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Showing posts with label 2013 Heritage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2013 Heritage. Show all posts

Friday, December 27, 2013

2013 Heritage Wantlist

You know the drill, someone asks me for a wantlist, I finally post it.


45
74 Brock Holt/Kyle McPherson RC
124
340 Paul Konerko356 Adam Eaton/Tyler Skaggs RC
389


Short-Prints *I'll take any parallel, border color, chrome, mini, hand drawn on a napkin, etc for short prints*
427 Andre Ethier SP
428 Ryan Howard SP
430 Mike Trout SP Rookie Cup
431 Hunter Pence SP
433 Adam Jones SP
435 Carlos Santana SP
436 Michael Brantley SP
438 Andrew McCutchen SP
439 Evan Longoria SP
440 Bryce Harper SP Rookie Cup
441 Jordan Zimmermann SP
443 Hiroki Kuroda SP
447 Felix Hernandez SP
449 Jered Weaver SP
450 Matt Kemp SP
451 Jake Peavy SP
452 Troy Tulowitzki SP
453 Justin Upton SP
454 Gio Gonzalez SP
455 Chris Sale SP
457 Mat Latos SP458 David Price SP
459 Yoenis Cespedes SP Rookie Cup
461 Marco Scutaro SP
463 Giancarlo Stanton SP
464 R.A. Dickey SP
466 Carlos Gonzalez SP
467 Chase Headley SP
468 Mariano Rivera SP
471 Matt Holliday SP
473 Matt Harrison SP
476 Yovani Gallardo SP
477 Yadier Molina SP
478 Madison Bumgarner SP
479 Ian Kinsler SP
480 Stephen Strasburg SP
481 Martin Prado SP
483 James Shields SP
484 Adam Dunn SP
485 Starlin Castro SP
486 David Ortiz SP
491 Wei-Yin Chen SP
492 Eric Hosmer SP
493 Aroldis Chapman SP
494 A.J. Burnett SP
497 Jonathan Lucroy SP498 Pedro Alvarez SP

I'm also looking for these cards for my Braves Team Set:

Base Set:
481 Martin Prado SPHigh Series:
HS1 Evan Gattis
HS31 Julio Teheran
HS77 Alex Wood

2013 Topps Heritage Minors:
6 J.R. Graham Mississippi Braves
7 Gus Schlosser MississippI Braves
115 Edward Salcedo Mississippi Braves
117 Sean Gilmartin Gwinnett Braves
122 Luis Merejo GCL Braves
128 Matt Lipka Lynchburg Hillcats
162 Mauricio Cabrera Rome Braves
188 Lucas Sims Rome Braves
214 Christian Bethancourt MississippI Braves SP

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Eighty dolls yelling "Small girl after all"

Who was at the DuPont Pavilion?


Why was the bench still warm?



 Who had been there?

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

I come to praise Heritage, not to bury it


Well, the past post was kind of a downer but it had to be done. One does not simply have a shelf full of Heritage binders and quit 'em all in a day. And yes, I have quit Heritage, but unlike some of the commenters I'm not dumping them all into the ocean to live with their '52 Topps High Series brethren. I had a plan and I stuck to it. Quite successfully actually. I had freed myself from the Heritage monkey on my back. I was done with it. 

Then the very next day, 2013 Heritage popped up in Wally World. 

Come on, I had to get a look at it.

So I looked at it. A few times. And went back for a second look. Maybe a third. 

Goddamnit, I finally had gotten over my Heritage fixation and I went and liked this stupid set. 

I should probably start to explain my future Heritage collecting plans going forward before I get into the meat of this post which is basically defending 2013 Heritage like a deranged fanboi. So up until recently, I was seriously trying to complete ALL the Heritage sets. Not actively, mind you, but I had all the wantlists posted somewhere up through about 2010 or so. Here's the thing: other than 2002 and 2008 I didn't have any set even close to complete. I think I had all the non-short prints from 2002. Other than that, disaster. So I finally came to the decision that I just needed to pick some sets and focus on them and screw the rest. My three favorite designs from Heritage are 1953, 1956 and 1960. Maybe I should focus on those? Well, no, because I needed 200+ cards from the '05 and '09 sets. I had a healthy chunk of the '07 and '08 sets but neither really did it for me. I finally settled on focusing on the 2002 set with the 1953 design, partly because I kind of want to steal a Ben Henry idea for the hundredth time. The other sets I would harvest for Braves team sets and also embark on a special project. 

So there I was, happy that I had finally focused my Heritage collection into one set, a bunch of team sets and a you-know-what that was actually completed Monday evening. Then I saw the 2013 Heritage set and fell in love with the damnable thing. I have an odd relationship with 1964 Topps. I didn't pay attention to it much when I was a kid but I've still managed to accumulate quite a bit of it. And it is a great set, the design is simple but effective. There are tons of extreme close up portraits in the set and a large amount of them are extremely goofy. The orangey pink backs are a little eye-bleeding but every beautiful thing always has a flaw. And damned if this Heritage set didn't just nail those '64s. Nailed it in a a way that Heritage hasn't nailed anything in a long time. 

