1946-47 Caramelo Deportivo card #65 of Lázaro Salazar, graded SGC 1. One of the best Cuban league players of his generation, the severely-underappreciated Salazar played for an incredible 21 years and coached / managed for years after that. He is one of very few players to be enshrined in three Halls of Fame (Cuba, Mexico, and Venezuela). A lifetime .300+ hitter in American Negro Leagues, Salazar won a Cuban League batting title in the 1934–35 season, hitting .407.
The cards in the two Caramelo Deportivo sets produced in Cuba for the 1945-46 and 1946-47 baseball seasons measure approximately 1 7/8" by 2 5/8". They are paper thin and were designed to be pasted into albums. They were distributed in packages of caramels and are often found with corresponding staining, similar to 1914 Cracker Jack cards in the United States. Most cards in circulation have been removed from their albums, and back damage is common. Fronts feature a black-and-white photo surrounded by a thin black border and creamy white margins, with the card number in a small circle at the bottom. Backs list the player's name, brief bio, and a promotional advertisement for the issuer, "Felices.” The 1946-47 cards have a semi-glossy front and are on a higher quality, lighter card stock which makes them less fragile than the 1945-46 cards, but more susceptible to creasing.
Note that many “high grade” 46-47 Deportivos are actually more recently hand-cut from defective uncut sheets. Those cards can be identified by the faint printing on the back and bright white color. This particular card is original and circulated with dark printing on the back and honest wear.