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Editor’s Note: It wasn’t too long ago when I discussed Munetaka Murakami and how noteworthy of a start his MLB career was getting off to, but it’s still happening, folks. Sure, a hamstring injury will keep him on the sh...


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The 1960 Topps baseball cards release came out right in the middle of baseball’s golden age. It was close to the end of the Mickey Mantle era, the rise of guys like Roberto Clemente and Roger Maris, and the dawn of players who would go on to define entire franchises for decades.

If you’ve ever flipped through a collection and stumbled onto one of these, you kno...


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Fred McGriff never hit 40 home runs in a season. He never led the league in that category more than twice. He never won an MVP award.

But that didn’t stop the Crime Dog from compiling some impressive statistics on his way to (eventually) being enshrined in Cooperstown at the National Baseball Hall of Fame. One of the more memorable days of his career likely came on Jun...


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Manny Ramirez had one of the sweetest right-handed swings of his generation, and his offensive production was consistently elite for pretty much the duration of his career. It’s a bummer that what he did in the batter’s box is now diminished because of his connection to performance-enhancing drugs.

While that’ll forever be part of the conversation regarding his legacy...


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What’s the first thing you think about upon hearing Cal Ripken Jr.’s name? For most, it’s probably the fact that he’s baseball’s Iron Man. That’ll happen when you play in 2,632 straight games and don’t miss a contest for nearly two decades.

But while that impressive (and likely unbreakable) record is a huge part of Ripken’s legacy, he did plenty more during his Hall o...


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