Friday, January 12, 2018

The Good Old Days

Right around the holidays I received a PWE from my buddy Mark Kaz, formerly of This Way to the Clubhouse, that took me back to our good old days of swapping three-pocket sheets of Mets and Red Sox. Years ago we were both setup on Zistle (RIP) and it seemed like we'd each fire off a couple of PWEs a month featuring cards for the other's team collection. I'm extremely grateful that, despite the fall of Zistle, and despite the fact that Mark no longer keeps a blog, we can continue this tradition.

Let's take a look at the nine cards that greeted me in this latest envelope...

We'll start off with what was my very first in-person look at 2017 Bowman Platinum.  I really didn't buy a lot of packs, blasters or boxes in 2017, so here I am getting my first look at a set from last year with the 2018 releases just around the corner.

These aren't bad looking cards at all I have to say.  Certainly more bold, colorful, and memorable than many prior years of Bowman Platinum releases that are all jumbled together in my mind.  Nice work, Topps.

I wonder exactly how many total Henry Owens cards Topps printed up between 2015 and 2017?  It's gotta be tens of thousands.  Hundreds of thousands maybe?  In any event, this refractor is serial numbered, to /499.

Here's a 2015 Prizm card of Dustin Pedroia that looks like it features a photo that may be from a few years prior.  The Prizm set worked so much better on the hockey side, where Panini actually had a license, if you ask me.

I've added just about 4,000 baseball cards to my collection on The Trading Card Database since the collapse of Zistle, and this is the very first from 1997 Bowman Chrome.

Fleer went with a full-bleed, minimalist design for their 1999 Tradition set.  The gold foil is a bit much (this was the '90s though, so not completely surprising), but I like the photograph for sure.

This one made me smile.  The Topps Total releases remain some of my favorites from the period where I was away from the hobby, and Brian Daubach here fills a hole in my 2004 team set.

Chris Smith is kind of a cool story.  He debuted with the Red Sox in 2008, pitching with the team from May through October.  He signed with the Brewers the following year, but was back in the minors by 2010.  Toiling in the minors for years, Smith worked all the way back to the Major League level and appeared in some games with the A's over the past two seasons.  He's a 36-year-old free agent now, so his career may be over, but at least he can say he made the show.

Here's the last card Mark sent in this latest delivery, not just any 2004 Bowman Heritage card but a short-print according to TCDB!  I've recently gained an appreciation for the '55 Bowman TV set design, and I'm pleased any time I can add a Red Sox card to my collection from the Heritage set that pays it tribute.

Mark, receiving your unexpected PWE brought some joy to my holidays indeed!  I've still got a small stack of Mets in your section of my trade box, and should have some time to prepare over the holiday weekend here and return fire next week!

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Buyback Franken-set: Through the Years

Tonight's buyback franken-set post contains cards from every decade between the 1950s and the 1990s.  Here we go...

1959 Topps #359 - Bill White

In the lead-off spot, the oldest buyback of the post, a '59 Bill White.  An interesting beginning to tonight's round, as White would later serve as President of the National League from 1989 through 1994.  Seems like an obvious win as far as the franken-set goes...

...but it has to displace this Jimmy Jones to win a spot in the binder.

Easy call here, as Jimmy moves over to my 1990 Topps buyback set binder, while the '59 White makes the franken-set.

1979 Topps #203 - J.R. Richard Record Breaker

Here's a cool one, a record breaker card from the 1979 Topps set honoring J.R. Richard's 1978 record for most strikeouts in a season by a National League righty.  Okay, so there are a couple of qualifiers there for sure, but it was an impressive season nonetheless.  Richard had an even better season in '79, with 313 Ks compared to '78's 303. 

Already had a nice 1959 Topps buyback in slot 203.  A tough choice for sure here.

Going with the Richard, one of the best power pitchers in the game before a stroke prematurely ended his career.

1978 Topps #405 - Rawly Eastwick

A pretty bland '78 Rawly Eastwick is next.  Looks like quite a crowd behind him there.  Rawly was traded from the Reds to the Cardinals in 1977, and I detect some airbrushing here.

