More Ugly Bowmans for your viewing pleasure. If you need some eye bleach, I'm sure there's twenty posts about Topps Series Two over on the sidebar. Now let's look at some Indians.
Hall of Famer Early Wynn for a quarter! This is an odd picture. Early looks like he's scrunching down in order to fit in the tiny TV screen. There weren't no 90 inch plasma screens in the '50s folks, these suckers were actual size.
Outfielder Dave Pope was the other Indian I picked up. Dave is not as scrunched up as Early, but is a fellow Alabamanian. Alabamaninin. Albanian Bananarama. A fellow guy from Alabama. These pics were taken in the same stadium as the Res Sox cards I showed off earlier. Even better there are tiny little people in the background of both pictures. I like the tiny little people, especially the ones cowering under Early Wynn's gigantic hulking form.
I have no idea how to create pages but I'll figure it out eventually godammit
Friday, June 24, 2011
Bowman Beaters - Boston Red Sox
Gonna try to blow the beaters out pretty quick. Don't have a lot of time to post right now so some eye candy is the way to go. Except these cards aren't really candy, they're more like eye Limburger cheese or pickled herring. Good, but an acquired taste. Here are the two Red Sox cards I snagged from the quarter box.
Pitcher Tom Brewer here. I'm digging the scoreboard in the background. Anyone know what stadium this is? The interesting part of this card is the bit that is stuck onto the top right corner. The bottom bit folds back to show that the card that it came from is actually 1955 Topps and not Bowman.
Outfielder Sam Mele is in a little better shape, it just has a water mark instead of paper glues to its top corner. I like the flag in the background. This photo was taken in the same stadium as Brewer's card and if you put them side by side it looks like one big panoramic photo. With all the old cards I've looked at over the years you'd think I could pick out individual stadiums by now...
Pitcher Tom Brewer here. I'm digging the scoreboard in the background. Anyone know what stadium this is? The interesting part of this card is the bit that is stuck onto the top right corner. The bottom bit folds back to show that the card that it came from is actually 1955 Topps and not Bowman.
Outfielder Sam Mele is in a little better shape, it just has a water mark instead of paper glues to its top corner. I like the flag in the background. This photo was taken in the same stadium as Brewer's card and if you put them side by side it looks like one big panoramic photo. With all the old cards I've looked at over the years you'd think I could pick out individual stadiums by now...
Thursday, June 23, 2011
June Vintage Show Top Ten #5
This is one of those cards I never thought in a million years I'd get at the June vintage show.
BUT I DIIIIIIIID.....
Aww yeah! A Sonny Jackson rookie card! Sonny was a shortstop and center fielder for the Braves from 1968 to 1974. Tommy's best year was in 1966 with Houston where he came in second to Tommy Helms in the NL Rookie of the Year voting. Houston traded Sonny to the Braves after the 1967 season for Denny LeMaster and Denis Menke. Sonny was on the 1969 NL West Championship team, but only played one game in the -
OK FINE.
IT'S A JOE MORGAN ROOKIE CARD.
I HATE JOE MORGAN WORSE THAN STEVEN STRASBORK
IF I WAS IN A ROOM WITH ADOLF HITLER, OSAMA BIN LADEN AND JOE MORGAN AND I HAD A GUN WITH TWO BULLETS I'D WAIT UNTIL GARY BETTMAN WALKED IN THE ROOM, SHOOT GARY TWICE AND THEN CONCETRATE REALLY HARD AND KICK JOE IN THE NUTS.
Cause, you know, those other two guys are already dead. And fuck Gary Bettman. Let's just say I hate Joe Morgan. This is me hating Joe Morgan: >:O
I got Joe's rookie card though. It's got a big crease on the corner, it's way off center and there's a blop of ink missing on the back near the number. But it's also a 1965 Topps card from the 1st series and I'm actively collecting that series. It was also three bucks. Same as a pack of Bowman. Aren't Hall of Fame rookie cards supposed to be expensive or something?? I'm having my beliefs on card values seriously shaken lately.
BUT I DIIIIIIIID.....
1965 Topps #16 Houston 1965 Rookie Stars
Aww yeah! A Sonny Jackson rookie card! Sonny was a shortstop and center fielder for the Braves from 1968 to 1974. Tommy's best year was in 1966 with Houston where he came in second to Tommy Helms in the NL Rookie of the Year voting. Houston traded Sonny to the Braves after the 1967 season for Denny LeMaster and Denis Menke. Sonny was on the 1969 NL West Championship team, but only played one game in the -
OK FINE.
IT'S A JOE MORGAN ROOKIE CARD.
I HATE JOE MORGAN WORSE THAN STEVEN STRASBORK
IF I WAS IN A ROOM WITH ADOLF HITLER, OSAMA BIN LADEN AND JOE MORGAN AND I HAD A GUN WITH TWO BULLETS I'D WAIT UNTIL GARY BETTMAN WALKED IN THE ROOM, SHOOT GARY TWICE AND THEN CONCETRATE REALLY HARD AND KICK JOE IN THE NUTS.
Cause, you know, those other two guys are already dead. And fuck Gary Bettman. Let's just say I hate Joe Morgan. This is me hating Joe Morgan: >:O
I got Joe's rookie card though. It's got a big crease on the corner, it's way off center and there's a blop of ink missing on the back near the number. But it's also a 1965 Topps card from the 1st series and I'm actively collecting that series. It was also three bucks. Same as a pack of Bowman. Aren't Hall of Fame rookie cards supposed to be expensive or something?? I'm having my beliefs on card values seriously shaken lately.
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Transmogrifier Mark 2.0 - Die Cut Edition
If you voted on the poll over to your right, the correct answer is 1) The nanosecond I could get to Wal-Mart. This was the answer least chosen by readers, although if you chose 2) When the Gypsy Queen runs out you were technically correct. The Wal-Mart near me has never had any Gypsy Queen at all. Anyone who chose option 4) was a fool. What kind of baseball card hipster would buy a case of the most mainstream card product ever in the history of anything? Seriously, true card hipsters would buy a case of 1990 Fleer and a case of PBR and drink and rip wax all night to whatever album he downloaded off of 4Chan /mu/ that day in an attempt to add to his variations collection. Nope, I snuck off to Wally World after a rough day in the salt mines and nabbed 6 packs and a 2 racks. Got meself two code cards out of the deal.
I haven't blogged much about the 2011 version of the mighty Transmogrifier. This is mainly for two reasons:
1) Topps and I are fighting. (They act like they don't know it but we are so totally fighting)
2) My codes have pulled bupkis this year.
Or, to be specific, up until this past week, I pulled bupkis. The only decent card I redeemed at all from Series one codes is a 1969 rookie card of the other Dave Campbell. No, the other other one. The sportscaster one. The rest was a bunch of junk commons and stuff like a Manny Ramirez card from 2001. So honestly, there hasn't been much to blog about so far.
This week I redeemed a few series 2 code cards. The first one redeemed was this:
After seeing every other blogger on the interwebs pull die cuts like I pull 1993 Topps I got pretty fed up with the whole thing. Every card I redeemed this year got screen capped for posterity too. 27 .pngs of garbage. I almost didn't bother redeeming the ones I got in Series 2 fearing more 1987 Topps. However, bored late night insomnia surfing got me to click on the Topps Diamond bookmark and try one more code. The result: Princess Fielder. Die Cut. Shiny Thing. I've loathed Cecil's kid ever since he got Bobby Cox and Johnny Venters suspended last year for sticking his fat ass out in front of the plate and whining about it. Of course, this year Venters could probably use four days off the way Fredi is abusing his arm, but I digress... What was I talking about? Oh yeah I hate Fielder and that's the die cut I finally pull. See, I told you Topps and I are fighting and Topps fights dirty.
