Description: 1934 Gold Medal Flour Dizzy Dean PSA 7 Absolute blazer Snow white borders 50/50 centering side to side and top to bottom Not sure why a 7 Great candidate for a review Pop of 2 with only 4 higher 1934 MVP Dizzy won two games in the 1934 world series including game 7 shutting out the Tigers 11 -0 1934 World Series Champions “Dizzy” Dean (born Jerome “Jay” Hanna Dean, January 16, 1910 - July 17, 1974) was, without question, one of the most colorful characters ever in professional sports, but also enjoyed one of the most successful, albeit short, careers in Major League Baseball history In 1930, he made his Major League debut in St. Louis, throwing a three-hit complete game for his first win. By 1932, he was the ace of the Cardinals staff In his first full season with the Redbirds, Dean went 18-15 while leading the league in strikeouts (191), innings pitched (286.0, shutouts (4) and batters faced (1,203). This was the first of four straight years that Dizzy led the National League in strikeouts. Ever the braggart, Dean predicted at the beginning of the 1934 season, that he and his brother, Paul, later dubbed “Daffy” by the media, would win 45 games between them, despite the fact that Paul had yet to pitch a single Major League gameIn 1934 Dizzy Dean led the NL with 30 wins, going 30-7, for a league leading .811 winning percentage, and also led in shutouts (7) and strikeouts (195) for the third straight year and was awarded the NL Most Valuable Player Award. And Paul, in his rookie campaign, won 19 games, easily topping the 45-game mark that Dizzy had predicted. He also was selected to his first of four All-Star Games. Most importantly, Dizzy led St. Louis to the National League pennant and then their third World Series championship in nine years and in franchise history. Dizzy, along with Pepper Martin was a leader of St. Louis’ famed Gashouse Gang that won the love and respect of the heartland, playing with grit and determination and appealing more to the everyman as opposed to living the glitzy life like so many New York players. He finished second in MVP voting the next two years. General Mills sent out the photo cards as a promotion for 1934 World Series One card was sent out for every Wheaties box top redeemed Six St Louis Cardinals and six Detroit Tigers were represented with five HOFers among the twelve An article from Old Cardboard magazine winter 2006 stated almost 243,000 photos were mailed out Cards were mailed out in thin mailing envelopes Individual cards were sent out and mailed as postcards Thin card stock is very susceptible to creasing and damage Very few survived undamaged and many are not graded for that reason R313A card designation also referred to as Good Medal Foods Please check out my other listings for more graded Gold Medal Flour cards
Price: 2995 USD
Location: Columbia, Missouri
End Time: 2024-11-21T22:27:59.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Card Size: Oversized
League: Major League (MLB)
Autographed: No
Set: 1934 Gold Medal Flour
Signed By: N/A
Grade: 7
Player/Athlete: Dizzy Dean, MVP
Year Manufactured: 1934
Material: Card Stock
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Vintage: Yes
Sport: Baseball
Type: Sports Trading Card
Parallel/Variety: Gold
Year: 1934
Card Name: Dizzy Dean
Manufacturer: Gold Medal Flour
Features: MVP year
Team: St. Louis Cardinals
Card Number: na
Season: 1934
Card Manufacturer: Gold Medal Flour
Player Name: Dizzy Dean