Card # 66
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Helmar This Great Game
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Player |
Position |
Team |
Dropo, Walt
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looking up after swing
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Boston Red Sox
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Top Auction Price |
Total Sold |
Avg # Bids |
Avg # Bidders |
Last Sold |
$ 87.55
|
14
|
5
|
3
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January 17, 2024
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CLICK TO GO TO BIDDING SECTION!
About the Player
From the 'This Great Game' card back: You don’t get the nickname “Moose” by accident. Walt Dropo was a big kid growing up in Connecticut, so big that when he was done throwing hay bales around the family farm, he was offered a contract to play football by George Halas of the Chicago Bears. But “Moose” Dropo earned a scholarship to UConn and packed his bags for college to play baseball. After a brief interruption provided by Uncle Sam, the big kid made good on his potential and won Rookie of the Year in 1951 for the Red Sox. That season, no one, not Joe DiMag nor teammate Teddy Ballgame, drove in more than the 144 runs plated by Moose.
About the Series
This series marks a step in a new direction for Helmar. For the first time we take a serious look at baseball in the 1950's and then, perhaps, the 1960's. The game found itself changing dramatically in this post WWII era, influenced by both the larger society and technological innovation. The color barrier may have been officially broken in 1947 but the acceptance of black players by the big league clubs came slowly, if surely. Reliable and inexpensive air transportation paved the way for geographic expansion. The game, which had been centered in the East and Midwest, found new opportunities along the West Coast.
The very center of the baseball world through the decade was New York City. New York teams competed in every World Series through the decade except for 1959. In many of those years both teams competing were from the city. Interestingly, New York also became the center of the art world at the same time. Migration after WWII brought many creatives to the Big Apple and movements such as abstract, modernism, surrealism and avant-garde.
Studying the era has inspired Helmar to use bold, often surreal colors in this series. We hope that you will join us as we explore this era of change.
Card size: 3' x 4'
Individually Numbered 1-20
Related Cards in the Series
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