Oh yeah I dug up a ring too. I don't really understand that game. I keep feeling that it should be more like minesweeper, where if you dig up the wrong patch of dirt you blow up and lose all your rings. Or worse, your rings turn into 1987 Topps Bip Roberts cards that you are legally required to pay to have shipped. Now that's a game! This thing they have now is just accumulating to accumulate. I know some of you are pushing 60 rings already, what exactly is the 45 ring prize? Is it really just a set of 2011 Topps? So let me get this straight... we rip packs like idiots to find code cards... fill up a monster box full of base cards... base cards we don't care about anymore because Topps rendered their base set irrelevant with inserts and gimmickry... and our ultimate reward for buying all these cards is... a factory set? Of the cards we just bought? Someone tell me what's really going on with this. It's keeping me up at night.
Ok, so I hate Prince Fielder and now I have a 'rare' virtual card of his. Which might be rare or really rare because there's also a numbered parallel of an online parallel of a retail insert. But there's no real indication of which one you have so you have to guess, I guess? I decided to see if I could flip the pile of bits and bytes I hated for one I liked. I clicked the trade button and searched for 2011 Braves. There's a bunch of Braves die-cuts in the set. Prado, Jurrjens, Freeman, Hanson, even a Billy Wagner. I settled on trying to trade for Heyward, Chipper and Aaron. The trading app shows both versions of the die-cut cards and when you could see the two variations side by side you noticed that the diamond in one of them was slightly darker than the other. And there were a lot fewer of the dark ones out there. So I guess there was no guessing after all, you just have to see them side by side. I now had a worthless common garden variety shiny die-cut thing. I put in two trade offers for Heyward (one diamond, one... black diamond?) then two for Chipper, then one for Aaron. When I tried to put in the second offer for Aaron, I noticed a trade had gone through:
YESS! The hated Princess Transmogriphied into the Mighty Chippah! That was easy! Remember, Topps hates me though and I learned an important trading tip.
Always put in offers for the Black Diamonds first, then the regular Diamonds.
So I get my beloved Chipper almost instantly, then I went back to my trade page and saw that my offer of Fielder for Aaron was also accepted. The Black Diamond Aaron. A Rare Black Diamond numbered to 60 Hank Aaron in exchange for crummy normal lab-created diamond with a lower-case d Prince Fielder. A Prince Fielder I didn't have any more. The trade just stuck on the page, mocking me. Ha! If you hadn't screwed up the order of trade offers you'd have a numbered Aaron instead of a normal Chipper! See? Topps can't even let me have a simple moment of victory in a Chipper well won. they gotta complicate it with what could have been. Well forget you Topps, I love my newfound Chipper and we're still fighting and YOU BETTER NOT RUN OUT OF THE THINGS AND TRY TO SEND ME A 1954 TOPPS COMMON INSTEAD. If you send me a '54 Tom Poholsky, Duryea will burn with my fury. Here's the card you're going to send me:
The exact appearance of the card may differ from the image shown, but it better dang well have Chipper Jones on it. I'm a mushroom cloud laying mickeyfickey, mickeyfickeys. I'm probably going to have it shipped pretty soon too. I have already gotten about nine hundred and thirty-two ridiculous offers for my Chipper and every time I click "Decline" on a trade I'm terrified the mouse will slip and I'll accidentally click "Accept" twice and end up with a 2005 Livan Hernandez card. Oh to have that bee-you-tee-full card in my grimy little hands.
But still, pretty good, eh? Not bad for a code out of a rack pack and a little bit of clicking. So yesterday I picked up a few more packs at Target and last night I redeemed another code. This is what happened:
Dammit, Topps. Just.... dammit.
I haven't blogged much about the 2011 version of the mighty Transmogrifier. This is mainly for two reasons:
1) Topps and I are fighting. (They act like they don't know it but we are so totally fighting)
2) My codes have pulled bupkis this year.
Or, to be specific, up until this past week, I pulled bupkis. The only decent card I redeemed at all from Series one codes is a 1969 rookie card of the other Dave Campbell. No, the other other one. The sportscaster one. The rest was a bunch of junk commons and stuff like a Manny Ramirez card from 2001. So honestly, there hasn't been much to blog about so far.
This week I redeemed a few series 2 code cards. The first one redeemed was this:
After seeing every other blogger on the interwebs pull die cuts like I pull 1993 Topps I got pretty fed up with the whole thing. Every card I redeemed this year got screen capped for posterity too. 27 .pngs of garbage. I almost didn't bother redeeming the ones I got in Series 2 fearing more 1987 Topps. However, bored late night insomnia surfing got me to click on the Topps Diamond bookmark and try one more code. The result: Princess Fielder. Die Cut. Shiny Thing. I've loathed Cecil's kid ever since he got Bobby Cox and Johnny Venters suspended last year for sticking his fat ass out in front of the plate and whining about it. Of course, this year Venters could probably use four days off the way Fredi is abusing his arm, but I digress... What was I talking about? Oh yeah I hate Fielder and that's the die cut I finally pull. See, I told you Topps and I are fighting and Topps fights dirty.
Oh yeah I dug up a ring too. I don't really understand that game. I keep feeling that it should be more like minesweeper, where if you dig up the wrong patch of dirt you blow up and lose all your rings. Or worse, your rings turn into 1987 Topps Bip Roberts cards that you are legally required to pay to have shipped. Now that's a game! This thing they have now is just accumulating to accumulate. I know some of you are pushing 60 rings already, what exactly is the 45 ring prize? Is it really just a set of 2011 Topps? So let me get this straight... we rip packs like idiots to find code cards... fill up a monster box full of base cards... base cards we don't care about anymore because Topps rendered their base set irrelevant with inserts and gimmickry... and our ultimate reward for buying all these cards is... a factory set? Of the cards we just bought? Someone tell me what's really going on with this. It's keeping me up at night.
Ok, so I hate Prince Fielder and now I have a 'rare' virtual card of his. Which might be rare or really rare because there's also a numbered parallel of an online parallel of a retail insert. But there's no real indication of which one you have so you have to guess, I guess? I decided to see if I could flip the pile of bits and bytes I hated for one I liked. I clicked the trade button and searched for 2011 Braves. There's a bunch of Braves die-cuts in the set. Prado, Jurrjens, Freeman, Hanson, even a Billy Wagner. I settled on trying to trade for Heyward, Chipper and Aaron. The trading app shows both versions of the die-cut cards and when you could see the two variations side by side you noticed that the diamond in one of them was slightly darker than the other. And there were a lot fewer of the dark ones out there. So I guess there was no guessing after all, you just have to see them side by side. I now had a worthless common garden variety shiny die-cut thing. I put in two trade offers for Heyward (one diamond, one... black diamond?) then two for Chipper, then one for Aaron. When I tried to put in the second offer for Aaron, I noticed a trade had gone through:
YESS! The hated Princess Transmogriphied into the Mighty Chippah! That was easy! Remember, Topps hates me though and I learned an important trading tip.
Always put in offers for the Black Diamonds first, then the regular Diamonds.
So I get my beloved Chipper almost instantly, then I went back to my trade page and saw that my offer of Fielder for Aaron was also accepted. The Black Diamond Aaron. A Rare Black Diamond numbered to 60 Hank Aaron in exchange for crummy normal lab-created diamond with a lower-case d Prince Fielder. A Prince Fielder I didn't have any more. The trade just stuck on the page, mocking me. Ha! If you hadn't screwed up the order of trade offers you'd have a numbered Aaron instead of a normal Chipper! See? Topps can't even let me have a simple moment of victory in a Chipper well won. they gotta complicate it with what could have been. Well forget you Topps, I love my newfound Chipper and we're still fighting and YOU BETTER NOT RUN OUT OF THE THINGS AND TRY TO SEND ME A 1954 TOPPS COMMON INSTEAD. If you send me a '54 Tom Poholsky, Duryea will burn with my fury. Here's the card you're going to send me:
The exact appearance of the card may differ from the image shown, but it better dang well have Chipper Jones on it. I'm a mushroom cloud laying mickeyfickey, mickeyfickeys. I'm probably going to have it shipped pretty soon too. I have already gotten about nine hundred and thirty-two ridiculous offers for my Chipper and every time I click "Decline" on a trade I'm terrified the mouse will slip and I'll accidentally click "Accept" twice and end up with a 2005 Livan Hernandez card. Oh to have that bee-you-tee-full card in my grimy little hands.