Now I know there are a lot of people out there who aren't happy with this set at all and that's cool, I can respect that. This is not a normal Heritage set. The 2013 version of the set doesn't resemble the one that came out in 2001 at all to be honest. That doesn't mean it's not any good though, and here are some reasons why I like this thing. 

The photos are ludicrous but awesome



One thing that has turned me off of Topps flagship sets in recent years is a complete lack of portrait cards. Flagship has had an awful lot of pics of the pitcher in the windup and the batter at the plate since 2008. Topps hasn't completely ignored them though, you see a lot of portraits in Heritage and other retro sets. The '13 Heritage set has a TON of em, and many are extreeeeeeeeme closeups in awkward poses like Ol' Busted Elbow here. As you can see from an Actual Colt .45 card this kids of crazy eyed closeup is common in the '64 set and I like it. A lot. 

The card stock is absolutely perfect


There has been much discussion on the interwebs about the 'flimsy' white card stock that the cards are printed on. I don't want to be rude but... well, Applejack says it much better than I can.


This set is not printed on flimsy card stock. It is printed on the exact same stuff Allen & Ginter is printed on. Allen & Ginter is not flimsy and I will fight anyone who says differently. It is absolutely printed on different card stock than all other Heritage sets (except maybe '12 Minors and High Series, I haven't actually seen those yet) in that it is white card stock unlike the traditional gray card stock Heritage is usually printed on. Even the Heritage sets that have white/light backs like the 2006 and 2010 sets with the 1956 and 1960 designs had gray stock clad with white on the back. This is pure white stock and it makes the set look really clean and brilliant. It is different from the other sets? Yes. Can I see how this could be a big shock to a hard core Heritage collector? Yes, I can. Do I think the white card stock is going away? NO. Every Topps set from 1963-1970 used white card stock. I have a feeling you'll be seeing this stock in Heritage for a few years to come.

Like Applejack says, this card stock is not flimsy



In the center is one hundred 2013 Topps Heritage cards with the white stock. on the right is one hundred 2011 Topps Heritage cards with the gray stock. The white stock is flatter and a tiny bit thinner than the gray stock. About two or three card thickness' difference in a stack of 100. That's not flimsy. Whatever junk they printed Archives on last year, that's flimsy. The stack on the left is one hundred original 1964 cards. I wouldn't call those flimsy either.

The scratch off trivia on the back ACTUALLY WORKS


Yes, yes, this is an idiotic reason for liking a trading card set in this day and age of SUPER SERIOUSNESS. My post yesterday almost started a blood war between the hardcore set collectors and the super Mojo chasers. SERIOUS BIZNISS. Fuck that shit, this is at heart an ephemeral bubblegum card set that's supposed to be fun and educational for the kiddos. There was a scratch off trivia question on the original set and Topps managed to reproduce the same thing on a modern card. How freaking cool is that?? Nickels actually work too. Try it! Ruin your cards! Ensure that your Drew Storen common card will never be graded Gem Mint by PSA and find out who the 2nd man with a 50-HR season was! DOOOOO IT! When I build the set I will probably scratch off at least one of every unique trivia questions (there are a bunch of duplicated questions in the set) just for the dang fun of it. Remember fun?

I got this card in my first pack so I won't be chasing it for years


This is a legitimate reason to love a set for a person who has still not found a 2002 Alex Rodriguez low numbered short print for a reasonable price. Chasing high dollar cards for a set sucks, especially in a modern set where cards are either near mint or in the garbage instead of the bargain box.

Topps put these silly things in there


This is an original, the 2013 parallel is down below. Most everybody probably knows that the cards with the black and red backs are the Venezuelan parallels. I will say this much about the set: There are too many frickin' parallels in the set and they're all too hard to find. Besides the many layers of Chrome with even shorter print runs, there's Red, there's Blue, there's mini numbered to 100 and probably a few more that are off my radar. And half are skip numbered so you need a database to know what to look for. These I like though, because they're not too impossible and I actually have a couple of originals. They are very nice but very weird looking in person. A weird parallel for a weird set. How can a weird collector not like this?

Although, sometimes bizarre stuff like this happens


All three of these came out of packs from the same Wal-Mart in Georgia. How in the hell? There's probably a mini and a gold still at the store waiting for me to come get them. (they'll be waiting a long time, I'm broke) I have no idea how this happened but I do know that Night Owl and gcrl probably want to kill me right now. If anyone covets these Kershaws, just know that I am absolutely desperate for a Kris Medlen Mini. Start searching, Dodger fans.

