Pages

Saturday, January 21, 2017

Closing out 2016's Scans with Cards from Cards on Cards

As I sit here this rainy, stormy Saturday morning -- the counties just south of Atlanta are under a tornado watch, for crying out loud -- I can't help but feel that American life has changed greatly in the past couple of days.


Yes, Topps is now incorporating social media handles -- here, Tulo's Instagram account -- on the backs of its 2017 flagship baseball cards.  These are truly dangerous times in which we live.

With this post and other than my COMC and eBay wins, this post will finally finish off the scans I made in 2016. There are still a couple of packages that I have to post that I did not get around to scanning until after the new year.

Today's cards come from Kerry at Cards on Cards. Kerry is one of the #SuperTraders, and I believe that is what led to this package. Thing is, though, that this one hit a few real softspots in my 1980s needs.

1986 Fleer Traded


By 1986, things had settled in for collectors and everyone had started to expect shenanigans from the card manufacturers to hold rookies back from inclusion in their main sets to put into traded sets. That, or the companies would put guys on dual-rookie cards and then give them their own cards in the traded set. These were well-established games that Topps and Fleer (beginning in 1984) would play.

So, to see Plesac, Sveum, Nieves, and Robidoux in the Fleer and Topps traded sets in 1986 was no surprise (Deer had cards in the main sets as a Giant). But, as a 14-year-old kid who made money cutting lawns and being a local-league umpire during the summer, my funds were limited as to what I could afford to buy. I chose to buy the Topps Update set rather than Fleer -- so all of these were new to me.

And a Base 1986 Fleer


Not sure how I didn't have two of these already. Now I do, and the entirety of 1986 Fleer can be crossed off my want lists.

1985 Topps Traded


Topps Traded was always -- and remains -- easier to find than Fleer Traded from the 1980s. At least it feels that way to me. I thought I had ordered this card on multiple occasions from Just Commons, but then it never arrived and I got one of those notes that their online inventory was not correct. Kerry took care of that for me, so I got to cross another team set off my list.

1988 Fleer


Strangely, these two guys together were hardly classic relief. I say that because most closers tended to be right-handers. Also, I think Plesac still had his braces on his teeth at this point. 

Once again, however, this card finished off another team set. 

1991 Topps Glossy Rookies

 

These glossy insert cards of first the All-Stars (appearing only in rack packs, I think) and then the Rookies were always fun to get. I would go through the rack at the grocery store to find the All-Star that I needed for my collection (since they were visible, I was not pack searching!). Maybe I should have kept some of those unopened.

No. No chance.

1995 Stadium Club


The 1990s in baseball cards are full of the jaunty graphics that ESPN2 tried to use to get the kids to watch their network. I think ESPN2 was the downfall of ESPN. It caused the company to stop focusing on the "S" for Sports and focus more on the "E" for Entertainment. Plus, it gave us Keith Olbermann in a leather jacket.

*involuntarily shudders*

2001 Topps Archives


In 1983, Topps reprinted its iconic 1952 set thanks to the huge interest in cards like Mickey Mantle and Eddie Mathews going stratospherically high -- a Mantle sold for over $4,000 in 1982, after all! Then, in 1991, the 1953 set got reprinted followed 3 years later by the 1954 reprint.

Why did that stop and the reprints of cards from 1988 start? 

Was it just the cost of trying to get clearance from former players and players' estates to reuse their images? Was it just too much work to do that? All those are plausible reasons, I suppose. But part of me would much prefer a 1957 reprint set over reusing the design for modern players. 

That might just be me, though.

More Recent Cards

Well, damn. The storms are starting to pick up a bit here and the light just flickered. So, I'd better finish this up before I lose power. This is nuts -- it's mid-January and we're having a weekend of thunderstorms and highs around 70 degrees.

I'd write-up something about Callix Sadeaq Crabbe, but that name is cool enough. From the Virgin Islands, high school in Stone Mountain here in the Atlanta area, and a 39 plate-appearance career with the Padres in 2008. He's now the proprietor of Crabbe-ology

Many thanks go out for the great cards to Kerry. 

3 comments:

  1. I actually don't mind the Twitter thing, but for the first time (since the '50s?) they are not showing all the stats on the back, which is a travesty.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Tony are we going to do that show in Macon on the first Saturday in February? Its getting close

    ReplyDelete
  3. The twitter handle is kinda cool...in my opinion, just wish it wasn't so big...

    ReplyDelete