But still, pretty good, eh? Not bad for a code out of a rack pack and a little bit of clicking. So yesterday I picked up a few more packs at Target and last night I redeemed another code. This is what happened:
Dammit, Topps. Just.... dammit.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
June Vintage Show Top Ten #6
Real quick one because I'm busy.
Pre-war, decent shape, TWO BUCKS! blue ink. At least the blue goes with the border.
Did you know there are two Dutch Leonards? At least two... I got the All-Star righty knuckleballer, not the lefty Ty Cobb hater with the .096 ERA. I didn't recognize it when I grabbed the card (basically because pre-war card for 2 bucks) but I already had a card of righty Dutch from the 1953 Topps set. Even though the other Dutch played in the teens and twenties, I happen to have a card of him too... from the 1979 Topps set.
1941 Play Ball #24 "Dutch" Leonard
Pre-war, decent shape, TWO BUCKS! blue ink. At least the blue goes with the border.
Did you know there are two Dutch Leonards? At least two... I got the All-Star righty knuckleballer, not the lefty Ty Cobb hater with the .096 ERA. I didn't recognize it when I grabbed the card (basically because pre-war card for 2 bucks) but I already had a card of righty Dutch from the 1953 Topps set. Even though the other Dutch played in the teens and twenties, I happen to have a card of him too... from the 1979 Topps set.
Joy of a Completed Page - 1956 Topps
I was doing some maintenance on my '50s binders last night when I discovered this gem.
I can't remember if I have posted this before, but if I did I'm posting it again. Because Spahnnie Banks.
I can't remember if I have posted this before, but if I did I'm posting it again. Because Spahnnie Banks.
Monday, June 20, 2011
June Vintage Show Top Ten #7
Tonight we have some 1954 Topps action for the price of a 2011 retail pack.
The little green dot on the card sleeve means it was two bucks. Yes, this is Orioles Day on the blog. Here's a '54 rookie card of pitcher Jehosie "Jay" Heard. I think it was the only Topps card Jay ever got, as he made two appearances for the O's in '54 before being sent back to the Pacific Coast League. Those two games were significant ones as Jehosie was the first black player on the Baltimore Orioles.
The Orioles had technically integrated seven years earlier when the St. Louis Browns called up Hank Thompson and Willard Brown to the club in 1947. Jehosie was still the first for the franchise to wear a Baltimore uniform. Despite never playing baseball until playing on an Army team during World War Two, Jay went on to win a pennant with his hometown Birmingham Black Barons of the Negro Leagues and pitched well in the minors and Pacific Coast League. The 'toons on the back of the card feature his 20-win season and no-hitter in 1952. I actually passed this card up at least once at previous shows but I'm glad I finally picked it up. There's some real gems in the bargain box if you just look...
1954 Topps #226 Jeshosie Heard
The little green dot on the card sleeve means it was two bucks. Yes, this is Orioles Day on the blog. Here's a '54 rookie card of pitcher Jehosie "Jay" Heard. I think it was the only Topps card Jay ever got, as he made two appearances for the O's in '54 before being sent back to the Pacific Coast League. Those two games were significant ones as Jehosie was the first black player on the Baltimore Orioles.
The Orioles had technically integrated seven years earlier when the St. Louis Browns called up Hank Thompson and Willard Brown to the club in 1947. Jehosie was still the first for the franchise to wear a Baltimore uniform. Despite never playing baseball until playing on an Army team during World War Two, Jay went on to win a pennant with his hometown Birmingham Black Barons of the Negro Leagues and pitched well in the minors and Pacific Coast League. The 'toons on the back of the card feature his 20-win season and no-hitter in 1952. I actually passed this card up at least once at previous shows but I'm glad I finally picked it up. There's some real gems in the bargain box if you just look...
Bowman Beaters - Baltimore Orioles
Here's a couple of cards from the twenty-five cent '55 Bowman stack. Today's team is the Orioles, with two cards out of the stack.
Preacher Roe! Full disclosure: I thought this was a Dodger card until I got it home.
Fellow pitcher Bob Kuzava. His "Most exciting game" blurb on the back tells of the day Bob Boyd broke up his no-hit bid in the top of the ninth with a double.
The odd thing with these two are the backs are perfect. Most of the cards out of that lot were missing large chunks of paper off the back. What else would the stuff stuck to on the front be? These two are pretty nice though. On the back. The fronts are a mess. look closely on the right side of the card and you'll see the text from the card that was once in front imprinted silly putty style on the TV cabinet border. I wonder if I can decipher the text to figure out what card got stuck to them?
Preacher Roe! Full disclosure: I thought this was a Dodger card until I got it home.
Fellow pitcher Bob Kuzava. His "Most exciting game" blurb on the back tells of the day Bob Boyd broke up his no-hit bid in the top of the ninth with a double.
The odd thing with these two are the backs are perfect. Most of the cards out of that lot were missing large chunks of paper off the back. What else would the stuff stuck to on the front be? These two are pretty nice though. On the back. The fronts are a mess. look closely on the right side of the card and you'll see the text from the card that was once in front imprinted silly putty style on the TV cabinet border. I wonder if I can decipher the text to figure out what card got stuck to them?
Sunday, June 19, 2011
i can haz haywerdz?
2007 Tristar Prospects Plus cheapo blaster video break:
Pics from the break forthcoming...
Also, contest.
Ok, finally pics.
Autograph of pitcher Tim Alderson. The Pirates organization is currently trying their hardest to destroy this kid's arm.
Three inserts: MVP Votto, Prospect LaPorta, RIP Adenhart.
Base cards! Cy Price.
LaRussa's whipping boy Colby Rasmus
Ok, yes. I haz Haywerd.
And these things don't scan for crap.
Pics from the break forthcoming...
Also, contest.
Ok, finally pics.
Autograph of pitcher Tim Alderson. The Pirates organization is currently trying their hardest to destroy this kid's arm.
Three inserts: MVP Votto, Prospect LaPorta, RIP Adenhart.
Base cards! Cy Price.
LaRussa's whipping boy Colby Rasmus
Ok, yes. I haz Haywerd.
And these things don't scan for crap.
I finally picked up a PRP Star Wars card for the Collection
Ever Since Punk Rock Paint started showing off cards from his PRP Star Wars collection, I've wanted to snag me a card or two from the set to go in the Star Wars binder. I don't have the time or the money to build that set right now - especially with A&G looming on the horizon - but a type card or two could hold me over for a while. After fruitlessly looking around the local shops (and spending all my money on Vintage) I was at long last able to pick up a card from the set. Behold!
#25 Luke SkyBuster
I think it's #25... the back is completely black. That's just what happens when you lower the blast shield, but I used the force to figure out the card number. I'll have to confirm it with Punk later.
h/t Capewood Collections who pointed me the right direction to find this card.
Saturday, June 18, 2011
June Vintage Show Top Ten #8
Two of my favorite things in one card: 1960 Topps and the Ol' Perfessor.
Look at this wonderfully beat up old mess. The card is looking rough too. Yankees are always at a premium when buying vintage cards, but thankfully the rich card snobs who love snapping up Yanks don't like the crummy grades. You know, the ones where PSA sends the card back to you ungraded along with a restraining order. This is one of those cards. Big ol' crease right across the NY logo, another going right through his schnozz and grimy scuff marks everywhere. Looks like a Red Sox fan got a hold of this one. There was actually two of these in the bargain box. This scuffed up hot mess and one that was so worn that it had corners rounder than playing cards. I chose this one for some reason.
1960 Topps manager cards have completely cartoonized backs. Some of the other manager's cartoons have fairly generic faces drawn but not Stengel's. The artist made sure that Casey's cartoon looked as much as the Old Man of the Mountain as possible. Even the cartoon of his World Series exploits makes him look like a craggy Dick Tracy villain. The artist's tour de force in this set has to be Casey explaining exactly how he won all those pennants to a nonplussed Oscar Madison. "It's a habit I developed... George Weiss keeps sending me Hall of Famers, and I keep winning pennants..." Note carefully that Casey was once the manager of my beloved Braves! Remember when Joe Torre was hired as manager of the Yankees and everyone was like " Torre? THAT bum? How the hell did he get the job? Got some incriminating pictures of George or something?" Yeah, it was pretty much the same thing for Casey after managing the hapless Braves (and Bees). I still claim Casey as a bona-fide Brave. Now I gotta track down his 1940 Play Ball card.