Mojo? FUCK Mojo.


After the card stock complaining the number one issue most collectors have with this set is the sheer number of ridiculously rare chase cards that are in this set. Heritage has always had difficult pulls with dual autographs and relics and such, but this year they've taken it to a different level. There's minis and coins and gold refractors numbered to 5 and stamps and coins and tattoos and Beatles and book cards and Senators variations and action variations and error cards and... and... and I don't even know all the crap that Topps has stuffed in this set to get the case breakers to buy more product and help keep the box prices from plummeting six weeks from now. It has gotten a tad ridiculous, and the set is suffering from the insert bloat that has been making Allen and Ginter less fun to collect recently. Even the traditional Flashbacks, New Age Performer and Then & Now insert sets have more subjects than ever before and Topps seemingly tried to hide that fact by replacing the numbers with initials so it wasn't immediately obvious how many cards were in the set without consulting a checklist. All this stuff crammed into what was once a simple set collector's dream set, and most of it the average collector will never ever see in a pack.

And you know what?

I don't give a shit. At all. Not just about the chase cards themselves, or the gimmicks or the whatever. I just don't care. They don't mean anything to me. If I happen to stumble across one in one of the limited number of packs I buy this year, great. If not, so be it. I don't like this set for all the inserts and bells and whistles and gimmicks and nonsense. That's not the set. I like the set for THE SET. All those base cards and short prints that are numbered 1-500. That set. That set that was very well done with some close attention to detail. Something that Topps has neglected in their fixation on gimmicks in the past few years. But not this year. This year Topps got it right with the base set at least.

So I'm probably collecting this set along with the 2002 Heritage set. I'm not going to worry about the variations be they error, action or Senator. (although I wouldn't turn down a Jonny Venters with the wrong birthdate) I know that in the past, variation cards were about as scarce as regular short prints in Heritage sets and I had fun collecting them, but they aren't anymore. That's just a fact. Topps has short printed them to the bejeezus belt to appeal to the gamblers. That's fine, they are neat cards but I like the set and I will collect the set. Because in the end, no matter what Topps does with their products, we are ultimately in charge. We buy the packs, we collect the cards. And no one can tell us what to collect. Not Topps, not Beckett, not eBay, not a certain editor we all know and love, not Bud Selig, not the Pope, not your parole officer*. Your wife may have a say in what you collect. I'd listen to her, but none of those other people.

You collect what you wanna collect be it cheap or expensive, new or old, mainstream or oddball. Here's what I wanna collect as far as Heritage is concerned going forward.

The 2002 set with the 1953 design.
The 2013 set with the 1964 design.
All Braves team sets from 2001-2013.
And a completed FrankenSet of Heritage cards from 2001-2009.

sample page - actual contents of the FrankenSet subject to change

This particular set is complete, scanned and in a binder. Starting tomorrow (actually today since this post took longer to write than I hoped) I will be showing it off one page at a time. This is a direct rip off of Ben Henry's Best of the '80s set that I attempted to show off card images for in the early days of this blog and failed. The FrankenSet idea itself is a ripoff of that idea to be honest. All the pages are scanned and ready to post so maybe, just maybe I'll actually finish something I've started for once. Expect the first page Wednesday evening and yell at me if it doesn't get posted in time.

Here's to collecting the way you want to collect.

*maybe your parole officer. I don't know the circumstances of your incarceration.

Monday, March 11, 2013

I come to bury Heritage, not to praise it

2013 Heritage came out last Wednesday or last Monday if there's a Wal-Mart near you. I'm not as active in the blogosphere as I once was but I'm pretty sure there's been a flurry of Heritage posts all over the place. A lot of people like it, a lot hate it. Some of the people who hate Heritage love it, some of the people who have master sets going back to 2001 loathe it. It's one of those sets.

I'd like to blame Heritage for getting me back into baseball cards but it's not really true. For one, I never really stopped collecting baseball cards, I just let my interests wander to football cards and Star Wars cards and Magic cards and comic books and actual books for a while in the late '90s. For another, 2001 Topps is what really got me back into baseball cards hard core or more specifically the 50 card reprint set that was inserted that year. Oh man, did I go crazy for those reprints. By the time Heritage showed up later in the year I already had a pile of green bordered cards big enough to choke a goat so I can't blame it on Heritage. I can blame it for the whole retro craze which sucked me (and a whole lot of other people) in back in the early aughts.

