View allAll Photos Tagged procard

Michele di Matteo (Bologna, doc. 1409-1470) St. Berthold - tempera on panel (post 1461) - Galleria Nazionale Bologna

 

Questa tavola, che segue in modo ormai stanco le cadenze tardogotiche, insieme ad altre quattro raffiguranti Sant'Andrea Corsini, San Procardo, San Francesco e San Domenico, fu eseguita dal maestro nella tarda maturità , dopo il ritorno da Siena.

 

This panel, which follows tiredly late Gothic cadences, along with four others depicting St. Andrea Corsini, St. Procard, St. Francis and St. Dominic, was executed by the master in his late maturity , after his return from Siena.

  

Michele di Matteo (Bologna, doc. 1409-1470) St. Andrea Corsini - tempera on panel (post 1461) - Galleria Nazionale Bologna

 

Questa tavola, che segue in modo ormai stanco le cadenze tardogotiche, insieme ad altre quattro raffiguranti Sant'Andrea Corsini, San Procardo, San Francesco e San Domenico, fu eseguita dal maestro nella tarda maturità , dopo il ritorno da Siena.

 

This panel, which follows tiredly late Gothic cadences, along with four others depicting St. Andrea Corsini, St. Procard, St. Francis and St. Dominic, was executed by the master in his late maturity , after his return from Siena.

Michele di Matteo (Bologna, doc. 1409-1470) St. Procard - tempera on panel (post 1461) - Galleria Nazionale Bologna

 

Questa tavola, che segue in modo ormai stanco le cadenze tardogotiche, insieme ad altre quattro raffiguranti Sant'Andrea Corsini, San Procardo, San Francesco e San Domenico, fu eseguita dal maestro nella tarda maturità , dopo il ritorno da Siena.

 

This panel, which follows tiredly late Gothic cadences, along with four others depicting St. Andrea Corsini, St. Procard, St. Francis and St. Dominic, was executed by the master in his late maturity , after his return from Siena.

Michele di Matteo (Bologna, doc. 1409-1470) St. Francis - tempera on panel (post 1461) - Galleria Nazionale Bologna

 

Questa tavola, che segue in modo ormai stanco le cadenze tardogotiche, insieme ad altre quattro raffiguranti Sant'Andrea Corsini, San Procardo, San Francesco e San Domenico, fu eseguita dal maestro nella tarda maturità , dopo il ritorno da Siena.

 

This panel, which follows tiredly late Gothic cadences, along with four others depicting St. Andrea Corsini, St. Procard, St. Francis and St. Dominic, was executed by the master in his late maturity , after his return from Siena.

Michele di Matteo (Bologna, doc. 1409-1470) St. Dominic - tempera on panel (post 1461) - Galleria Nazionale Bologna

  

Questa tavola, che segue in modo ormai stanco le cadenze tardogotiche, insieme ad altre quattro raffiguranti Sant'Andrea Corsini, San Procardo, San Francesco e San Domenico, fu eseguita dal maestro nella tarda maturità , dopo il ritorno da Siena.

 

This panel, which follows tiredly late Gothic cadences, along with four others depicting St. Andrea Corsini, St. Procard, St. Francis and St. Dominic, was executed by the master in his late maturity , after his return from Siena.

seen in Explore

 

IMG_3123.jpg

swap from mirjam

ProCard

Medici Society

Pro!

 

you can find me on Instagram _cgimagery and Facebook cgimagery

Ferguson Arthur Jenkins

Nickname: Fergie, Fly

Born: December 13, 1942 in Chatham, Ontario

 

He was a MLB pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs, Texas Rangers, and Boston Red Sox, from 1965 through 1983. He also played basketball in the off-season for the Harlem Globetrotters from 1967 to 1969, and pitched two seasons in Canada for the minor league London Majors following his major league career.

 

Jenkins played mostly for the Cubs. He was a National League and Cubs All-Star for three seasons, and in 1971, he was the first Canadian and Cubs pitcher to win a Cy Young Award. He was a 20-game winner for seven seasons, including six consecutive seasons for the Cubs.

 

Jenkins was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 1987, and in 1991, became the first Canadian ever elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.

 

On December 17, 1979, he was made a Member of the Order of Canada for being "Canada's best-known major-league baseball player".