1960 Topps #227 Casey Stengel
Look at this wonderfully beat up old mess. The card is looking rough too. Yankees are always at a premium when buying vintage cards, but thankfully the rich card snobs who love snapping up Yanks don't like the crummy grades. You know, the ones where PSA sends the card back to you ungraded along with a restraining order. This is one of those cards. Big ol' crease right across the NY logo, another going right through his schnozz and grimy scuff marks everywhere. Looks like a Red Sox fan got a hold of this one. There was actually two of these in the bargain box. This scuffed up hot mess and one that was so worn that it had corners rounder than playing cards. I chose this one for some reason.
1960 Topps manager cards have completely cartoonized backs. Some of the other manager's cartoons have fairly generic faces drawn but not Stengel's. The artist made sure that Casey's cartoon looked as much as the Old Man of the Mountain as possible. Even the cartoon of his World Series exploits makes him look like a craggy Dick Tracy villain. The artist's tour de force in this set has to be Casey explaining exactly how he won all those pennants to a nonplussed Oscar Madison. "It's a habit I developed... George Weiss keeps sending me Hall of Famers, and I keep winning pennants..." Note carefully that Casey was once the manager of my beloved Braves! Remember when Joe Torre was hired as manager of the Yankees and everyone was like " Torre? THAT bum? How the hell did he get the job? Got some incriminating pictures of George or something?" Yeah, it was pretty much the same thing for Casey after managing the hapless Braves (and Bees). I still claim Casey as a bona-fide Brave. Now I gotta track down his 1940 Play Ball card.
June Vintage Show Top Ten #9
A quick one for a Friday night, there's not much to say on this one...
Yaaaay, a Team card. A very red team card. It looks like the photographer put them up against a green screen so he could put some nice trees or a bunch of puppies in the background, but he screwed it up because he was colorblind. Now instead of America's Team they're the Devil's team. Actually, the Braves weren't really America's Team until Ted Turner showed up. Just scratch that, forget I said anything. It's late.
Braves had a pretty nice team in 1960. They came in second to the World Champion Pirates that year mainly because the Pirates owned them. Spahnnie went 1-5 against the Bucs. Ouch. Batting leaders: Joe Adcock, Eddie Mathews and Hank Aaron. Very nice. Odd thing about this card - it's #463. Problem is that Orioles pitcher Jack Fisher is card #463 in the 1961 set according to the 6th series checklist. The 5th series checklist shows the Milwaukee Braves team card as #426. So was Jack's number on the back of his card #426? Nope. Topps gave you two #463s and no #426 in 1961. The Braves team card is now forever #463a. Better than a super short printed #661 I suppose.
1961 Topps #463 Milwaukee Braves Team
Yaaaay, a Team card. A very red team card. It looks like the photographer put them up against a green screen so he could put some nice trees or a bunch of puppies in the background, but he screwed it up because he was colorblind. Now instead of America's Team they're the Devil's team. Actually, the Braves weren't really America's Team until Ted Turner showed up. Just scratch that, forget I said anything. It's late.
Braves had a pretty nice team in 1960. They came in second to the World Champion Pirates that year mainly because the Pirates owned them. Spahnnie went 1-5 against the Bucs. Ouch. Batting leaders: Joe Adcock, Eddie Mathews and Hank Aaron. Very nice. Odd thing about this card - it's #463. Problem is that Orioles pitcher Jack Fisher is card #463 in the 1961 set according to the 6th series checklist. The 5th series checklist shows the Milwaukee Braves team card as #426. So was Jack's number on the back of his card #426? Nope. Topps gave you two #463s and no #426 in 1961. The Braves team card is now forever #463a. Better than a super short printed #661 I suppose.
Friday, June 17, 2011
That's enough blue chip prospect MLB debuts for one season, thanks
Randall Delgado got called up to the bigs to make his big league debut tonight against the Rangers. He's up in The Show because Tommy Hanson's on the DL for an ouchie shoulder. The way Huddy and Lowe are pitching this year, we do NOT need Delgado making more than one emergency start. Get well soon, Tommy.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
June Vintage Show Top Ten #10
Yep, going to do another countdown from a card show. I'm not going to drag this one out forever though. I'm going to have every post written in 15 minutes or else you'll get a half-written post. #10 is a favorite player from a favorite set with a special bonus.
FREE HANK WITH REGGIE! One of the special back subsets were faux newspaper clipping highlights from the previous season. On April 27th, 1971 Hank bopped one off of fellow future Hall of Famer Gaylord Perry to join Willie and the Babe as the only players with 600 homers. I'm also impressed with the Atlanta Journal masthead on the top of the card. Topps got the font right and everything, something they haven't been able to do much lately. I'm in somewhat of a quandary now though... does this go in the 1972 Topps binder or the '72 Topps Braves Team set?
1972 Topps #436 Reggie Jackson In Action
1972 Topps is my ether, and there is nothing in the world more helpless and irresponsible and depraved than a man in the depths of an ether binge. I binged a little last weekend with some Reggie Jax. There were quite a few In Action cards of some pretty high rollers in the bargain box including such legends as Seaver, Clemente and Killebrew. I settled in on Reggie because, well, I like me some Reggie, and also because there are special subjects on the back of the In Action cards. Here's the back of this one:
FREE HANK WITH REGGIE! One of the special back subsets were faux newspaper clipping highlights from the previous season. On April 27th, 1971 Hank bopped one off of fellow future Hall of Famer Gaylord Perry to join Willie and the Babe as the only players with 600 homers. I'm also impressed with the Atlanta Journal masthead on the top of the card. Topps got the font right and everything, something they haven't been able to do much lately. I'm in somewhat of a quandary now though... does this go in the 1972 Topps binder or the '72 Topps Braves Team set?
Vintage Show June - My Bowman Beaters
I just put the old card show to bed, that means you're going to have to deal with the stuff from the new card show. Don't worry, It's cool. Just good old-fashioned baseball cards. There's only one card in the bunch that is not a true baseball card, but it's tied in with one of the top five sets of all time so you'll probably like it. I went to this show with a plan. You gotta have a plan. Run into a card show half-cocked and you'll end up walking out with bent 1974 Topps Dock Ellis card and three boxes of 1990 Upper Deck. Here was my plan:
1) Hit the Braves team set needs
2) Find a 1953 Topps card I don't have
3) Hit these sets hard:
4) get some cheap stuff for the 1954-1956 sets
5) find a really cool non-sport card
I hit all my goals except for 1963 Topps. I just didn't find anything that jumped out at me. I'm also alyways prepared for the unexpected and something really unexpected jumped out at me at the show. 1955 Bowman. Here's an example:
Hall of Famer Robin Roberts. With paper stuck all over the front of the card. I didn't bother to scan the back but there's paper missing from there too. Basically what appears to have happened is that a box filled with a bunch of '55 Bowmans got some severe water damage, which caused the cards to stick together. In the process of pulling them apart, many of the backs of some cards ended up on the fronts of other cards. This was mostly around the edges however, so the picture of the player was in most cases unobscured. I'm guessing Roger either purchased these cards in a collection or had one of his own boxes fall into the toilet. at any rate, there was about 400 poor abused Bowman cards at the show for sale. Dodgers and Yankees were $2.00 each, Everyone else was a buck a pop. Except for a stack of really awful looking cards like this one. These Bowmans were a quarter each. How could I pass up '55 Bowmans for a quarter? I couldn't. that's what. I snagged 28 of the quarter Bowman beaters. If you would have bet me that I would come back from the show with over two dozen 1955 Bowman cards you would have made a lot of money.
Picking out the Bowmans was pretty much the last thing I did before cashing out at the show. I had already been shuffling through cards for over an hour at that point and in retrospect I probably could have done a better job. My basic criteria while picking out cards was to pull any Hall of Famers like Robin here, pull anyone who I thought should be in the Hall of Fame, pull cards of players I liked, and then grab a few that weren't all that beat up. Looking back on it now I wish I had gotten a few dollars more worth of the beaters and I also regret not picking up a player from each team. I got no cards of the Cubs, Cardinals, Tigers, A's, Senators or Yankees. I don't think there were any quarter Yankees in the pile though. At the very least I should have picked up all the Cardinals, Cubs and Tigers just to trade off to bloggers. Oh well, what's done is done.
