Man, my previous post-- re: the "We Didn't Start the Fire" binder-- was very well received. Felt great getting congratulatory comments from lots of folks including many I haven't heard from in a while. Ended up dragging my feet, but figured I'd follow up that post with another curated binder page.
My Vagabond Binder is a fun little project wherein I fill each page with cards of one player, but the catch is he's with a different team on every card. So for a guy to be considered, he needs to have been associated with at least 9 teams. (It also has to be a dude I enjoy collecting-- I don't force myself to include everyone who's eligible.) Previous featured players are Rickey (2019), Benito (2020), Canseco (2020), Goose (2021), and Kevin Mitchell (2025).
I'm excited for this sixth guy, as we get to OVERMAXXX the boundaries of the project, squishing an astonishing 10 teams into a single binder page (and still couldn't fit all his teams in). Behold, Kenny Lofton:
Now we take a closer look at each card while recapping the player's career.
Kenny kicked off his MLB career in 1991 when he was a September call-up with Houston and got into 20 games. Sorry, Astros fans, but the team didn't make the cut for the page; I couldn't justify swapping out any card here in favor of an overproduction era rookie card. He established himself the next year after being traded to Cleveland, leading the AL in steals and narrowly missing out on ROY thanks to Pat Listach's one good year. An impressive run followed with 4 straight Gold Glove awards and 5 straight stolen base titles. Just before the 1997 season, Lofton was traded by the Indians with Alan Embree to the Braves for Marquis Grissom and David Justice. After an uneven year in Atlanta (--must've been weird playing for the team that recently beat you in the World Series [1995]), Kenny returned to Cleveland as a free agent and remained with the team through 2001.
Kenny signed to patrol center field for the White Sox in 2002 and ended up swapped to San Francisco at the trade deadline, helping the Giants win the pennant that year. Of course that was the "David vs. Goliath" World Series where Eckstein slayed Bonds.
2003 saw him sign with the Pirates, then another trade deadline swap sent him back to the Windy City to finish out the season at Wrigley. The Cubs looked tough to beat that year until one ill-fated play in the NLCS knocked the wheels off.
In 2004, Lofton signed with the Yankees and spent the whole year in pinstripes, though by this point he was more of a role player, only getting into 83 games. Glad to find a use for this dupe 2004 Chrome black refractor that I've already got in my setbuild. (BTW, that long-running project has finally hit the "down to single digits" milestone, with just 9 needs remaining.)
Refraction overload! Compare this to the muted image in the scan up top-- looks like a totally different card.
We close out with this pairing. The Yankees traded Kenny to the Phillies for pitching help before the 2005 season, and he finished out the year in Philly. He signed with the Dodgers for 2006 and Topps found it significant enough to commemorate on a Trading Places insert, squeezing an extra team on the page. Then he signed with the Rangers for 2007, and played well enough for them to be swapped back to Cleveland at the deadline. The Indians went on to make a strong postseason run before getting knocked out by eventual-champs Boston in the ALCS. No teams came calling for 2008, so that wrapped up Kenny Lofton's playing career at age 40.
He was one-and-done on the Hall of Fame ballot, and sure, he was no Willie Mays, but in the years since, nerds have used statistics to determine that he was actually pretty good and kept it going longer than most, maybe enough to consider him among the most valuable center fielders of his era. So it wouldn't be a shock if a committee sends him to Cooperstown one of these years.
That wraps up another page in the Vagabond Binder. If you dig this project, welp, sorry to say there isn't another page anywhere near completion on the horizon.. but then again I suppose all it takes is a focused Sportlots order or two to help turn that around.
Coincidentally, the next guy I've got in mind for a page was also a speedster who suited up for the Indians, Braves, Yankees, Dodgers, and Rangers among his several teams. I've got the tough one out of the way-- he only has one true Yankees card and it's an oddball-- but still need to round up more of the common ones.









Dude got around, but success certainly seemed to follow him.
ReplyDeleteHis first name is elite.
ReplyDeleteNot sure if my memory sucks... or if it has to do with me not collecting cards during most of the 2000's... but I only remember him playing for Cleveland, Atlanta, and SF. Very cool project. Once upon a time, I tried to acquire a memorabilia card of Rickey Henderson from each team he played for. I think I ended up with four before realizing it was too rich for my budget.
ReplyDeleteThat Black refractor is fantastic! And I semi-collect Lofton myself, but I dont think I have a Pirates Lofton card. I was briefly excited that he had autos in the Chrome Anniversary set a couple years back - only to find they were Dodger cards. And the newest Lofton cards depict him with his primary team but (understandably) ditch the old name and logo for a generic "Cleveland"
ReplyDeleteLong story short: it's not easy collecting Kenny Lofton cards!
I was going to do something like this for Edwin Jackson (15 total teams), but I ended up going for everything when I got a big batch of his auto's etc.
ReplyDeleteI could probably help you with a page of Royce Clayton....
Seems like to get to that many teams you had to have been really good at one point, good enough that one team after another tries to capture that past success.
ReplyDelete