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1979 Topps and the Minnesota Twins


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Welcome to my review of the 1979 Topps baseball card set and the Minnesota Twins player cards in that set. Once again, Rod Carew is the Twins lone superstar from that era. Mr. Carew will make an appearance later in this post.

When it comes to my review of any of the late 1970s Topps cards, I have come to the realization that I am not a fan of the design of most years. Some years are better than others, of course. But I have also come to recognize that my opinion is probably clouded by two things. I am a little too young to have been fully invested in those Twins teams of the late 1970s. Secondly, the teams were just not that great. And those two things might have been a chicken and egg thing. Was I not that interested because they were bad, or was I just too young?

For me, this design fits the “just OK” category. I find the design and pictures to be simple, some might say boring. The bottom of the card lists the player’s name and position. Under that is a banner with the player’s team. There are 726 cards in the set with 29 Twins cards.

MOST OBSCURE PLAYER

Throughout my blog series of Topps baseball cards and Twins players, I hope I have not offended anyone by using the phrase “most obscure.” Obviously, these guys I select as the most obscure are far more accomplished than I. But reviewing each year’s players is captivating to me in that some players appear only briefly then fade from our memories. I try to do somewhat of an internet dive and try to figure out what happened to that player and where they went. When I select the most obscure, if I have a few choices, I tend to go with the player who has an interesting story. My choice as the most obscure Twins Player in the 1979 set is local, so if anyone who knows him reads this, I mean no disrespect. For 1979, I chose Gery Serum’s card (#627) as the most obscure Twins player in the Topps set.

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As an aside, where the heck is that field in the background of the picture? That looks worse than any rec league field that I played on or that my son plays on nowadays. Sandlots are fine, but shouldn’t a professional be playing on a better field?

Gary Serum is an Upper Midwesterner. He was born in Fargo, ND. He graduated high school in Alexandria, MN. For college, he first attended Moorhead State University then St. Cloud State University. The Twins signed Serum after college as an amateur free agent.

Despite being a free agent, Serum quickly worked his way through the Twins’ minor league system and by 1977 he was called up to the Twins and first appeared on July 22. He played the full season in 1978 for the Twins pitching 184.1 innings with a record of 9-9 including six complete games and one shutout. He pitched part of 1979 for the Twins then never played Major League Baseball again.

After his playing career, Serum opened a restaurant in Anoka, MN, so go check it out. I’m sure many of you have.

THE BEST

Once again, the most valuable Twins card in the 1979 Topps set is a Rod Carew card, the #1 Batting Leaders card with Dave Parker. I do like combo cards. But let’s also acknowledge Mr. Carew’s other last card as a Twin. His base card (#300) is an all-star card. And it’s the end of an era. Carew was traded to the Angels in February of 1979.

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The all-star card has a simple difference from the regular base card in that it has another banner on the card labeling the player as an all-star. For some reason, for me personally, that upgrades the card quite a bit over the plain 1979 Topps base card. It seems like a small thing that would not affect my opinion, but for me it makes the card much more compelling than a regular base card and simply better overall.

So, those two Carew cards kind of tie for me as the best of 1979.

PERSONAL FAVORITE

I know I mentioned an autographed Dave Goltz in my 1978 blog entry. Here I am again. But wait, there’s a good reason. As I looked at this card (#27), I thought the player’s face/picture/stance/something was familiar to me. I thought he looked like another player from another era.

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After not too long I realized a likeness to Mr. Ebby Calvin “Nuke” LaLoosh from my favorite baseball movie Bull Durham. I’m sure most of you will think I’m nuts. But let me know, is there any resemblance? Is it the way he wears the hat, the striping on the sleeves, or the blue long-sleeved undershirt? Maybe the V-neck?

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While I was digging for a picture for Nuke, I came across a USA Today article about the real-life inspiration for the Nuke character – Steve Dalkowski. It’s worth a read. His numbers were crazy.

So, I’m going with my signed 1979 Dave Goltz card as my favorite Twin in the 1979 Topps set exclusively because of my probably incorrect perception that he looks like the fictional character Nuke LaLoosh and that I loved that movie and have seen it too many times.

