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And by the way, I am on board with most of Druid's comments on my list. One that he objected to that I think should be considered is the McGraw card I cited. He was a great player, a better manager, and deserves to have his best card included in the set.
I also think Druid is wrong about Bill Lange, who was a far more talented player than Kip Selbach or John Titus. Lange was a big fan favorite in Chicago for a few years. Bill James has described Lange as “probably the greatest all-around athlete to play major-league baseball in the 19th century,”
He retired to marry the daughter of a wealthy man who would not tolerate a ballplayer for a son-in-law, although his rowdy lifestyle (he, Babe Ruth, and Mickey Mantle were peas from the same pod) and playing style (he is reported to have run through a (wooden) fence to catch a fly ball hit by Kip Selbach) caused him to miss a lot of playing time and probably affected his performance.