Logo of the Chicago Stags, who played in the Basketball Association of America and the National Basketball Association from 1946 until 1950. They had a fairly successful team in their short existence, compiling a winning record in each season. Some of their notable players were Max Zaslofsky, Gene Vance and Stan Miasek. They also once owned the draft rights to Bob Cousy, but never signed him.
Archive for June, 2011
Classic Sports Card of The Day
1961 Fleer basketball card of former Boston Celtic star K.C. Jones, courtesy of www.CheckOutMyCards.com . Jones joined his college teammate Bill Russell in the NBA and played 9 seasons, all with the Celtics, winning 8 championships. Known as a tenacious defender (as most of the Celtic players of that era were), Jones was an eight-time NBA All Star and was elected to the basketball Hall of Fame in 1989. After his playing days ended, he embarked on a successful coaching career, and won 2 NBA titles as coach of the Celtics in the 1980s.
Classic Team Logo of The Day
Logo of baseball’s Philadelphia Phillies, used from 1950 until 1969. This era included the 1950 “Whiz Kids” team that won the National League pennant, led by stars like pitchers Robin Roberts and Curt Simmons and hitters like Del Ennis, Willie Jones and Richie Ashburn. It also included the infamous 1964 season when the club, managed by Gene Mauch, held a 6 1/2 game lead in the National League with 12 games to play, then proceeded to lose 10 in a row in a historic collapse known as “The Phold”. That team, despite the collapse, included some of the Phils’ best players in their long history, such as Dick Allen, Jim Bunning, Chris Short, Tony Taylor, Bobby Wine and Johnny Callison. The pitching staff also included a man who would go on to manage the Phils to a World Series title – Dallas Green.
Classic Sports Card of The Day
1962 Topps baseball card of one of the premier power hitters of all time, Harmon Killebrew, who passed away recently. Nicknamed “Killer”, he is second on the all-time American League list of total career home runs, trailing only Babe Ruth. Killebrew played 22 seasons in the majors, for the AL Washington/Minnesota franchise and the Kansas City Royals, mostly in an era when the game was dominated by pitchers, which makes his power numbers even more impressive. He was an eleven time All Star and was voted AL MVP in 1969, when he clubbed 49 HRs and drove in 140 runs. His jersey # 3 has been retired by the Twins, and he was elected to baseball’s Hall of Fame in 1984.
Classic Team Logo of The Day
This is a special logo of one of the National Hockey League’s “original six” franchises, the Boston Bruins, who are currently competing in the Stanley Cup Finals. It signifies the 25th anniversary of the team – in 1949. The team’s original colors were brown and yellow, patterned after owner Charles Adams’ grocery store chain colors, and was changed to the current black and gold in 1939. The Bruins are without a doubt one of the NHL’s most storied teams, and in their first quarter century of existence had some of the game’s most historic figures associated with them. Their original general manager was Art Ross, whose name is on the league’s trophy for annual scoring champion. Hall of Fame players from this era include Dit Clapper, Babe Pratt, Milt Schmidt, Tiny Thompson, Harry Oliver, Eddie Shore, Bobby Bauer, Roy Conacher and Frank Brimsek.
Classic Sports Card of The Day
Courtesy of www.CheckOutMyCards.com , a 1985 Opeechee hockey card of former NHL player Ray Sheppard, who played 14 years in the league. He started his career with the Buffalo Sabres but played for 6 different teams , and was known as a “sniper”, a guy with a knack for scoring goals. His best season stastically was in 1993-94 when he scored 52 goals for the Detroit Red Wings. He holds the unfortunate status of having been sold by the Sabres, in 1990, to the New York Rangers, for a dollar. Sheppard is an avid golfer, and was named the 2nd best golfer, among athletes who aren’t professional golfers, by Golf Digest magazine.