 

MLB debut - September 10, 1965, for the Philadelphia Phillies

Last MLB appearance - September 26, 1983, for the Chicago Cubs

 

MLB statistics:

Win–loss record 284–226

ERA - 3.34

Strikeouts - 3,192

 

Teams:

Philadelphia Phillies (1965–1966)

Chicago Cubs (1966–1973)

Texas Rangers (1974–1975)

Boston Red Sox (1976–1977)

Texas Rangers (1978–1981)

Chicago Cubs (1982–1983)

 

Career highlights and awards:

3× All-Star (1967, 1971, 1972)

NL Cy Young Award (1971)

2× Wins leader (1971, 1974)

NL strikeout leader (1969)

Chicago Cubs #31 retired

 

Link to all of his issued baseball cards: www.tradingcarddb.com/Person.cfm/pid/2876/col/1/yea/0/Fer...

Thomas Joseph Beckwith (b. January 28, 1955) is a retired MLB pitcher. He grew up in Auburn, Alabama, where he played for Auburn High School and Auburn University. In the Majors, Beckwith played for two teams in his career: the Los Angeles Dodgers (1979-1983, 1986) and Kansas City Royals (1984-1985).

 

He was a member of the Royals team that won the World Series in 1985 and a member of the Dodgers who won the World Series in 1981.

 

- April 8, 1986: Joe Beckwith was signed as a free agent by the Blue Jays.

- July 31, 1986: Joe Beckwith was purchased from the Blue Jays by the Los Angeles Dodgers.

 

MLB debut - July 21, 1979, for the Los Angeles Dodgers

Last MLB appearance - September 30, 1986, for the Los Angeles Dodgers

 

Career statistics:

Win-loss record 18-19

ERA - 3.54

Strikeouts - 319

 

Teams:

Los Angeles Dodgers (1979–1983)

Kansas City Royals (1984–1985)

Los Angeles Dodgers (1986)

 

Career highlights and awards:

1985 World Series Championship

 

Link to all of his issued baseball cards - www.tradingcarddb.com/Person.cfm/pid/375/col/1/yea/0/Joe-...

Thomas Bradford Gilles (b. July 2, 1962) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher. Gilles pitched in two games for the Toronto Blue Jays in the 1990 season. He had a 1-0 record, in 1.3 innings, with a 6.75 ERA.

 

Born in Peoria, Illinois, he was drafted by the New York Yankees in the 47th round of the 1984 amateur draft.

 

MLB debut - June 7, 1990, for the Toronto Blue Jays

Last MLB appearance - June 8, 1990, for the Toronto Blue Jays

 

- June 4, 1984: Drafted by the New York Yankees in the 47th round of the 1984 amateur draft.

- March 25, 1986: Released by the New York Yankees.

- January 1, 1987: Signed as a Free Agent with the Kansas City Royals.

- March 20, 1988: Released by the Kansas City Royals.

- April 6, 1988: Signed as a Free Agent with the Minnesota Twins.

- December 6, 1988: Drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays from the Minnesota Twins in the 1988 minor league draft.

- October 15, 1990: Granted Free Agency.

 

MLB statistics:

Record - 1-0

ERA - 6.75

Strikeouts - 1

 

Link to all of his issued baseball cards - www.tradingcarddb.com/Person.cfm/pid/69449/col/1/yea/0/To...

Ferguson Arthur Jenkins

Nickname: Fergie, Fly

Born: December 13, 1942 in Chatham, Ontario

 

He was a MLB pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs, Texas Rangers, and Boston Red Sox, from 1965 through 1983. He also played basketball in the off-season for the Harlem Globetrotters from 1967 to 1969, and pitched two seasons in Canada for the minor league London Majors following his major league career.

 

Jenkins played mostly for the Cubs. He was a National League and Cubs All-Star for three seasons, and in 1971, he was the first Canadian and Cubs pitcher to win a Cy Young Award. He was a 20-game winner for seven seasons, including six consecutive seasons for the Cubs.

 

Jenkins was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 1987, and in 1991, became the first Canadian ever elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.

 

On December 17, 1979, he was made a Member of the Order of Canada for being "Canada's best-known major-league baseball player".

 

MLB debut - September 10, 1965, for the Philadelphia Phillies

Last MLB appearance - September 26, 1983, for the Chicago Cubs

 

MLB statistics:

Win–loss record 284–226

ERA - 3.34

Strikeouts - 3,192

 

Teams:

Philadelphia Phillies (1965–1966)

Chicago Cubs (1966–1973)

Texas Rangers (1974–1975)

Boston Red Sox (1976–1977)

Texas Rangers (1978–1981)

Chicago Cubs (1982–1983)

 

Career highlights and awards:

3× All-Star (1967, 1971, 1972)

NL Cy Young Award (1971)

2× Wins leader (1971, 1974)

NL strikeout leader (1969)

Chicago Cubs #31 retired

 

Link to all of his issued baseball cards: www.tradingcarddb.com/Person.cfm/pid/2876/col/1/yea/0/Fer...