Butch Wynegar's 1979 release has been holding down slot 405 in the binder for a while now.

Going with the Wynegar here, the airbrush job definitely worked against Eastwick.

1988 Topps #44 - Lou Piniella

Next up, baseball lifer Lou Piniella.  Lou was just embarking on his lengthy managerial career here.  Is that one of his World Series rings from his championships with the Yankees in the '70s that he's sporting there?

If it is, Roberto Pena is not impressed.  This is one of those cards that, while I can't exactly articulate why, I'm just drawn to for some reason.  I have a feeling most folks would go with the Piniella here...

...but it's my project, and I just like that Pena card too much to oust it at this point.  A Piniella from his playing days may have had a chance, but this one didn't make the cut.

1993 Topps #478 - Greg Cadaret

Sticking with the Yankees theme for a minute, here's an interesting horizontal shot of pitcher Greg Cadaret.  I like the photo here, and this set is one that I have fond memories of from my collecting youth.

This '78 Topps buyback of Red Sox color commentator Jerry Remy stands in Cadaret's path to franken-set glory.

Another easy call there.

1989 Topps #311 - Chris Bosio

Could Chris Bosio look any less excited to be included in the 1989 Topps baseball set?  Even a Brewers fan might have a hard time finding much to like about this buyback.

On the other hand, this '65 Orlando Pena, which is currently sitting in slot 311 of the binder, is a thing of beauty.  I'm a huge fan of the yellow and green KC A's uniforms of the '60s.

Took about 2 seconds to make that decision.  Half a dozen cards in, and not one new number for the franken-set so far.  Let's mix it up and finish out the post with a quartet of 2017 Heritage buybacks and see if they fare any better...

1968 Topps #591 - Dick Nen

A high number Cubbie starts us off.  In fact, at #591 this is my highest numbered buyback from the '60s so far.  I don't detest the burlap '68s like a lot of collectors seem to, but this one's hard to get excited about.

This '88 Doug Drabek buyback gets pitted against Dick Nen.

Drabek remains in the binder and Nen is off to the rejected box.  The presence of a baseball cap would've improved his chances.

1968 Topps #122 - Gene Mauch

Now that's more like it!  A manager card, which I'm a fan of generally speaking, and a much better photo to boot (complete with cap!).  The Phillies may have had a sub-par season in '68, finishing 8th in the National League with a sub-.500 record, but this one makes the binder as my first #122 buyback.  Gene Mauch to the rescue, preventing me from getting skunked on new numbers for the project this evening.

1968 Topps #114 - Ron Swoboda

Here's another nice one, featuring outfielder Ron Swoboda.  Ron, who was a member of the Miracle Mets team the year after this card was issued, drove in a career-high 59 runs in 1968.  Does he make the franken-set binder?

Well, there's already a '74 Topps Angels team card in slot 114.  Nolan Ryan and Frank Robinson were on the roster, however the team had a horrific year by any standard, managing just 68 wins.

Going with the Swoboda!

1968 Topps #380 - Ken Holtzman

Here's the last card for tonight, and maybe the best yet of my small lot of 2017 Heritage box-topper buybacks.  It's the only one I have from the All-Star subset anyway.  Holtzman's best years were actually still ahead of him here, including a couple of no-hitters!

A really good match-up here, as HOFer Dave Winfield laid claim to slot 380 a while back.

Once again saved by my 1990 Topps buyback set, as Dave will slide nicely into that binder.  The definition of a win/win for sure.

Just one new number today vs. nine conflicts, but the set still improved with a couple of new contenders battling their way into the binder.  Strengthening my 1990 buyback set with a couple of new cards including a guy enshrined in Cooperstown didn't hurt either.

Franken-set Progress:  522/792 (65%)
"Rejected" Buybacks:  406
Total Buybacks in Collection: 928

Monday, January 8, 2018

Still Haven't Seen Star Wars

Still haven't seen the new Star Wars movie yet, which is unlike me.  Maybe this weekend if things line up.  I do have two Star Wars buybacks from 2017's 40th Anniversary set to share with you though...


A couple of noteworthy scenes from the first-ever movie there.  I've got 7 of these buybacks in my collection now, if my count is accurate.