I'm going to show off all my horribly abused Bowmans over the next couple of weeks (or months if I get lazy). I'll post them by team to make things easy for me. I betcha can't guess from which team I got the most Bowmans!
1) Hit the Braves team set needs
2) Find a 1953 Topps card I don't have
3) Hit these sets hard:
- 1960 Topps
- 1963 Topps Series 1
- 1965 Topps Series 1
- 1972 Topps
4) get some cheap stuff for the 1954-1956 sets
5) find a really cool non-sport card
I hit all my goals except for 1963 Topps. I just didn't find anything that jumped out at me. I'm also alyways prepared for the unexpected and something really unexpected jumped out at me at the show. 1955 Bowman. Here's an example:
Hall of Famer Robin Roberts. With paper stuck all over the front of the card. I didn't bother to scan the back but there's paper missing from there too. Basically what appears to have happened is that a box filled with a bunch of '55 Bowmans got some severe water damage, which caused the cards to stick together. In the process of pulling them apart, many of the backs of some cards ended up on the fronts of other cards. This was mostly around the edges however, so the picture of the player was in most cases unobscured. I'm guessing Roger either purchased these cards in a collection or had one of his own boxes fall into the toilet. at any rate, there was about 400 poor abused Bowman cards at the show for sale. Dodgers and Yankees were $2.00 each, Everyone else was a buck a pop. Except for a stack of really awful looking cards like this one. These Bowmans were a quarter each. How could I pass up '55 Bowmans for a quarter? I couldn't. that's what. I snagged 28 of the quarter Bowman beaters. If you would have bet me that I would come back from the show with over two dozen 1955 Bowman cards you would have made a lot of money.
Picking out the Bowmans was pretty much the last thing I did before cashing out at the show. I had already been shuffling through cards for over an hour at that point and in retrospect I probably could have done a better job. My basic criteria while picking out cards was to pull any Hall of Famers like Robin here, pull anyone who I thought should be in the Hall of Fame, pull cards of players I liked, and then grab a few that weren't all that beat up. Looking back on it now I wish I had gotten a few dollars more worth of the beaters and I also regret not picking up a player from each team. I got no cards of the Cubs, Cardinals, Tigers, A's, Senators or Yankees. I don't think there were any quarter Yankees in the pile though. At the very least I should have picked up all the Cardinals, Cubs and Tigers just to trade off to bloggers. Oh well, what's done is done.
I'm going to show off all my horribly abused Bowmans over the next couple of weeks (or months if I get lazy). I'll post them by team to make things easy for me. I betcha can't guess from which team I got the most Bowmans!
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Card Show Top 20 - #1 The Holy Grail of Commons
Here it is, The card you've waited four months to see. The absolute best card I picked up from the Freedom Cardboard show last February. IT's worth the wait. I've been looking for this dang thing for over 25 years. I've asked for it at card shops, I've looked for it at shows, I've been outbid online, and I finally found it. It's mine. All mine. The greatest common card in the history of baseball cards as far as I'm concerned. BEHOLD: The HOLY GRAIL OF COMMON CARDS:
The immortal Bob Uecker in his only solo Braves card. His rookie was on a 1962 4-in-1 high number rookie card that is expensive as crap. His 1964 card has him in a Braves uniform but with Cardinals on the top of the card. If you want a Uecker Topps card as a Brave, this is it. And oh what a perfect card it is....
Bob in the standard batting pose. His face is a unique combination of intense focus and slack-jawed bewilderment. The Milwaukee M overlooks a perfect bill that is not too curved and not too flat. The Screaming Brave howls on Bob's sleeve. Follow catcher Del Crandall is seen in the background bird dogging chicks in the stands. The inset photo has bob in the crouch, displaying the freakishly large catcher's mitt necessary to receive a young Phil Niekro's knuckleballs. The bottom border is blue and red, Braves colors. Gorgeous.
I've wanted this card since the mid 80's. I probably first saw Ueck in a Miller Lite commercial. Ha ha! He's not sitting in the front row at all! Then Bob showed up on Mr. Belvedere and my interest was piqued. The dude from Mr. Belvedere probably had a baseball card! I had already tried looking for a football card of Webster's dad (name that player - you have five seconds!) why not get one of Ueck too. Somewhere along the line I found out he played for the Braves. Then Major League came out. MUST. HAVE. UECK. CARD.
Problem was, I couldn't find one. Back in the '80s I asked the old Atlanta Sports Cards if they had any Bob Uecker cards. The shopkeeps' reaction to my query was just about the same as if I had said "Ronald Reagan is an alien Lobsterman from the planet Voltron". I dropped the subject even though I could have sworn I saw a Euck card there once. I looked around other shops and shows and found nada. Granted, most of the '90s I was caught up in Insertmania and vintage was not in the forefront of my mind. The new century came and with it came eBay and Yahoo Auctions. I saw many auctions for Ueck cards. The problem is, the people who were online buying baseball cards at the time were just as big of a nerd as I was and really really wanted their Uecker cards too. Cards were going for over $10 a throw, which is kind of nuts for a '60s common*. When a card came in my price range it would inevitably get sniped. Even the reprint of the dang card went for six bucks. My usual tactic of scrounging through bargain boxes was not turning up any Ueckers at all, and he didn't end up in any star cases either. Before the show, the '63 Ueck was on my top 10 all-time wantlist along with the '54 Aaron and the '40 Play Ball Casey Stengel.
Then the card show happened. There's a vintage seller that has showed up to the past two big shows in Atlanta. We only get one every two or three years, but this guy showed up. Uncle.. something or other. Uncle Larry? Floyd? Jerry? Lumpy? I can't remember the name even though I tried to memorize it so I wouldn't forget it later. Uncle Somethin's vintage cards. The dude had a massive table - probably four or five tables to be accurate - with vintage binders piled three deep all across the tables. Two or three or four different books for every vintage Topps set filled with commons and stars. some pockets were three or four cards deep. Basically if you were looking for a common card and he didn't have it, then it just flat out wasn't your day. the cards in the binders were a tad pricey, but they were all in above average shape. On either end of the table were bargain boxes. One side had a dollar box that held very little of interest to me. the bargain boxes on the other side were much better. I found my only '53 Topps card in that box along with some other goodies. Before I cashed out I looked at all the binders. It finally clicked. UECK! HE'S GOTTA BE IN THERE SOMEWHERE! I checked the '63 Topps low number binder, flipped to the 120s... and THERE! UECK! THREE OF EM! One was $4, the other two $3.50. I snagged this one for three-fiddy. A dream - my dream - fulfilled for the price of a happy meal. I had found the Grail. And I didn't even have to get taunted by Frenchmen.
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| Angels sing, etc..etc... |
1963 Topps #126 Bob Uecker
The immortal Bob Uecker in his only solo Braves card. His rookie was on a 1962 4-in-1 high number rookie card that is expensive as crap. His 1964 card has him in a Braves uniform but with Cardinals on the top of the card. If you want a Uecker Topps card as a Brave, this is it. And oh what a perfect card it is....
Bob in the standard batting pose. His face is a unique combination of intense focus and slack-jawed bewilderment. The Milwaukee M overlooks a perfect bill that is not too curved and not too flat. The Screaming Brave howls on Bob's sleeve. Follow catcher Del Crandall is seen in the background bird dogging chicks in the stands. The inset photo has bob in the crouch, displaying the freakishly large catcher's mitt necessary to receive a young Phil Niekro's knuckleballs. The bottom border is blue and red, Braves colors. Gorgeous.
I've wanted this card since the mid 80's. I probably first saw Ueck in a Miller Lite commercial. Ha ha! He's not sitting in the front row at all! Then Bob showed up on Mr. Belvedere and my interest was piqued. The dude from Mr. Belvedere probably had a baseball card! I had already tried looking for a football card of Webster's dad (name that player - you have five seconds!) why not get one of Ueck too. Somewhere along the line I found out he played for the Braves. Then Major League came out. MUST. HAVE. UECK. CARD.