Nathaniel Cromwell

Position: Pitcher

Bats: Left, Throws: Left

Height: 6' 1", Weight: 185 lb.

 

Nate Cromwell pitched for nine years in the Blue Jays and Padres organizations but he never made it to the majors.

 

Cromwell's career began in 1987, taken by the Blue Jays in the 11th round of the draft, out of Las Vegas' Chaparral High.

 

Cromwell played that first season at Medicine Hat, going 4-6, with a 4.31 ERA, along with 47 strikeouts in 54.1 innings.

 

He moved to single-A Myrtle Beach in 1988, going 8-8, with a 2.90 ERA. He also struck out 86 in 124.1 innings.

 

He made the Florida State League All-Star team in 1989 with the Dunedin Blue Jays, earning the start and the win. Cromwell showed he deserved that All-Star selection by going on to post a 12-6 record and striking out a league-record 161 batters.

 

At Knoxville in 1990 Cromwell went just 5-14 with a 5.56 ERA. In September, Cromwell spent a brief time in the Braves organization, claimed off waivers. The Braves, though, traded him back to the Blue Jays on November 7, 1990 for minor-league pitcher Earl Sanders.

Procard

FB swap from ingrid

Donald Jeffrey Boston (b. 6 Sep 1971) - Drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 39th round of the 1990 MLB June Amateur Draft - he never made it to the majors.

 

The brother of Daryl Boston, D.J. Boston began his career in the Toronto Blue Jays farm system in 1991. He hit .280 for the Medicine Hat Blue Jays and led the team with 12 doubles as their man first baseman. A year later he was promoted to the New York-Penn League, where he slipped to .234, but led the St. Catharines Blue Jays in walks (36) and RBI (36). He stole 20 bases in 23 tries and his 5 home runs were second on the club.

 

In 1993 Boston played in a full-season league for the first time. For the Hagerstown Suns Boston hit .315, stole 31 bases in 42 tries, drove 35 doubles, homered 13 times and drove in 93, not bad for a 21-year old in full-season class A. He was fourth in the league in batting average, was named the All-Star 1B in the South Atlantic League and won the league's MVP award. Baseball America rated him the #5 prospect in the league (one spot ahead of Jason Kendall).

 

1997 saw Boston bounce around between A, AA and AAA and he played in the farm systems of both the Oakland A's and Colorado Rockies. He spent yet another season putting up solid numbers at Double-A, but he was now practically a non-prospect.

Jeffrey Franklin Kent (b: March 7, 1968 in Bellflower, California) is a former MLB second baseman. Kent won the National League MVP award in 2000 with the San Francisco Giants, and is the all-time leader in home runs among second basemen. He drove in 90 or more runs from 1997 to 2005, a streak of run production unprecedented for a second baseman, a position typically known for its defense. Kent is a five-time All-Star and his 560 career doubles put him tied for 21st on the all-time doubles list.

 

Kent played at UC Berkeley prior to being drafted in the 20th round of the 1989 amateur draft by the Toronto Blue Jays. After four seasons in the minor leagues, Kent was invited to spring training with the Toronto Blue Jays in 1992 and made the opening day roster. He made his debut on April 12 against the Baltimore Orioles and recorded his first career hit (double) in the 6th inning against José Mesa. He saw limited at-bats early in the season; however, an injury to starting third baseman Kelly Gruber granted Kent a more regular role in the line-up.

 

Kent was traded to the Mets on August 27, 1992, for pitcher David Cone, as Toronto bolstered their pitching rotation for a successful World Series run.

 

In a deal made prior to the 1996 trade deadline, the Mets infamously sent Kent and José Vizcaíno to the Cleveland Indians for Álvaro Espinoza and Carlos Baerga. The following offseason, Kent was again traded, this time to the San Francisco Giants along with José Vizcaíno and Julián Tavárez. The San Francisco trade was initially very unpopular, as it sent Matt Williams, a longtime Giant and a fan-favorite, to the Indians.

 

Kent's contributions were recognized in 2000 (33 HR, 125 RBI, .334 BA, and a .986 fielding percentage) with the National League MVP Award, beating out teammate and perennial MVP candidate Barry Bonds.

