five runs on four hits in just 2/3 of an inning.

Building the Set Card #2
Summer of 1983 or 1984 in Millville, NJ Original 17 from the Magic Box
Last fully retold with the Al Dark (#2) post, this Keriazakos card was one of the 17 cards from the 1955 Bowman set contained with the Magic Box.  At the time, and in fact up until composing this post, I had no idea this was the pitcher's only mainstream appearance on a baseball card.

The Card / Bowman Exclusive Rookie Card / Greatest Fielding Play on Back / Nationals Team Set
The Washington baseball club used the Nationals and Senators nicknames seemingly interchangeably throughout the 1950s, but they were officially known as the Senators between 1901 and 1904, the Nationals between 1905 and 1956, and then the Senators again between 1957 and 1960.  The franchise moved to Minnesota and became the Twins in 1961.  Given the official nickname in place at the time, I'm using the Nationals team name for purposes of this blog, even though the back of the Washington players' cards label them as members of the Washington Senators.  Interestingly enough, the 1955 Topps set labels the team correctly as the Washington Nationals.

I'm going to track what appears on the back of each 1955 Bowman card, and here we see an example of a first-hand anecdote, presumably from the player himself.  The greatest fielding play Keriazakos ever saw was courtesy of Larry Doby, stealing a would-be home run from Tom Umphlett (#45).  I'm assuming the play took place in 1954, but Keriazakos must not have pitched in the game, as I couldn't find any instance in those games of an Umphlett fly out to Doby.  (I'm sure there's a way to find the exact game, but a quick review of Nationals-Indians games from 1954 came up empty for me.)

Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card: 1955 Bowman #14
Bowman Set Appearances (1): 1955
Topps Set Apperances (0): N/A
Most Recent Mainstream Card: 1955 Bowman #14
Total Cards Listed in TCDB and Top Collector as of 1/1/26: 3 total, many collectors tied with 1

Sources

#13 Clyde Vollmer - Washington Nationals / #15 Frank Sullivan - Boston Red Sox

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

#2 Al Dark - New York Giants


Alvin Ralph Dark / New York Giants / Shortstop
Bats: Right Throws: Right Height: 5'11" Weight: 185
Born: January 7, 1922, Comanche, OK
Signed: Signed by the Boston Braves as an amateur free agent, July 4, 1946
As a Player: Boston Braves 1946, 1948-49; New York Giants 1950-56; St. Louis Cardinals 1956-58; Chicago Cubs 1958-59; Philadelphia Phillies 1960; Milwaukee Braves 1960
World Series Appearances: Boston Braves 1948; New York Giants 1951, 1954
As a Manager: San Francisco Giants 1961-64; Kansas City Athletics 1966-67; Cleveland Indians 1968-71; Oakland Athletics 1974-75; San Diego Padres 1977
As a Coach: Chicago Cubs 1965, 1977
Died: November 13, 2014, Easley, SC (age 92)


Al Dark spent 27 years in the majors first as an All-Star shortstop between 1946 and 1960 and then as a successful manager between 1961 and 1977.  Dark was the National League Rookie of the Year in 1948, batting .322 with 48 RBIs.  He was a three-time All-Star (1951, 1952 and 1954) and earned MVP votes in six different seasons.  Dark led the league in doubles with 41 in 1951, the year he helped the Giants reach the World Series.  He'd have to wait until 1954 to win his first World Series ring when he batted .412 during the series while helping the Giants sweep the Indians.  Dark finished eight seasons in the top five for fielding percentage among all National League shortstops and he led the league in double plays turned three times.  In 1,828 career games, Dark batted .289 with 126 home runs and 2,089 hits. 

After retiring as a player, Dark began his managerial career with the Giants in 1961, guiding the team to the National League pennant in 1962.  After stints with the Kansas City Athletics and Indians, Dark took over the Oakland Athletics in 1974 and led the team to its third straight World Series.  (The team had won in 1972 and 1973 with Dick Williams as the manager.)  He was 994-954 as a manager, just missing the 1,000-win plateau.

Some text for this post originally appeared on my 1956 Topps blog.

1955 Season / New York Giants
From Dark's SABR biography:  "An injury-plagued 1955 campaign was Dark's last full season as a Giant. After fracturing his rib in a game against Cincinnati on August 7, he separated his right shoulder against the Phillies on September 2. Dark's injuries limited him to 115 games, and he ended the year hitting .282 with 9 homers and 45 RBIs. New York finished 18½ games behind the Dodgers, in third place."

