Jim Rice. (1976). $886

1976 Topps #340 – Value: $450.00 – Grade: Mint

Hall of Fame Journey: https://youtu.be/em09lvKy5Ko

James Edward Rice (Born in Anderson, SC on March 8, 1953-) was the 1974 International League Rookie of the Year, Most Valuable Player and Triple Crown winner with the Pawtucket Red Sox batting .337 with 25 home runs and 93 RBI in 117 games. Needless to say, Rice was quickly added to the big club’s roster in Boston and he became the third left fielder in Boston’s long history to spend his entire career with the boys from Beantown (Ted Williams and Carl Yastrzemski). Rice played 16 years in Boston where he clouted 20 home runs in his first eleven seasons and earned the 1978 American League Most Valuable Player Award. In 1979, he became the second player in history after Ty Cobb to lead the league in total bases for three consecutive seasons (1977-1979), and again in 1983. His 406 total bases in 1978 remains an AL record for a season. The eight-time All-Star selection also led the league three times in home runs, and RBI and slugging percentage twice. Jim Rice retired with 2,452 hits, 1,249 runs, 1,451 RBI, and 382 home runs while posting a career .298 batting average. The Veterans Committee elected James Edward Rice to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 2009.

Published by 1jimburton

Been married to Karen for 51 years! Father to Garrett (40) and Sarah (47). Grandfather to Ava (18) and Lila (16). Have developed the following Wordpress blogs over the past three years: All-Time Greatest Music, High Quality Baseball Cards, High Quality Basketball Cards, High Quality Football Cards, High Quality Ice Hockey Cards and USA Traveling Tips. Written one book called A World with Heart. Also, after retiring from a career in Hospital Facilities management, I have been doing K-12 substitute teaching. Also, coached U13-U16 boys and girls basketball teams for over 25 years. Last, learned to be a master at hand-carving and painting signs. The largest of which is 4’ x 6’ is a logo for Marathon Motor Works hanging over their main entrance in Nashville (it took three months to complete).

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