That movie spurred me into asking for a Commodore 64 computer for Christmas, which only disappointed because we didn't have a modem for it. Or an external drive. And it did not come with any internal drives, either. It basically was a glorified keyboard that could be programmed with BASIC for as long as you could keep the power on it.
But, that Commodore 64 and the Atari 2600 that followed soon after generated an interest in technology and games for me. That interest has cooled somewhat -- I don't play video games online, for example...I mean, I don't need some 12-year-old kicking my ass at video games to tell me I shouldn't play video games any more.
Yet, as a 15 to 16-year-old obsessed with games and with baseball, this game was one I played way too much:
I think I killed my game during the winter of 1988-1989 by playing it so often. It was that and Nintendo that I was playing all the time. I kept the cards that came with the game, of course, and never thought about the game again.
Then, I got back into card collecting and found out that, also in 1988, Parker Brothers leveraged this game from being just an All-Star game into being one that you could add all the teams in major league baseball to it. See -- I didn't even think about that as a kid. I didn't have the time or the money to chase after stuff like that.
Imagine my eyes, though, when on that 20 items for $20 table at the McDonough card show, I saw this box and one other:
The cartridge was inside, as were the cards -- in their original wrappers, even -- and in perfect condition even though the box was a little bit beat up. Here are a few of the guys I got:
Yes, I'm leading off with Joey Cora. Why? Well, as a Vanderbilt student in the early 1990s, the only professional baseball player that had attended Vanderbilt playing at the time was none other than Joey Cora. We jokingly called him Mr. Vanderbilt. Sure, Scott Sanderson was still kicking around, but he was an established player. Cora was just coming up.
Nowadays, Vanderbilt students are spoiled for options -- David Price, Pedro Alvarez, Mike Minor, Ryan Flaherty, Sonny Gray, Taylor Hill, Curt Casali, Nick Christiani, Antoan Richardson, Mike Baxter, and Drew VerHagen all played major league baseball last year. If you're into legacies, Carl Yastrzemski's grandson Mike Yastrzemski was a 14th round pick in 2013 out of Vanderbilt. If you're into prospecting, the 14th pick overall in the 2014 draft was a kid named Tyler Beede, whom the Giants selected.
But we had Cora and Sanderson. That. Was. It.
I am not at all clear as to why Kirk Gibson and Orel Hershiser are profile shots here, but they are. Gibson's logoless helmet is pretty clearly a Tigers helmet by color, but he got shoved into the Dodgers set because, after all, he joined the Dodgers for 1988 and golfed that ball out off Dennis Eckersley in the World Series.
So, in other words, I have team sets now for the Cardinals, the Padres, the Dodgers, and the Giants that I can send to someone if they would like it. I've already mailed out the Expos and the Cubs -- sorry guys.
While I had promised myself I would not drag out this show, I've got one more good post left in the scans folder from it. So, I'll wrap up this second card show by showing off the remainder of my purchases either tomorrow or Wednesday.
Thanks for stopping by!
I would love to trade for the Giants team set!
ReplyDeleteYou got it!
DeleteAwesome purchase! I'd love to work out a trade for the Padres.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely -- we'll get it figured out!
DeleteThose are great Tony. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThose are sweet! Nice pickups!
ReplyDeletefun find Tony!
ReplyDeleteGreat Joey Cora. Also love Orel in the batting helmet.
ReplyDeleteSomeone needs to track down the artist for these, as many of them are a lot better than what Perez was doing for the Diamond Kings of the time.
ReplyDeleteAnd . . . the Cubs team set found my mailbox. You. Are. The. Man.
ReplyDeleteThanks!