When I stopped by the local hobby shop a few weeks ago, I decided to try a little experiment. I picked up one hobby pack of Topps Heritage for $5. I also grabbed a rack pack of 1984 Topps baseball, which cost half the amount of the Heritage pack at $2.50. I've picked up quite a few of these '84 rack packs over time and they've always been fun to rip. I figured this would be a good way to illustrate why I gravitate towards older cards, and man was I right!
Let's take a look at the Heritage pack first...
Nine cards for $5, so we're talking more than 50 cents per individual card...
Fantastic, a boring card of a hat-less player!
I do have to say in all fairness that I love the 1962 Topps backs.
And we finish things off with probably the best card in the pack.
Still awake? Not exactly the world's most exciting pack. Do I feel like I got a decent return on my $5? Nope! Now let's look at the '84 rack pack. For just $2.50 I got over 50 cards, meaning each individual card cost me less than 5 cents compared to more than 50 cents per card with Heritage. Let's see what the pack yielded...
1st Section
Each rack pack comes with one Glossy All-Star card. I chose George Brett, let's hope he treats me well.
#485 - Rick Rhoden
#332 - Kevin Gross
Can't beat two first ballot Hall-of-Famers on one card.
#69 - Rod Scurry
#640 - Lance Parrish
#618 - Dickie Noles
#433 - Rich Hebner
#684 - Bob Shirley
#699 - Dave Rucker
#99 - Craig Lefferts
#185 - Sixto Lezcano
#247 - Onix Concepcion
#659 - Duane Walker
#343 - Mark Davis
#252 - Larry Christenson
#257 - Julio Cruz
The first section was so-so, the League Leaders cards are nice. On to section 2...
2nd Section
#612 - Harry Spilman
#657 - Thad Bosley
#342 - Tim Foli
Nice, Murphy was coming off of 2 straight NL MVP seasons in '82 and '83.
#196 - Don Slaught
#738 - Bill Schroeder
#53 - Juan Beniquez
Normally this would be card of the pack for me hands down, but there's a card in section 3 that beats even Ozzie here...
#491 - Bobby Castillo
#575 - Jim Clancy
Not exactly a picture perfect swing from Steve Balboni.
#469 - Tom O'Malley
#193 - Darrell Brown
#203 - Matt Keough
#172 - Frank DiPino
#146 - Ed Romero
#603 - Renie Martin
#624 - Terry Harper
#39 - Garth Iorg
Ozzie was definitely the star of the middle section, I'm always happy to add a new Wizard to the collection.
3rd Section
#115 - Andre Thornton
I don't think you can get a better 1984 Topps pack than this! It's exciting to pull one of the better 80's Topps rookies from a pack. This one's in great shape too, with sharp corners and pretty good centering. I've pulled Ripken and Gwynn rookies from Topps packs and now I can add Don here to the list.
#656 - Bryn Smith
#425 - Steve Howe
#93 - Bob Knepper
#749 - Doug Flynn
#642 - Tom Underwood
Toby looks like an NHL player sporting a playoff beard.
#275 - Len Matuszek
#620 - Al Oliver
#65 - Kirk Gibson
#385 - Tony Perez
#145 - Gary Lavelle
#538 - Kevin Bass
#245 - Rick Sutcliffe
So there you have it, a 2011 Heritage pack vs. a 1984 Topps rack pack. I know that I was extremely lucky to pull the Mattingly rookie, but I would go so far as to say that I'd still take the rack pack over the Heritage pack even without that card. The Ozzie Smith alone is a card I'll always keep, and I can't say that for any of the Heritage cards.
Don't get me wrong, this isn't a knock on Heritage and I realize every collector is different (which is why this hobby is so great). How about you, would you take the Heritage pack or the rack pack?
A Milestone
-
What better way to celebrate your 1000th game than a custom jersey for the
warm-up?
Other than actually being allowed to wear it during the game.
Also...
9 comments:
I'd definitely take the 84's. Another tactic is to just buy the cards from Heritage that you really want. So far I have 4 in my COMC "to be shipped" inventory. Total cost with shipping will be just $1.40. That's 35 cents a card and I got to hand pick them. As you say, we all have our ways of collecting. None wrong, just different.
I'd go with the old pack, too. I gave up on new wax a couple of years ago. Now, I just let someone else put the set together and pick up what I want directly. It's easier.
Limits the amounts of traders I get, though.
must be nice to be able to have the choice.
it ain't that way around here my friend....
I wish hockey rack packs from the 80's were that cheap! 82-83 Racks will run you about 30+ a piece around here!
But I agree, vintage won that battle for sure!
I don't think I've seen an '82-83 rack pack since ... (ponders) ... '82-83.
I remember buying one because it had Richard Brodeur on the front and he'd been eluding me.
Mattingly! Shave those sideburns!
I saw someone selling a 35 dollar 82-83 Rack pack at the swap meet last weekend. There was a Hawerchuk team leader card and a few commons on the visible portions. If I didn't have the set and doubles of almost every card I would have probably bought it just for the fun of it.
I see 1982-83 OPC Hockey Rack Packs at that big show I go to 2 times a year. Some dealer who overprices everything has them, and wants about $40 for one. Honestly, I just want a picture of it for the Wrapper Gallery.
Nice pull!
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