The first time I found 2001 Topps Heritage is a good analogy for my entire Heritage collecting experience. I was at a Target for some reason or another and checked the card aisle as I was wont to do. I found at least ten full boxes of 2001 Heritage sitting there. Just sitting there! I snagged maybe 15 packs or so in an attempt to not go completely broke figuring I could come back and get some later. I ripped 'em, loved 'em, came back the next day. There was not a single pack to be seen. Not even a box! Whoever cleaned out the store hoovered up the boxes even! I never again saw a single pack of 2001 Heritage in any retail establishment ever again. And in hobby shops? HAH! I could buy a real '52 high number card for what they wanted for unopened '01 wax. So that's my Heritage experience in a nutshell: I love it to death, but I will never ever be able to complete a set as long as I live.

Not to say I didn't try. I bought up every single pack of '02 Heritage I could find and came reasonably close to getting close to finishing it. I bought up a bunch of '01 and '03 commons at one point. I got a hobby box every year for a while I had most of the 2008 set too including black backs. Well, other than short prints. That's the thing about Heritage... bloody short prints. dozens and dozens of short prints all over the dang place. Also variations. Black backs, night cards, old logos, colored letters, different poses... and that's before they stopped being just plain 'ol short prints and became SSSSSSP mojo. At some point Heritage stopped being fun and started being a pain in the ass. Here's a timeline of disillusionment for me:

2001: Wow! This set is awesome! Aaaaaaaaaaand it's gone.
2002: A junkie's first hit of cardboard heroin. Nothing better than this.
2003: Don't like this design as much but the set is still a lot of fun.
2004: Bought a hobby box, loved the Double Header box toppers, not much else.
2005: Love this design as much as the '53 set, still bought a fraction of what I did in '02.
2006: This design sucked and it still sucks. Hey, what's that Ginter stuff...
2007: WHY THE HELL ARE THE SHORT PRINTS SKIP NUMBERED
2008: A new appreciation for the '59 design, go just as overboard as in '02. Complain bitterly about SSPs and then High Series but keep buying.
2009: THE TURNING POINT

If you haven't figured it out yet the whole point of this post is a formal declaration that I am forsaking my quest to complete all the Heritage sets in favor of focusing on Vintage Topps, Ginter and  a few other sets. This is not a spur of the moment ragequit decision but has been snowballing for a while now. Competition from Ginter and the super short printing of variations were tough blows for my love of Heritage but the real beginning of the end was in 2009.

You see, I love the 1960 Topps design. It's just so colorful and weird and whacked out. I've always been fond of it ever since I got a small brick of about 30 old '60 Topps cards back in the '80s with all these obscure players with goofy portraits. Faye Throneberry, Bobby Malkmus, Gene Green, Ray Sadecki... I loved them all. Then the 2009 Heritage set finally came out with my beloved design. I had a Franklin stashed away to buy my Hobby box. I went into my card shop and... they were sold out. Actually there were four unopened boxes on the counter but those were being saved to sell as individual packs. The rest of the cases he had ordered had already been sold. Well crap. I bought 4 packs just to get a taste and resigned myself to come in the following week to pick up my box.

The following Monday I was laid off.

In March of 2009.

Remember that year?

You didn't want to get laid off that year. A lotta people did though.

So basically I finally got to a Heritage set with a design I really loved and surprise! I can't have it. Add to this the print run was drastically lower than previous years because everyone was scared to death about the economy so now I can't even get a hobby box for that Franklin I was going to use that day. It didn't help that by the time I had money again and Heritage packs were plentiful, the designs were ass.

2010: Terrible design and too many home run cards, The dice game was the only saving grace
2011: Dark and murky wood borders, now we have 14 different parallels/color variations
2012: The crash.

I was really looking forward to 2012 Heritage as 1963 Topps is my second favorite design from the '60s. It was the first really vintage set I actually tried to work on. In 1987 or so I scrounged through the '63 box of a local card shop snagging all the first series common cards because those were twenty five cents each. I really wanted to complete that set, but... I would start with the commons from Series 1. The problem was in fall of 2011 I got completely sick and goddamn tired of new baseball cards. you can check the archives if you want to see why but I was positively allergic to new cards. A really good Heritage set might have snapped me out of it though. It was released, I still snubbed new cards but I did get a look at some of the '12 Heritage cards and they were... ass. Complete ass. The photos were dark and had that ridiculous fuzz filter that worked for the '57 set but not here. The colors seemed off to me for some reason. The typical Heritage card stock didn't feel right. It was clunky and the gray stock clad with white backs looked awful. And the Variations. Those stupid Variations! Swapping the black and white inset photo with the color photo?? What were they thinking??? I hated it. I eventually bought one pack and it sucked. Complete total utter disappointment and that was the before the whole High Series Money Grab. I was pretty much done with the brand at this point. I had decided how I was going to move forward in my Heritage collection and went through with it.


Then 2013 Topps Heritage happened. What exactly happened? That's the story of tomorrow's post.

Monday, March 4, 2013

It Begins


I have to admit, gimmicks aside, this is the best looking Heritage set in quite a while. Topps nailed this one.