Problem was, I couldn't find one. Back in the '80s I asked the old Atlanta Sports Cards if they had any Bob Uecker cards. The shopkeeps' reaction to my query was just about the same as if I had said "Ronald Reagan is an alien Lobsterman from the planet Voltron". I dropped the subject even though I could have sworn I saw a Euck card there once. I looked around other shops and shows and found nada. Granted, most of the '90s I was caught up in Insertmania and vintage was not in the forefront of my mind. The new century came and with it came eBay and Yahoo Auctions. I saw many auctions for Ueck cards. The problem is, the people who were online buying baseball cards at the time were just as big of a nerd as I was and really really wanted their Uecker cards too. Cards were going for over $10 a throw, which is kind of nuts for a '60s common*. When a card came in my price range it would inevitably get sniped. Even the reprint of the dang card went for six bucks. My usual tactic of scrounging through bargain boxes was not turning up any Ueckers at all, and he didn't end up in any star cases either. Before the show, the '63 Ueck was on my top 10 all-time wantlist along with the '54 Aaron and the '40 Play Ball Casey Stengel.
Then the card show happened. There's a vintage seller that has showed up to the past two big shows in Atlanta. We only get one every two or three years, but this guy showed up. Uncle.. something or other. Uncle Larry? Floyd? Jerry? Lumpy? I can't remember the name even though I tried to memorize it so I wouldn't forget it later. Uncle Somethin's vintage cards. The dude had a massive table - probably four or five tables to be accurate - with vintage binders piled three deep all across the tables. Two or three or four different books for every vintage Topps set filled with commons and stars. some pockets were three or four cards deep. Basically if you were looking for a common card and he didn't have it, then it just flat out wasn't your day. the cards in the binders were a tad pricey, but they were all in above average shape. On either end of the table were bargain boxes. One side had a dollar box that held very little of interest to me. the bargain boxes on the other side were much better. I found my only '53 Topps card in that box along with some other goodies. Before I cashed out I looked at all the binders. It finally clicked. UECK! HE'S GOTTA BE IN THERE SOMEWHERE! I checked the '63 Topps low number binder, flipped to the 120s... and THERE! UECK! THREE OF EM! One was $4, the other two $3.50. I snagged this one for three-fiddy. A dream - my dream - fulfilled for the price of a happy meal. I had found the Grail. And I didn't even have to get taunted by Frenchmen.
The Top 20 List:
#20 Reds' Heavy Artillery
#19 Blue MadDog
#18 Lil' Jimmy
#17 Real Fake '52
#16 First Topps
#15 Bogus Boog
#14 V103 Tree
#13 Sertoma Rico
#12 '55 Finishers
#11 Hey Shiny
#10 What the Dickens
#9 '60 Spahnnie
#8 Lonely '53
#7 Super Chief
#6 Original Frank
#5 Hoops Inspiration
#4 Rocket Robin
#3 Wizard Off Kilter
#2 Shenanigans Were Called
#1 The Holy Grail of Commons
* Yes, Bob Uecker is a common card by any definition of the word. The man has made an entire career out of being a common. That's why we love him.
* Yes, Bob Uecker is a common card by any definition of the word. The man has made an entire career out of being a common. That's why we love him.
Labels:
1963 Topps,
Bob Uecker,
Card Show Top 20,
The Holy Grail
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Card Show Top 20 - #2 Shenanigans Were Called
Ok, this one turned out to be a big mistake. When I made up the Top 20 list I was really excited about this card but four months later I'm pretty meh about it. It's a nice card, and a good story, but... honestly I like the Robin card with the crazy Joker puzzle on the back better. And the Rico Carty advertising vehicle. And the Chief Knock-A-Homa team issue. Just stick this one at #20 and bump everything else up one spot and we're good.. So what is the 'good at first but boring the next day' card anyway? It's basically Mojo.
Yay, an autograph of Brewers desperately-trying-to-remain-a-top-prospect Mat Gamel. It's even got a swatch of what is probably a Futures Game jersey on it. It's nice enough I guess, It's a sticker auto but it's framed which always makes the dreaded stickers look better. The relic is shaped like a stamp on a ticket stub, which is weird but attractive. The picture's small and kind of crummy. There's random foil on the sides which is breaking up in spots. It's an ok autogamer. Here's the back.
Bluh, Ticket to Stardom. What a worthless freaking set. Topps refuses to do Topps Total or Bowman Heritage, but that horsepuckey sees the light of day. Useless. Sharp eyed readers have noticed that the card says "Dual Autographed Relic". So where's the Dual? Here it is:
Princess Fielder. Mr. "Imma lean in and stick my fat ass out in front of the plate and then whine to high Heaven when I inevitably get plunked by a ball that was over the plate". I used to like Prince until he pulled that crap in a series against the Braves. Now I hope he signs with the Yankees next year so I can boo him even more lustily. Same deal as before, tiny picture where you can't see his eyes, sloppy framed stickergraph, a bat swatch instead of a jersey, dumb foil that looks like it's flaking off on the right. Oh, there's a serial number this time, 11/39.
Wait a sec... if I showed you the front and back already... then what is this witchery? A card with three sides? Four, actually.
Yay, a book card. This is my first book card. It's nice looking I guess. The spine of the book is basically the front bit of the card which is the thickness of a normal card and looks a bit fragile. I have no idea how some of those huge MegaBook cards are going to hold together with 6 or 8 panels. I have a feeling that 100 years from now halves or thirds or quarters of book cards will be as common as the T202 Triple Folder cards that have been separated into three cards. Maybe the high end books get better binding agents than crummy Ticket to Stardom. The whole back (outside? cover?) shows more of the ticket motif.
Other than the stupid foil barcode the thing looks pretty good. It would look great displayed, but I have no idea how to do that without wrecking the card. So where did I pick up my first (and maybe last) book card? Remember the dollar box from Dimension X with all the weird crap in it? Yep, it was in there. It shouldn't have been, but it was. I asked the seller if this was supposed to be in a dollar box and he said "No, but you can have it". He only asked that I showed him where I found it to make sure nothing else out of sorts migrated to the dollar box. I showed it off later on to Stale Gum's Chris Harris and everyone around called bullshit that this card came out of a dollar box. Well it did. One of the more ridiculous pulls out of a dollar box you will ever see. And now I am completely apathetic towards the thing. Man, I'm a terrible collector.
It's really not a bad little card. It just needs a little love. Which I ain't giving it unless the Braves sign Prince Lardass to play first next year. Probably not even then. Why waste money on a pre-Madonna instead of letting Freddie Freeman develop? Maybe I can use this to bribe Thorzul into letting me cut in line ahead of Chris Mays for the Braves in his next El Cheapo group break...
The Top 20 List:
Yay, an autograph of Brewers desperately-trying-to-remain-a-top-prospect Mat Gamel. It's even got a swatch of what is probably a Futures Game jersey on it. It's nice enough I guess, It's a sticker auto but it's framed which always makes the dreaded stickers look better. The relic is shaped like a stamp on a ticket stub, which is weird but attractive. The picture's small and kind of crummy. There's random foil on the sides which is breaking up in spots. It's an ok autogamer. Here's the back.
Bluh, Ticket to Stardom. What a worthless freaking set. Topps refuses to do Topps Total or Bowman Heritage, but that horsepuckey sees the light of day. Useless. Sharp eyed readers have noticed that the card says "Dual Autographed Relic". So where's the Dual? Here it is:
Princess Fielder. Mr. "Imma lean in and stick my fat ass out in front of the plate and then whine to high Heaven when I inevitably get plunked by a ball that was over the plate". I used to like Prince until he pulled that crap in a series against the Braves. Now I hope he signs with the Yankees next year so I can boo him even more lustily. Same deal as before, tiny picture where you can't see his eyes, sloppy framed stickergraph, a bat swatch instead of a jersey, dumb foil that looks like it's flaking off on the right. Oh, there's a serial number this time, 11/39.
