Earlier this week, as we turned the calendar to 2023, I started a new set-collecting blog for the 1969 Topps set we're building. It's going to look and feel mostly like the blog I recently wrapped up, which chronicled our collation of a complete 1965 Topps set between December 2019 and December 2022. Presented below is the post for the first official card we added to our set - Cookie Rojas.
Please check out my new project and follow along as I collect the under appreciated 1969 Topps set.
1969 Topps #507 Cookie Rojas - Philadelphia Phillies
Octavio Victor Rojas
Philadelphia Phillies
Infield-Outfield
Bats: Right Throws: Right Height: 5'10" Weight: 160
Born: March 6, 1939, La Habana, Cuba
Signed: Signed by the Cincinnati Reds as an amateur free agent before 1956 season
Major League Teams: Cincinnati Reds 1962; Philadelphia Phillies 1963-1969; St. Louis Cardinals 1970; Kansas City Royals 1970-1977
As a Manager: California Angels 1988; Florida Marlins 1996
A long-time utility player for the Phillies, Cookie Rojas enjoyed the best years of his career as the starting second baseman for the Royals in the early 1970s. Rojas was a five time All-Star - once with the Phillies in 1965 and then four times with the Royals between 1971 and 1974. Blocked at second base by Tony Taylor (#108) early in his career, Rojas moved around the field playing wherever needed for Phillies manager Gene Mauch (#606). He finished in the top 10 in singles in his respective league in 1965, 1966 and 1974. Rojas is second on the Royals' all-time games played list at second base behind Frank White.
Rojas played for 16 seasons, accumulating a .263 average over 1,822 games. Following his playing career, Rojas stayed in the game serving as a coach for the Cubs between 1978 and 1981, and becoming the first Cuban born manager in major league history when he was at the helm for the Angels in 1988, succeeding his former manager Mauch as manager of that club. He later served as a coach for the Marlins (1993-1996), Mets (1997-2000) and Blue Jays (2001-2002). He's been the Spanish-language color commentator on Marlins television broadcasts since 2003.
A long-time utility player for the Phillies, Cookie Rojas enjoyed the best years of his career as the starting second baseman for the Royals in the early 1970s. Rojas was a five time All-Star - once with the Phillies in 1965 and then four times with the Royals between 1971 and 1974. Blocked at second base by Tony Taylor (#108) early in his career, Rojas moved around the field playing wherever needed for Phillies manager Gene Mauch (#606). He finished in the top 10 in singles in his respective league in 1965, 1966 and 1974. Rojas is second on the Royals' all-time games played list at second base behind Frank White.
Rojas played for 16 seasons, accumulating a .263 average over 1,822 games. Following his playing career, Rojas stayed in the game serving as a coach for the Cubs between 1978 and 1981, and becoming the first Cuban born manager in major league history when he was at the helm for the Angels in 1988, succeeding his former manager Mauch as manager of that club. He later served as a coach for the Marlins (1993-1996), Mets (1997-2000) and Blue Jays (2001-2002). He's been the Spanish-language color commentator on Marlins television broadcasts since 2003.
Some text for this post originally appeared on my 1965 Topps blog.
Building the Set / Card #3
November 6, 2021 from Cooperstown, NY (Stonehouse Toys of Fame)
In early November 2021, needing a quick vacation and wanting to take our sons to Cooperstown for the first time, we took advantage of the annual NJEA Teacher Convention in which public schools are closed for a few days. We loaded our car on a Thursday morning with a loose plan of spending two days in Cooperstown and the surrounding area over the weekend, shopping in the village, soaking in the Hall of Fame exhibits and eating a few good dinners. The 4 1/2 hour drive to Otsego County was scenic and enjoyable. Most of the day Friday was spent in the Hall of Fame and Saturday was dedicated largely to shopping in the many stores, mostly baseball related, located in the blocks surrounding the Hall.
We'd add nine cards to our 1965 Topps set during the weekend and four cards to our not-yet-collecting 1969 Topps set. This Rojas card was pulled from a stack of loosely organized vintage Topps commons found within the subterranean Stonehouse Toys of Fame and it cost me $3. I hadn't planned on adding any 1969 Topps cards during this trip, but by the end of the weekend Rojas would be joined by three other cards from the set. It's fitting Rojas would be the first official card purchased for our 1969 Topps set build, as his 1965 Topps card was one of the first five cards we purchased for that set in December 2019.
The Card / Phillies Team Set / Accuracy Index +5
Given the card comes late in the set, I'm going to assume this is one of the newer photos to appear, perhaps taken as late as spring training 1969. The back of the card highlights Rojas' 14-game hitting streak in 1968 which came in May and early June. Rojas' versatility is also mentioned, and through the 1968 season he had pitched in one game, caught in seven games, played a game at first base and played three games at third base.
Accuracy Index: This card scores a +5 for showing Rojas on the correct team and not recycling an old photo.
1969 Season
This was to be Rojas' seventh and final season with the Phillies. In 110 games, he batted .228, the fourth year in a row his average had declined. Rojas made 96 starts overall, with 94 starts coming a second base and a pair of starts in April in left field. Taylor gradually saw more playing time at second base as the season progressed, and by the end of the season the Phillies had decided to move ahead with young Denny Doyle as Rojas' permanent replacement for 1970. As noted below, Rojas was shipped to the Cardinals on October 7, 1969 as part of a blockbuster seven-player deal.
Phillies Career
The Phillies acquired Rojas from the Reds on November 27, 1962 for reliever Jim Owens, and his Topps rookie card in the 1963 set shows him wearing a Reds uniform top. He played for seven seasons with the Phillies, appearing in at least 100 games every year except his first in 1963. His best season with the club was 1965 when Rojas was named to his first All-Star team, joining his teammates Dick Allen (#350) and Johnny Callison (#133). He appeared in 142 games that year, and saw more time at second base than usual due to a season long slump endured by regular second baseman Taylor. He also led the team with a .303 average, which placed him eighth overall in the league.
After several years of declining offensive output, the Phillies traded him in October 1969. Rojas was one of the players included in the blockbuster deal between the Phillies and Cardinals that shipped Allen and Jerry Johnson (#253) to St. Louis in exchange for Curt Flood (#540), Tim McCarver (#475), Byron Browne and Joe Hoerner (#522). (Flood never reported to the Phillies, but that's a story for another post.)
Rojas played in 880 games for the Phillies - the exact amount of games he played for the Royals.
Other Notable Baseball Cards
First Mainstream Card: 1963 Topps #221
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (16): 1963-1977, 1988
Most Recent Mainstream Card: 2019 Topps Archives Fan Favorites Autographs #FFA-CR
Total Non-Parallel Baseball Cards: 90 in the Beckett online database as of 12/27/22.
Sources:
Baseball Reference / SABR
Beckett Database / The Trading Card Database
1965 Topps Blog / The Phillies Room
Rojas played in 880 games for the Phillies - the exact amount of games he played for the Royals.
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First Mainstream Card: 1963 Topps #221
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (16): 1963-1977, 1988
Most Recent Mainstream Card: 2019 Topps Archives Fan Favorites Autographs #FFA-CR
Total Non-Parallel Baseball Cards: 90 in the Beckett online database as of 12/27/22.
Sources:
Baseball Reference / SABR
Beckett Database / The Trading Card Database
1965 Topps Blog / The Phillies Room
1 comment:
Wow, I just started a new set blog, too, and am collecting the 1969 set as well!
I bet you finish it before I do.
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