It also reminds me of when I thought Frank Thomas would live each day as a member of the White Sox. That fantasy died in Oakland and continues in Toronto.
On July 25, 2003, Frank Thomas hit his 400th home run in Tampa Bay. He has never hit a milestone home run in his home park. In fact his first home runs and his 500th, were both hit in Minnesota, albeit on different teams.
Frank would end up hitting 448 home runs for the White Sox. It's still a team record. The man who replaced Frank hit his 500th home run last year. So, I guess the Sox swapped out 500 home run hitters. Frank's last milestone home run with the White Sox was number 400, so that's why he is here.
Milestone posts give me a chance to see about the state of the blog. Everything seems to be going fairly strong. Many trades have been highlighted recently. A box break result was posted. A contest was realized. There are many positives to mention.
I've met new bloggers. I've even started recapping actual games. It's nothing in depth, but shows the high points and low points of each game. The card spotlight feature is still going strong. The uniform number project is winding down, hence the less frequent posts. The set reviews and player profiles have slowed as I have focused on other areas. There will be more coming shortly.
I've also branched out a bit. I've started another blog called Things one To Cards. It's updated on an infrequent basis, but so far, it's been several times a month. I've joined A Pack A Day and started to play Sox Or No Sox on that site. I've joined the Bad Wax forums and The Bench trading post. I'll be a contibutor to Baseball Legends, which will feature articles about Hall of Famers and make cases for who should be included. I'll even be featured as a source in an upcoming MSN Sports online article about baseball cards. When it goes live I'll provide a link.
I feel like the site and my blogging abilities have grown since my first post back in November 2007. I used to be the one asking a bunch of questions. Now, I get asked the questions. I hate to admit it, but it feels nice. I'm honored that people would actually want to seek out my specific advice about baseball cards and blogging.
Thanks for reading!