Wait a sec... if I showed you the front and back already... then what is this witchery? A card with three sides? Four, actually.
Yay, a book card. This is my first book card. It's nice looking I guess. The spine of the book is basically the front bit of the card which is the thickness of a normal card and looks a bit fragile. I have no idea how some of those huge MegaBook cards are going to hold together with 6 or 8 panels. I have a feeling that 100 years from now halves or thirds or quarters of book cards will be as common as the T202 Triple Folder cards that have been separated into three cards. Maybe the high end books get better binding agents than crummy Ticket to Stardom. The whole back (outside? cover?) shows more of the ticket motif.
Other than the stupid foil barcode the thing looks pretty good. It would look great displayed, but I have no idea how to do that without wrecking the card. So where did I pick up my first (and maybe last) book card? Remember the dollar box from Dimension X with all the weird crap in it? Yep, it was in there. It shouldn't have been, but it was. I asked the seller if this was supposed to be in a dollar box and he said "No, but you can have it". He only asked that I showed him where I found it to make sure nothing else out of sorts migrated to the dollar box. I showed it off later on to Stale Gum's Chris Harris and everyone around called bullshit that this card came out of a dollar box. Well it did. One of the more ridiculous pulls out of a dollar box you will ever see. And now I am completely apathetic towards the thing. Man, I'm a terrible collector.
It's really not a bad little card. It just needs a little love. Which I ain't giving it unless the Braves sign Prince Lardass to play first next year. Probably not even then. Why waste money on a pre-Madonna instead of letting Freddie Freeman develop? Maybe I can use this to bribe Thorzul into letting me cut in line ahead of Chris Mays for the Braves in his next El Cheapo group break...
The Top 20 List:
#20 Reds' Heavy Artillery
#19 Blue MadDog
#18 Lil' Jimmy
#17 Real Fake '52
#16 First Topps
#15 Bogus Boog
#14 V103 Tree
#13 Sertoma Rico
#12 '55 Finishers
#11 Hey Shiny
#10 What the Dickens
#9 '60 Spahnnie
#8 Lonely '53
#7 Super Chief
#6 Original Frank
#5 Hoops Inspiration
#4 Rocket Robin
#3 Wizard Off Kilter
#2 Shenanigans Were Called
#1 The Holy Grail of Commons
OMG! We're almost done!!!
OMG! We're almost done!!!
Monday, June 13, 2011
Card Show Top 20 - #3 Wizard Off Kilter
Almost done with this card show. Then I can move on to the next card show. No, I haven't bought any Topps Series 2. I'll be able to find tons of it in repack boxes in about 6 months anyway. Has the mindbendingly absurd gimmick popped up yet? Topps usually saves their best garbage for Series two. Maybe a supadupa short print variation Stephen Strasburg card with the disembodied head of Bryce Harper blowing kisses in the background? Eh, don't care. Here's a card from a real set where men were men and gimmicks were Bump Wills.
Wizard! In the fluorescent brown Padres uni! Rockin' the sideburns! Those suckas are dangerously close to Mutton Chops. And it's a rookie card! And it's about a nanometer away from being officially miscut!
One of the sets I'm closest to completing is the 1979 Topps set. It's not even one of my favorite sets of the period, I like bookends 1978 Topps and 1980 Topps much better. I just happened to have a bunch of it, and then people sent me a lot more of it and it sort of kind of piled up. No matter how much I accumulated though The Wizard always loomed. That's one problem I've got with collecting vintage sets. Dang near every one has one or more key rookie cards that are pricey. Well, used to be pricey. Everyone's chasing SWEET MOJO HITZ or looking for completely perfect vintage cards to submit to PSA in hopes of landing that grade 10 cardboard wiener enhancer that they can wave at their fellow graded collectors. No one cares about the vintage garbage I collect.
THE PROBLEM: There was a time in my life when I actually paid attention to price guides. You know the one. I'd buy one about every other month depending who was on the cover and drool over all the Hi prices of the old vintage cards I'd never get my hands on. There were cards that cost over 100 dollars! Even the rookies from 1983 Topps that I already had were $25! That's a lotta money for a card! Or it was in the mid '80s at least when I was a broke kid. I blow $25 on retail bullcrap nowadays without batting an eye. But back then it was Expensive! So here's my problem: Thanks to Beckett Brainwashing early in my collecting career I have a Pavlovian response to iconic vintage rookie cards. First I go, "REALLY REALLY WANT". Then I go, "probably too expensive for me...." and slink off in shame. I can't break myself of this habit either, even though I could probably find just about every significant rookie from 1974-1985 for well under 20 bucks online if I looked hard enough. It's frustrating.
So I'm at the FCB card show. I'm at the Sports Memories OK table. That's the guy I bought a new pile of old goodies from on Saturday. I purposely saved his table for last knowing there would definitely be some good stuff to pick though. If anything was a sure thing at this show, that was it. So I do my usual routine. Check the cases. Look at all the high grade stars from the '60s. Ooooh. Gawk at all the beautiful cards from the '50s. Aaaaah. Gaze lovingly at the pre-war Goudeys and Cabinets and Tobaccos, Oh My!. Get to the Museum case with the 19th century cards and original Ruths and Gehrigs. Jizz in my pants. Then I go to the bargain boxes where I can actually afford stuff.
Roger must have picked up a collection before the show because there was an entire display of low grade Hall of Famers. I found a couple of interesting ones on there that I considered getting but chose to hit the bargain box first just to see what I could find. I found the typical stuff, '50s commons off my wantlist, Braves for my teams sets, etc. etc. The bargain boxes consist of two 3200 count monster boxes and are organized thusly: Box 1 has a row full of non-sports cards and the baseball oddballs, row two and about half of row three are filled with vintage Bowman and the rest is filled with vintage football, basketball and other assorted sports. Box 2 is filled with Topps organized by year. The back of the first row starts with a section of everything 1973 and newer, then there is a separate section for every year going from 1972 down to 1951. At the very end are a few bargain Pre-war cards. I usually attack the boxes starting with the pre-war stuff, then I hit the 1953s, rummage around the rest of the large-size '50s cards (Except 1952, blecch), hit a few years like 1960 and 1972 that I really like, then work my way through the rest of the years looking for Braves.
I'll usually hit the '73 and up section last. Like, very last. After I've checked the Bowman and Non-Sport and maybe even the football. It usually only has a bunch of '70s stars that I already have. Occasionally a Hank '74 Highlight or Niekro will show up. I checked it last as usual and flipped through it pretty quickly not really expecting anything. It was late and I was getting worn out by my card frenzy so I sloughed through barely paying attention. Gary Carter... Tony Perez... Steve Carlton... Lou Brock... Ozzie Smith Rookie... Carlton Fisk - dang I have two of that card - Ho hum, Bob Gibso- WAIT, WHAT??
I shuffled back. Ozzie Smith. Rookie. The EXPENSIVE 1979 card. In the bargain box. How much. Probably 20 bucks if it's a penny. I'm down to my last 20, no way I can afford this card. What's the price?
Five bucks. My face did this:
Ozzie in my pile. Forgot about the cards in the case. Went to pay. Roger left to pay his electricity bill so I paid someone who was watching his table for him. Felt like a thief. WIZARD FOR FIVE BUCKS. That cop over there is gonna bust me I know it. Finished up the day by picking up a couple items I had left before and was able to walk out the door without getting thrown in the hoosegow. I even talked to Roger on my way out, apparently it was legit. Ok, so it's a smidge off center. Anyone have a diamond cut 1980 Rickey Henderson? A '75 Topps Yount with a tack hole at the top? A '78 Eddie Murray with a hole punch through the rookie cup? There's a fiver in it for ya...
1979 Topps Ozzie Smith RC
Wizard! In the fluorescent brown Padres uni! Rockin' the sideburns! Those suckas are dangerously close to Mutton Chops. And it's a rookie card! And it's about a nanometer away from being officially miscut!
