More Players on Other Players’ Cards
June 3rd, 2010 | Published in Football Card Trivia | 3 Comments
Last year I wrote about players who appeared on other players’ cards, and I noted that some players who made guest appearances never appeared on cards of their own. Today I dug up a few more cards with uncredited players.
First is Andy Robustelli’s 1961 Fleer card. Number 60 from the Giants also appears on the card, with his back to the camera. Who is it? Well, there was no number 60 on the Giants’ 1961 roster, but the photo was probably taken the year before, and number 60 on the Giants’ 1960 roster was Bill Crawford. Crawford played in four games in 1960, but that was the extent of his NFL career, so having his back appear on another player’s card was a reasonably good showing. According to cflapedia.com, Crawford also went on to play in the CFL for four seasons. I don’t believe he appeared on a CFL card, though.
Next is a 1973 Topps Jim Files card, which actually shows two other players more clearly than Files. One of the players is Dave Roller, who played for the Giants in 1971. (He might also have been on the roster other years, but according to his page on pro-football-reference.com, he did not play.) Roller went on to play six seasons for the Packers and Vikings, but, as far as I know, he never appeared on a card of his own.
The other player on the Jim Files card, number 76, appears to be Fred Miller, a defensive tackle for the Colts from 1963 to 1972. Though Miller had a long career and made the Pro Bowl three times, he did not appear on a regular issue card. Perhaps, if he had played another year, he would have made it onto a 1973 Topps card, since Topps increased the size of their football card set from 351 cards to 528 in 1973. Miller did appear on a couple of oddball items–a 1967 Williams Portrait and a 1967 Johnny Pro Die-Cut–that you can sometimes spot on eBay.
Finally, we have a 1972 Topps Ed Podolak Pro Action card. The defensive player on the card–who’d like to smack that ball away from Podolak–appears to be Al Clark of the Lions. Clark spent the 1971 season with Detroit, then played five seasons for the Rams and Eagles. I don’t know of any other cards of Clank.
I frequently get inquiries from the families and friends of players who had short pro careers, and I have to tell them, sadly, that I don’t know of any cards of their uncle or granddad or friend. If I had more of these uncredited players cataloged, I could probably sell more cards!
- Search eBay for: Andy Robustelli, Jim Files, Ed Podolak
- Search Nearmint’s Cards for: 1961 Fleer, 1972 Topps, 1973 Topps
June 3rd, 2010 at 1:14 PM (#)
There are probably dozens of these, but I will mention one for you. 1972 Topps IA Doug Cunningham. Cunningham is a 49er and is being tackled by Mel Refro (I think), but standing prominantly in the background is #56 Tom Stincic, Dallas Cowboys MLB 1969-71.
June 3rd, 2010 at 1:24 PM (#)
Hi Steve, thanks for stopping by. I’m sure you’re right, that there are dozens of these. They’re kind of fun to research, though.
Here’s the card you mentioned, with Tom Stincic in the background.
June 6th, 2010 at 8:46 AM (#)
A couple of weeks ago, I featured a 1975 Topps card of Greg Pruitt of the Browns. While I’m a Steelers fan and collector, Pruitt would be an odd choice, except the picture shows “Mean” Joe Greene closing in for the kill.
Here’s a link to that post:
http://thevintagesportscards.blogspot.com/2010/05/mean-joe.html