This card is part of the 2012 Panini Cooperstown 150 card Red Crystal Collection parallel set. Each card is individually serial numbered to only 399 and were inserted randomly into packs of 2012 Panini Cooperstown Baseball. Each card is a parallel of the regular cards in the set, but with a red holofoil finish.
- From the 2012 Panini Cooperstown Red Crystal Collection 150 Card parrallel set
- Individually serial numbered to 399 made
- Randomly inserted into packs of 2012 Paninin Cooperstown
Player Biography
A major league player, manager, coach, executive and broadcaster, Frank Robinson has done it all. A two-time Most Valuable Player, once in each league, Robinson was an aggressive outfielder and hard-charging baserunner. “Frank was a great player,” Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax said. “He had great tools, and he had great desire. He beat you any way he could.” The 1966 American League Triple Crown winner, Robinson concluded his career with 586 home runs and just 57 hits shy of 3,000. His intelligence and leadership helped him become the major leagues’ first African-American manager; he was named player-manager of the Cleveland Indians in 1975.
This card is part of the 2012 Panini Cooperstown 150 card Red Crystal Collection parallel set. Each card is individually serial numbered to only 399 and were inserted randomly into packs of 2012 Panini Cooperstown Baseball. Each card is a parallel of the regular cards in the set, but with a red holofoil finish.
- From the 2012 Panini Cooperstown Red Crystal Collection 150 Card parrallel set
- Individually serial numbered to 399 made
- Randomly inserted into packs of 2012 Paninin Cooperstown
Player Biography
A major league player, manager, coach, executive and broadcaster, Frank Robinson has done it all. A two-time Most Valuable Player, once in each league, Robinson was an aggressive outfielder and hard-charging baserunner. “Frank was a great player,” Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax said. “He had great tools, and he had great desire. He beat you any way he could.” The 1966 American League Triple Crown winner, Robinson concluded his career with 586 home runs and just 57 hits shy of 3,000. His intelligence and leadership helped him become the major leagues’ first African-American manager; he was named player-manager of the Cleveland Indians in 1975.