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Showing posts with label 2011 Obak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011 Obak. Show all posts

Sunday, September 11, 2011

2011 Tristar Obak Football

Hooray! Football day! For the first time in nine months I got to watch the Falcons s#!& the bed! I'm so happy the season wasn't canceled. This seems like an appropriate time to post the Obak Football pack I snagged. My initial reaction: Sepia-colored baseball players superimposed over fluffy clouds are interesting. Sepia-colored football players superimposed over fluffy clouds are boring. I might just be suffering from a case of the Atlanta crappy football despairs. Not even Georgia's winning anymore. We don't even have an Uga right now because they all keep dropping dead. Now I'm very sad. Stay healthy Russ!

I shall attempt to chronicle this Obak pack through the tears. EVEN THE BRAVES KEEP LOSING. BAAAAWWWWWW! :_:

#64 Mitchell

Tristar does the thing where they slpit the player's name up in the write up on the back again in this set. Lord, I hate that. So annoying. SPOILER ALERT: This is the only photograph in the pack that was taken after about 1945. Lydell Mitchell here was a teammate of Franco Harris at Penn State and had a pretty dang good NFL career with the Colts in the '70s. He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 2004. I recognized Lydell as soon as I opened the pack and would have sworn that I already had a card with this photo on it. It turns out I merely have just about every single one of his cards from his playing days and a couple of the cards have very similar photos. Check out his 1976 Topps card, it might have been taken in the same photoshoot. Unfortunately for Le, Lydell has gotten some recent 'legends' cards in some Panini sets so my inadvertent status as Lydell Mitchell SuperCollector has been revoked.

#74 Beecher


@#$% Tristar doesn't even put the dude's first name on the back of this card!  I'm mad that I had to Google it so you can read Lifetime Topps Project's writeup on HENRY. Heeeeeeenry. Is that so hard, Tristar??

#8 Lombardi mini



Ok, Lombardi I can figure out by myself. This might be the only true keeper out of the pack, although I know at least two Packer fans who deserve it more than me. I shall have to weight the guilt of keeping it against the torment of trying to choose who to give it to and determine which will cause me the least amount of mental illness. Oh who am I trying to kid, I'm pretty much bonkers at this point. Maybe I should King Solomon it and  cut it in half so they both get a piece. The picture of young Vince here is pretty kickass, I've only seen him on the sidelines being a genius.

#79 McNamee


First football play by play announcer, whoopee. The only thing keeping this card of Graham McNamee performing a hand-fart concerto from being the single most boring card I've ever pulled is the fact that he was also the first great baseball announcer. He also worked as the straight man to Ed Wynn, which is pretty cool as well.

#4 Hein



Quick! Name the inaugural class of the Baseball Hall of Fame! You got it! Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Christy Mathewson, Walter Johnson and Honus Wagner. You're really smart, you know that?

Here's another question: Name the inaugural class of the Pro Football Hall of Fame!

I'm waiting...

Still waiting.

Zzzzzzzzz.......

Ok, that was a tough question. NFL history only goes back as far as Super Bowl I and the first Hall class was elected four years earlier in 1963. There were seventeen members elected instead of five as well, and Mel Hein here was one of them. How'd he get in? I dunno, how'd an offensive lineman win an MVP award? Mel did that too.

Not a bad little pack there. Not a chance in hell I'm buying another one though. At least not until all the baseball Obak are gone.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

2011 Tristar Obak Baseball

Ok, here's that pack of 2011 Obak baseball I promised you last night. The cards are back to being printed on virgin white paper stock, made from the last remaining grove of Indian Parijaat trees culled from the outskirts of a remote village in the Bijapur district of Chhattisgarh. You bitches should have bought more of the 2010 set with recycles card stock.

In addition to creating environmental catastrophe, TriStar also assaults our eyes with red ink on the back of the cards. I didn't scan one because 1) it's ugly and b) I'm lazy. On the bright side, the set ganks the 1911 T212 Obak back design, which has stats on the back this time. And by stats, I mean A. B., B. H. and P. C. whatever the hell they are.  The fronts are still the same though, featuring black & white or sepia portraits of  old/dead/minor league ballplayers superimposed on various public domain background images. Basically the Plan 9 From Outer Space of card design in that it's so wretched it circles back upon itself and becomes awesome. Here's the first pack dissected for your carding pleasure:

#55 Barnes


Ok, I feel bad about griping about the first card pulled from the pack, especially when I get around to explaining who the heck this guy is. But I feel the need to complain because it took entirely too long to figure out who it was. The front of all the cards in the set show just the player's last name. This is not a surprise, as Oback has been doing this for the past 3 years (or 103, if you prefer). The issue I have is with the back. Instead of a full name on the back, there is a small write up like so:

BARNES has the distinction of hitting the first home run in National League history when on May 2, 1876, he accomplished the feat. Ross was also the National League's first batting champion, hitting .429 in 1876.