 

Career statistics:

Batting average - .290

Hits - 2,461

Home runs - 377

RBI - 1,518

PROCARD Exclusive, Netherlands

 

Postcrossing Round Robins

10 x 10 RR - Group 84 - Illustrations

#9 Melanie Hoogvliet @Jumbbumble

Netherlands

Sent 00.00.2023 / Received 31 May 2023

 

ProCard

Medici cards

fb swap from henriette

Jeffrey Franklin Kent (b: March 7, 1968 in Bellflower, California) is a former MLB second baseman. Kent won the National League MVP award in 2000 with the San Francisco Giants, and is the all-time leader in home runs among second basemen. He drove in 90 or more runs from 1997 to 2005, a streak of run production unprecedented for a second baseman, a position typically known for its defense. Kent is a five-time All-Star and his 560 career doubles put him tied for 21st on the all-time doubles list.

 

Kent played at UC Berkeley prior to being drafted in the 20th round of the 1989 amateur draft by the Toronto Blue Jays. After four seasons in the minor leagues, Kent was invited to spring training with the Toronto Blue Jays in 1992 and made the opening day roster. He made his debut on April 12 against the Baltimore Orioles and recorded his first career hit (double) in the 6th inning against José Mesa. He saw limited at-bats early in the season; however, an injury to starting third baseman Kelly Gruber granted Kent a more regular role in the line-up.

 

Kent was traded to the Mets on August 27, 1992, for pitcher David Cone, as Toronto bolstered their pitching rotation for a successful World Series run.

 

In a deal made prior to the 1996 trade deadline, the Mets infamously sent Kent and José Vizcaíno to the Cleveland Indians for Álvaro Espinoza and Carlos Baerga. The following offseason, Kent was again traded, this time to the San Francisco Giants along with José Vizcaíno and Julián Tavárez. The San Francisco trade was initially very unpopular, as it sent Matt Williams, a longtime Giant and a fan-favorite, to the Indians.

 

Kent's contributions were recognized in 2000 (33 HR, 125 RBI, .334 BA, and a .986 fielding percentage) with the National League MVP Award, beating out teammate and perennial MVP candidate Barry Bonds.

 

Career statistics:

Batting average - .290

Hits - 2,461

Home runs - 377

RBI - 1,518

Mark Anthony Whiten (b. November 25, 1966) is a former MLB outfielder and switch-hitter batter who played for the Toronto Blue Jays (1990–91), Cleveland Indians (1991–92, 1998–2000), St. Louis Cardinals (1993–94), Boston Red Sox (1995), Philadelphia Phillies (1996), Atlanta Braves (1996), Seattle Mariners (1996) and New York Yankees (1997). He became known by the nickname "Hard-Hittin'" Mark Whiten. He was selected by Toronto in the 1986 amateur draft and made his major league debut in the '90 season.

 

Whiten was a typical up-and-down player. He had one of the best outfield arms in the 1990s. He hit for power too, but his mental lapses hurt him in the field and at the plate. The Blue Jays had little patience with his development and sent him to Cleveland. After two seasons with the Indians he was sent to the Cardinals.

 

In his first season with St. Louis Whiten recorded nine outfield assists, fifth-best in the National League. On September 7, 1993, he gained notability with his performance against the Cincinnati Reds in the second game of a doubleheader. Whiten hit 4 home runs and drove in 12 runs, tying the all-time single-game records in both categories in the process. He also tied the NL mark for RBI in a doubleheader (13). Whiten is one of only 16 players in major league baseball history who have hit four home runs in one game, and he and Jim Bottomley are the only two players with 12 RBI in one game.

 

Career statistics:

Batting average - .259

Home runs - 105

RBI - 423

William Allen Blair (b: December 18, 1965) is a former journeyman right-handed pitcher in MLB and current Bullpen coach for the San Diego Padres.

 

Blair played baseball for Morehead State University before the Toronto Blue Jays drafted him in the 11th round of the 1986 amateur draft.

 

He spent four seasons in the Blue Jays minor league system, playing for the St. Catharines Blue Jays (1986), the Dunedin Blue Jays (1987-1988), the Knoxville Smokies (1988), and the Syracuse Chiefs (1989). In his career, Blair pitched with the Blue Jays (1990), Cleveland Indians (1991), Houston Astros (1992), Colorado Rockies (1993-1994), San Diego Padres (1995-1996), Detroit Tigers (1997, 1999-2001), Arizona Diamondbacks (1998), and New York Mets (1998).

 

His best year was 1997, in which he had 16-8 record and an ERA of 4.17. In 1999, Blair was the starting pitcher for the final Opening Day in Tiger Stadium history.

 

On December 11, 2012, he was named Bullpen coach of the San Diego Padres, replacing Jimmy Jones.

 

Career statistics:

Win–loss record 60–86

ERA - 5.04

Strikeouts - 759

1 3 4 5 6 7 ••• 9 10