What do you all think? Does anyone know Gary Serum or his restaurant? What do you all think of Nuke LaLoosh and Bull Durham? I would love to see your opinions, comments, or stories below.

Go Twins.

6 Comments


Recommended Comments

BradKSharp

Posted

I love looking at the old card sets and reading your opinion on them.  Great idea and keep it up.  I hope you do every year from the beginning.

Brock Beauchamp

Posted

1 minute ago, BradKSharp said:

I love looking at the old card sets and reading your opinion on them.  Great idea and keep it up.  I hope you do every year from the beginning.

Welcome to TD!

IndianaTwin

Posted

Another fun article. 

1. The 1979 season was the last year in which I went into the store and bought packs with gum, except for a one-year blip in 1988. I eventually was able to complete the set. For that reason it's a favorite set, but I agree with your "just OK" in terms of the actual look. 

2. I remember Gary Serum, but I don't remember the circumstances of his career ending, including whether there was injury at play, etc., but it seems surprising that someone with 1.9 bWAR as a 21-year-old didn't get picked up somewhere, particularly in a time so quickly after expansion in 1977. His restaurant looks good, however.

3. I've always enjoyed leader cards too. I've also always been surprised that Parker didn't get more HOF consideration. His vote totals are amazingly consistent. He stayed on the ballot a full 15 years, but spent the last 11 years in a tight window of 10.3-11.6 percent. Most people either trend up or fall off. In looking closer, he probably doesn't belong, but he's very close to Tony Oliva in both categories used in JAWS. He, Jim Rice and Dale Murphy are these three outfield contemporaries who were monsters for several years, but weren't able to sustain at the level needed. I'm sure Parker's issues with drugs hurt him significantly with the voters. 

4. Goltz/LaLoosh -- I can see it, particularly in the sideburns and hairline. I also see a bit of the "Well played, Mauer" guy in Goltz's face. 

Keep them coming. 

 

Rosterman

Posted

Topps fancy "t" in the logo just isn't a grabber.

Gary Serum, traded to Yankees for Gagne, Paul Boris and some pitcher named Davis.

I often wonder how much effort Topps put into choosing photographs taken during spring training to use on cards, when you look at some of the pictues that looks like they were taken from the stands. With no lens adjustments, filters, whatever.

IndianaTwin

Posted

On 4/16/2024 at 6:08 PM, Rosterman said:

Topps fancy "t" in the logo just isn't a grabber.

Gary Serum, traded to Yankees for Gagne, Paul Boris and some pitcher named Davis.

I often wonder how much effort Topps put into choosing photographs taken during spring training to use on cards, when you look at some of the pictues that looks like they were taken from the stands. With no lens adjustments, filters, whatever.

Didn't think of this -- is 1979 the first year Topps put their logo on the front, other than as part of "Topps All-Star Rookie," etc.? I wonder if they were already anticipating the market divergence of 1981 that gave us Donruss, Fleer, etc. 

Only She Would Know

Posted

Gary Serum

1. Baseball Card: At that time baseball card photos were taken during spring training.  This photo was taken at Tinker Field in Orlando Fl.

2. Attended St Cloud State( 1975-76), Moorhead State (1977) , UofM Morris (1979) and UofM 1982 -

3.  Graduated from high school in Alexandria, MN. in 1975.  He attended a Twins tryout camp, in June of that year, at the Met Stadium, which lead him to being signed as an amateur free - agent.  He was one of three player, that attended the try - out camp, over the years, that actually made it to the majors.

4. One thing to note, When Gary made his first appearance in the majors, July 1977, he was the youngest pitcher in the American League at the age of 21.

5. 1983 he walked away from the game..  Gary attended the AAA Columbus Clippers (NY Yankees) spring training when they informed him he was being sent to AA.  His response was, I quit.

Disrespectful - none taken.

Detailed information:

https://twinstrivia.com/interview-archives/gary-serum-interview/

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