Phillies Career / 1960
Dark came to the Phillies in the trade that saw popular Phillie and future Hall of Famer Richie Ashburn (#130) depart the franchise.  On January 11, 1960, the Phillies acquired Dark, John Buzhardt and Jim Woods from the Cubs for Ashburn.  With Dark at 38, only Dave Philly (#222) was older on the club at 40.  Dark was the Phillies' opening day third baseman in 1960 and he was a regular in the line-up until the team traded him on June 23rd to the Braves for Joe Morgan.

His first hit of the season in the team's home opener on April 14th was the 2,000 of his career, a sixth inning infield single off pitcher Don McMahon.  With the Phillies, Dark hit .242 over 55 games, with 3 home runs and 14 RBIs.  His short time with the club earned him a 1960 Topps card, released late in the season.

Building the Set Card #1
Summer of 1983 or 1984 in Millville, NJ Original 17 from the Magic Box
The full story of the Magic Box appeared frequently on my 1956 Topps blog, and originally over at the Phillies Room in a post from 2011.  I'll retell the tale here in full and then summarize it for the next 16 posts.

I think it was either the summer of 1983 or 1984 when a shoebox of vintage baseball cards, football cards and a few non-sports cards arrived into my world.  The box contained about a hundred cards dating between 1950 and 1956, and for the most part, they were all in excellent shape.  A friend of the family was in the process of cleaning up and moving into her new house when she found the old shoebox and she wondered if the only kid she knew who collected baseball cards (me) would be interested in looking through it – maybe even taking the box off her hands.

She dropped the box off to my parents and asked them to have me look through the box and take what I was interested in. Turns out, I was interested in everything.  Up to that point, the oldest cards in my collection were cards from the early '70s I had obtained through trades or cards that my Dad had picked up for me at yard sales or small baseball card shows.  (My Dad had given me a few dog-earred ’59 Topps cards – Juan Pizzaro and Jim Busby – a few years prior, and I completely forget how or why he had purchased these cards for me.)

My parents asked me to pick out a few cards from the box, and then we’d return the rest to the family friend.  Problem was, I wanted them all.  I really wanted them all.  I diligently and meticulously went through one of my price guides and determined the “value” of the treasure chest. I probably used my Sport Americana Baseball Card Price Guide No. 4, edited by Dr. James Beckett, and I had no way to value the football or non-sports cards.  My memory is fuzzy, and I can't find the original tally, but I think I came up with the box being worth somewhere in the neighborhood of $300 to $400, which I knew my parents definitely did not have in their discretionary spending budget.  But they could tell how much I wanted those cards, as I lovingly studied each and every one and handled each as if it were some long-lost artifact.

I don’t know the exact details, but I believe my Dad went back to the friend and told her we’d take the whole box, but only if she let him give her some money for it.  I believe she was genuinely shocked that the box of old cardboard pictures had some value, and that someone was willing to give her cash for it.  My Dad shared the list I had created showing the “book value” of the cards and he mentioned how it was going to be close to impossible to get me to pick and choose which ones I wanted.  When all was said and done, the family friend, who had absolutely no intention of making money on this endeavor, walked away with (I think) something in the neighborhood of $100 for the whole lot.

Within the spoils were 44 cards from the 1956 Topps set – by far the most cards from any one set.  I studied them, I sorted them, and I pretty much memorized every detail of those 44 cards.  But there were also 18 cards from the 1955 Bowman set, consisting of mostly commons or semi-stars, but no star cards.  This Dark card was one of the cards, and there was a Fred Baczewski (#190) card in the bunch with an advertisement on the back.  (I'll get to that card with the Baczewski post.)

The Card / Bowman Exclusive Bio on Back / Giants Team Set
Dark appeared exclusively in Bowman sets in 1954 and 1955.  The TV paneling on the front is the lighter of the two cabinet colors used in the set, with Bowman switching to a darker coloring with card Don Zimmer's (#65) card.  There are a few different options Bowman went with for the backs of the cards, and Dark's card contains his biography.  Other cards later in the set recount a player's favorite baseball memory, advice to youngsters or other baseball-related anecdotes.

1949 Bowman #67
1951 Bowman #14
1952 Bowman #34
1953 Bowman Color #19
1954 Bowman #41

Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card: 1949 Bowman #67
Bowman Set Appearances (7): 1949-55
Topps Set Apperances (19): 1952-1953, 1956-1964, 1966-1970, 1975, 1978
Most Recent Mainstream Card: 2011 Topps Lineage Autographs #RA-AD
Total Cards Listed in TCDB and Top Collector as of 12/27/25: 213 total, gwhy11 has 54

Sources
1956 Topps Blog / 1969 Topps Blog / The Phillies Room

#1 Hoyt Wilhelm - New York Giants / #3 Joe Coleman - Baltimore Orioles