#1 Steve Carlton Becomes All-Time NL Strikeout Leader
This card was my first look at the great lefty Steve Carlton. I still remember my first impression, thinking "Wow! A one armed pitcher!". It was a couple months before somebody let me know he actually did have two arms, which made him less impressive to me.
That's a funny thought really, Steve Carlton being unimpressive. I just didn't know any better yet.
So anyway, this card is all about a moment in Montreal on September 21, 1981. Steve entered the game just 1 strikeout short of tying Bob Gibson's National League strikeout record of 3,117.
Steve induced 3 groundouts and a pop fly to short, before getting his first strikeout victim, Larry Parrish for the 2nd out of the 2nd half of the 2nd inning. That tied him with Bob Gibson, at 3,117 strikeouts in the NL, but he'd have to wait 'til the next inning to grab the record for himself.
The bottom three of the Expos order was due up in the bottom of the 3rd, so it seemed that Steve would get one of them for the record breaker. That was before Chris Speier singled, Jerry Manuel popped out, Ray Burris bunted Speier over, and consecutive walks to Warren Cromartie and Jerry White, which brought future Hall of Famer Andre Dawson to the plate.
So the scene was set for a possible great moment—Loaded bases in a 0-0 tie; the battle had come down to two great players. The last 9 times they'd faced each other, Dawson had smacked 4 hits and drawn 2 walks. By the way, 3 of those 4 hits were doubles.
This time Steve Carlton reached back and pulled out history from his glove and tossed it out of his left hand, striking out Andre Dawson, to become the all-time National League strikeout king! Better yet for the Phillies, he finished the Montreal threat and kept the game tied at 0.
He finished the day with 12 strikeouts in 10 innings, but Philadelphia eventually lost the game in the 17th inning, 1-0., when Andre Dawson singled in the winning run with the bases loaded. So Andre got his revenge and won the day, but Steve still set the bar higher.
At the end of the day, the all-time strikeout list looked like this—
- 3,508 - Walter Johnson
- 3,326 - Gaylord Perry
- 3,229 - Nolan Ryan
- 3,128 - Steve Carlton
- 3,117 - Bob Gibson
- 3,067 - Tom Seaver
- 2,962 - Fergie Jenkins
- 2,855 - Jim Bunning
- 2,832 - Mickey Lolich
- 2,742 - Don Sutton
Interestingly, Steve had a 0.95 ERA in 19 innings against Montreal that season, and also earned his 3,000th career strikeout against the Expos on Apr 29. Tim Wallach was the victim that time.
By the end of '81, with three active pitchers closing in on the all-time strikeout lead, it was not longer a question of "Can anyone topple Walter Johnson?"; The only questions left were— who, and when?





















I don’t think I have the book in front of me, since I lent it out, but I want to say this card is included in Cardboard Gods by Josh Wilker. If I remember correctly, he calls it one of the least-impressive cards in the set.
Carlton’s a great pitcher, but he may be a little overrated. Did you know Carlton is 260th all-time for WHIP, his 1.2467 ranking below immortals like Atlee Hammaker, Pascual Perez and Milt Pappas?