One of the sets I'm closest to completing is the 1979 Topps set. It's not even one of my favorite sets of the period, I like bookends 1978 Topps and 1980 Topps much better. I just happened to have a bunch of it, and then people sent me a lot more of it and it sort of kind of piled up. No matter how much I accumulated though The Wizard always loomed. That's one problem I've got with collecting vintage sets. Dang near every one has one or more key rookie cards that are pricey. Well, used to be pricey. Everyone's chasing SWEET MOJO HITZ or looking for completely perfect vintage cards to submit to PSA in hopes of landing that grade 10 cardboard wiener enhancer that they can wave at their fellow graded collectors. No one cares about the vintage garbage I collect.
THE PROBLEM: There was a time in my life when I actually paid attention to price guides. You know the one. I'd buy one about every other month depending who was on the cover and drool over all the Hi prices of the old vintage cards I'd never get my hands on. There were cards that cost over 100 dollars! Even the rookies from 1983 Topps that I already had were $25! That's a lotta money for a card! Or it was in the mid '80s at least when I was a broke kid. I blow $25 on retail bullcrap nowadays without batting an eye. But back then it was Expensive! So here's my problem: Thanks to Beckett Brainwashing early in my collecting career I have a Pavlovian response to iconic vintage rookie cards. First I go, "REALLY REALLY WANT". Then I go, "probably too expensive for me...." and slink off in shame. I can't break myself of this habit either, even though I could probably find just about every significant rookie from 1974-1985 for well under 20 bucks online if I looked hard enough. It's frustrating.
So I'm at the FCB card show. I'm at the Sports Memories OK table. That's the guy I bought a new pile of old goodies from on Saturday. I purposely saved his table for last knowing there would definitely be some good stuff to pick though. If anything was a sure thing at this show, that was it. So I do my usual routine. Check the cases. Look at all the high grade stars from the '60s. Ooooh. Gawk at all the beautiful cards from the '50s. Aaaaah. Gaze lovingly at the pre-war Goudeys and Cabinets and Tobaccos, Oh My!. Get to the Museum case with the 19th century cards and original Ruths and Gehrigs. Jizz in my pants. Then I go to the bargain boxes where I can actually afford stuff.
Roger must have picked up a collection before the show because there was an entire display of low grade Hall of Famers. I found a couple of interesting ones on there that I considered getting but chose to hit the bargain box first just to see what I could find. I found the typical stuff, '50s commons off my wantlist, Braves for my teams sets, etc. etc. The bargain boxes consist of two 3200 count monster boxes and are organized thusly: Box 1 has a row full of non-sports cards and the baseball oddballs, row two and about half of row three are filled with vintage Bowman and the rest is filled with vintage football, basketball and other assorted sports. Box 2 is filled with Topps organized by year. The back of the first row starts with a section of everything 1973 and newer, then there is a separate section for every year going from 1972 down to 1951. At the very end are a few bargain Pre-war cards. I usually attack the boxes starting with the pre-war stuff, then I hit the 1953s, rummage around the rest of the large-size '50s cards (Except 1952, blecch), hit a few years like 1960 and 1972 that I really like, then work my way through the rest of the years looking for Braves.
I'll usually hit the '73 and up section last. Like, very last. After I've checked the Bowman and Non-Sport and maybe even the football. It usually only has a bunch of '70s stars that I already have. Occasionally a Hank '74 Highlight or Niekro will show up. I checked it last as usual and flipped through it pretty quickly not really expecting anything. It was late and I was getting worn out by my card frenzy so I sloughed through barely paying attention. Gary Carter... Tony Perez... Steve Carlton... Lou Brock... Ozzie Smith Rookie... Carlton Fisk - dang I have two of that card - Ho hum, Bob Gibso- WAIT, WHAT??
I shuffled back. Ozzie Smith. Rookie. The EXPENSIVE 1979 card. In the bargain box. How much. Probably 20 bucks if it's a penny. I'm down to my last 20, no way I can afford this card. What's the price?
Five bucks. My face did this:
Ozzie in my pile. Forgot about the cards in the case. Went to pay. Roger left to pay his electricity bill so I paid someone who was watching his table for him. Felt like a thief. WIZARD FOR FIVE BUCKS. That cop over there is gonna bust me I know it. Finished up the day by picking up a couple items I had left before and was able to walk out the door without getting thrown in the hoosegow. I even talked to Roger on my way out, apparently it was legit. Ok, so it's a smidge off center. Anyone have a diamond cut 1980 Rickey Henderson? A '75 Topps Yount with a tack hole at the top? A '78 Eddie Murray with a hole punch through the rookie cup? There's a fiver in it for ya...
The Top 20 List:
#20 Reds' Heavy Artillery
#19 Blue MadDog
#18 Lil' Jimmy
#17 Real Fake '52
#16 First Topps
#15 Bogus Boog
#14 V103 Tree
#13 Sertoma Rico
#12 '55 Finishers
#11 Hey Shiny
#10 What the Dickens
#9 '60 Spahnnie
#8 Lonely '53
#7 Super Chief
#6 Original Frank
#5 Hoops Inspiration
#4 Rocket Robin
#3 Wizard Off Kilter
#2 Shenanigans Were Called
#1 The Holy Grail of Commons
Sunday, June 12, 2011
Card Show Top 20 - #4 Rocket Robin
Item #7 off the FCB card show game plan:
7) One oddball non-sports card. Just one.
I am rendered speechless by this utterly perfect painting. Hang that thing up in the Louvre right next to ol' whats her face. Here's the back.
Here's the complete story on the back for posterity:
Grant Morrison it ain't, but it works. Just don't think about it too hard. Your brain will ask questions. Like Why would a bank robbing gang of thieves crash a ballgame after a heist? Why would a gang choose a blue sport coat over an orange sweater as a uniform? Where the heck did Robin hide that suit before he changed? Did 1960's era ballparks even have phonebooths?
Don't think about all that. Just think of bad guys showing up at a ballgame and Robin doing his best Bob Gibson impression to save the day. Comic books are about the art, not the writing. The art here was provided by Topps regular Norman Saunders, who also worked on Mars Attacks and Wacky Packages. There were a bunch of Batman card sets released in 1966, this particular one has puzzles on the back:
Oh yeah, that's some nightmare fuel right there. I thought about maybe trying to collect all 6 puzzle pieces, but this bit here is disturbing enough.
The Top 20 List:
7) One oddball non-sports card. Just one.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
1966 Topps Batman Series 2 "Red Bat" series
#27A Striking Out The Cobra
I am rendered speechless by this utterly perfect painting. Hang that thing up in the Louvre right next to ol' whats her face. Here's the back.
Here's the complete story on the back for posterity:
Dick Grayson was enjoying himself at the local ball park when suddenly the Cobra Gang appeared. Changing into Robin, he rushed into the game and struck many of the crooks out. The newspapers called it, "Robin's Shut Out Game!"
Grant Morrison it ain't, but it works. Just don't think about it too hard. Your brain will ask questions. Like Why would a bank robbing gang of thieves crash a ballgame after a heist? Why would a gang choose a blue sport coat over an orange sweater as a uniform? Where the heck did Robin hide that suit before he changed? Did 1960's era ballparks even have phonebooths?
Don't think about all that. Just think of bad guys showing up at a ballgame and Robin doing his best Bob Gibson impression to save the day. Comic books are about the art, not the writing. The art here was provided by Topps regular Norman Saunders, who also worked on Mars Attacks and Wacky Packages. There were a bunch of Batman card sets released in 1966, this particular one has puzzles on the back:
Oh yeah, that's some nightmare fuel right there. I thought about maybe trying to collect all 6 puzzle pieces, but this bit here is disturbing enough.
The Top 20 List:
#20 Reds' Heavy Artillery
#19 Blue MadDog
#18 Lil' Jimmy
#17 Real Fake '52
#16 First Topps
#15 Bogus Boog
#14 V103 Tree
#13 Sertoma Rico
#12 '55 Finishers
#11 Hey Shiny
#10 What the Dickens
#9 '60 Spahnnie
#8 Lonely '53
#7 Super Chief
#6 Original Frank
#5 Hoops Inspiration
#4 Rocket Robin
#3 Wizard Off Kilter
#2 Shenanigans Were Called
#1 The Holy Grail of Commons
Only three to go!
Only three to go!
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