So the complete name of the featured fellow is actually on the back, you just have to hunt for it. This occurs on every card back in the pack. It might even be historically accurate to the original 1911 set, I'm not sure because I don't have any original Obaks. It's annoying as crap though and I hate it. I'm not in the mood to work to figure out who is on a card anymore. Topps' nasty habit of printing names in foil for the past decade has given me enough of that.

Griping aside, my first Obak card of the year is of Ross Barnes, a star player for the Boston Red Stockings of the National Association from 1871-1875. Calm down Red Sox fans, in the 1800s the Red Stockings were the predecessors of the Braves. So I got a Brave in the first card in the first pack! Well, not as such. In 1876 (this is the second time I've typed a 9 instead of an 8 in the date so far this post) the Chicago White Stockings  poached four players from Boston including Ross. This caused quite a kerfuffle, so to avoid the deal being kiboshed by the National Association, the owner of the Chicago team actually founded a new league. Yes, that league. The NL was founded because the dirty Cubs wanted to steal players from the Braves. Chicago went on to win the first NL Pennant, five more Pennants in the pre-World Series era, and took two World Series Titles in 1907 and 1908. Everyone knows what's happened to them after that. Karma's a real bitch, ain't it Chicago.

In other news, This is likely the first card I have of one of the stars of the original Braves, and it's a fine example of the fact that Topps is not the only company to poach public domain images off of Wikipedia.

#35 Clements


Jack Clements has the distinction of being the greatest left handed catcher in history. Oh, and he also was the first to wear a chest protector or something. Oh and here's a Wikipedia picture TriStar didn't swipe, just because it's cool. What, you wanted me to write a novel for every card? Ain't happening.

#5 Thomson Mini


Shot heard 'round the world... yada yada yada. Everybody should know who Bobby Thomson is by now. I'm three for three on pulling Braves in this pack though, as Thomson played for Milwaukee after his Branca-bopping days and Lefty Clements up there played 16 games for Boston in 1900. I'm still miffed that there's only 24 minis in this set though... not that I would chase the set anyway, but it puts a crimp in my FrankenSet plans.

#18 Wilson


Hack Wilson looks like the love child of a pit bull and a fire hydrant in this picture. I think he might have looked like that in real life though. Proof positive that any boy can grow up to be in the Hall of Fame provided you hit 56 home runs and 191 RBIs in one season. Hack breaks my streak of tangential Braves so I'm slightly miffed.

#56 Connor


Babe Ruth broke Roger Connor's home run record but Roger still keeps the distinction of being the first player to ever hit a Grand Slam. Then Lou Gehrig blew right by him and took the all time record for Grand Slams in a career. Poor Roger. Whoever designed this card at TriStar had a little fun with it as the 'giant' Connor is seen leaning upon a barn in this photo mashup. Cool because the 6 foot 3 inch Roger was supposedly the inspiration of the New York "Giants" nickname. Or not. Who knows, it was a long time ago and I found this stuff on Wikipedia. I could sneak in there that Roger Connor was the Third Earl of Glastonbury and no one would notice for at least a couple of months.  

#67 Pyznarski


I managed to get an extra card in this pack somehow. The extra card is from Tim Pyznarski, who was the Minor League player of the year in 1986, got a cup of coffee with the Padres that same year and that's about it. You may think you've never heard of him, but if you collected 1987 Topps, just click here and you'll quickly remember. I'm pretty sure I have three or four dozen cards of 'ol Tim already.

I think that's enough Obak for one night, I'll post the football pack later this week.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Obak against the wall

You all know that I'm an unabashed Obak lover and not just because I got a Motherf@%$ing hot box last year. I really like the obscure subject matter and the low-budget cheepniss of it all. Even though I've been in somewhat of a card-funk delirium lately I still vaguely knew that Obak was going to be roaming free in the wild at some point after The National, and this weekend I finally saw some at my local Target.


Sadly there is no Jason Heyward in this year's Checklist, unless you count a cut auto (which I don't). It appears to have an interesting subject list once again, although the mini card set is positively anemic this year at 24 cards per set. I was surprised to see two pristine boxes of Obak sitting in the card aisle, and at first thought the second box might some unsold packs of the 2010 version. Imagine my surprise...


Football? In MY Obak? Oh GAWD. Just what I needed when I'm trying to kick the habit for good. ANOTHER set of Obak. For a sport I don't even really collect anymore. Brilliant.

At first I was


But then I was


And before I knew it two packs came home with me. Both are ripped and scanned, depending on the amount of beer/interwebs/ponies I partake in this evening will determine when they get posted. Hey, it's Labor Day. I can goof off on Labor Day. (especially after working all day)