Lopes had a pretty unusual career. Didn’t debut until he was 27, but still managed to play for 16 seasons. By his Astros days, I remember getting baseball cards of him and being incredulous he was still playing.
Must have been incredibly challenging for prospects in the Dodgers system in the early 70s. When Lopes broke in, he had old guard Jim Lefebvre and fellow long-career prospect Lee Lacy ahead of him.
That late 70s Dodgers infield seemed so monolithic when I was a kid. The standard. Those who might have lacked with their glove certainly did not with their bat.
Later, Lopes became one of the more anonymous Brewers managers, but I’m willing to forgive almost anyone who served in the late Selig era of ownership. By then, new park or not (Lopes was manager when Miller Park opened), they had stopped being a serious organization and were basically run to prove that small markets couldn’t compete.