Believe it or not, that's all I've got time for tonight.  Just been one of those days...

Sunday, January 7, 2018

Chipping Away at the WHA

Something about sub-zero temperatures and shoveling snow just gets me in the mood for hockey cards.  Understandable, I guess.  Anyway, as I touched on in my 2017 re-cap, one of the areas I hope to make better progress on in 2018 within my collection would be WHA hockey cards.

My long term goal is to complete the entire '70s WHA run, but I'm targeting the very first WHA hockey cards to begin with, from the high series of the standard '72-73 O-Pee-Chee set.  There are 51 total WHA subjects in the set, and I closed out 2017 with 11 of them.  40 more to go, I'd love to cut that number in half this year.  Let's knock one off the list today anyway...

My first Minnesota Fighting Saints card from this release is right winger Wayne Connelly.  Wayne actually had a lengthy and fairly successful run at the NHL level beginning in the early 1960s, before transitioning to the WHA to wind down his career.  Random trivia fact, Bobby Orr's first career point came as an assist on a powerplay goal that Wayne scored in October of 1966!

The Fighting Saints lasted about 3 and 3/4 seasons in the WHA before folding.  Yes, I said 3 and 3/4.  The WHA was such an adventure that just because you started a season as a franchise didn't necessarily mean you were going to finish it.  Though you don't get a look at it on this card, they had one of the more "interesting" logos you'll probably ever see:


Here's the back.  These are all about the fronts if you ask me, but it is kinda cool that it mentions Wayne's shot being so hard that he broke plexiglass on more than one occasion.

I got this one in a lot of '72-73 OPC cards that included some of the regular lower series NHL cards as well, so why not take a look at a couple of those while we're at it here...

Here's another winger.  Lowell MacDonald played in just over 500 NHL games, recording 390 career points.  His best years came with the Pens, right around when this set was released.

Last of today's trio, goaltender Dan Bouchard.  Love those brown pads!  Dan would become an NHL regular for many seasons, but '72-73 was actually his rookie campaign.  A couple of nice commons, but...

...at the end of the day it was the WHA cards that drove me to this lot.  Nice to be up to an even dozen of these now!

Seems like it's going to be a long winter here in New England, so I'm sure I'll have plenty of motivation to post more of these in the coming weeks...

Saturday, January 6, 2018

2018's First "COMC Blaster"

Let's raid my card chest where I store past COMC hauls for the first time in 2018 here to see how far we can get building a virtual "blaster" with $20 worth of credit...

Why on Earth would this '71 Jim Nelson be in the lead-off spot?  Well, because it's an O-Pee-Chee card, which means...

...glorious floating head!  This one cost me just 40 cents, and I'm basically grabbing just about any new card from this release for that price.  Especially a Pirate, given that they won the World Series that year.

Still plugging slowly away at the 3-D Lenticular inserts from the 2015 Upper Deck Dinosaurs set.  The Velociraptor here puts me at a half dozen, and it sure looks quite a bit different than the ones that were conceived for 1993's Jurassic Park film.

Here's one more, featuring a dinosaur I hadn't heard of, the Pinacosaurus.  Apparently these roamed in what is now modern day Mongolia and China.  This one was had for 99 cents, while I had to pony up $1.64 for the raptor.

While I don't collect football cards, I did pick up a pair of these 1969 Topps Boston Patriots cards last year because the price was right (67 cents for this one).  Art was a successful wide receiver with the team for a few years in the '60s.  I didn't know this when I picked up the card, but apparently his father played in some games with the Boston Red Sox in the mid-'30s.  How cool is that?

Love the amount of room dedicated to the cartoons in this release.

Here's one that I wouldn't necessarily buy nowadays, but went for a couple of years back now in a parallel frenzy.  Certainly an example of a "Future Star" that didn't quite pan out as Topps predicted.  These days, the 70 cents I spent on this one would be better used on a vintage card, but oh well.

This one, on the other hand, I'm quite pleased with.  I'll never turn down a nice, new card of the most dominant pitcher I've ever seen pitch for the Red Sox with my own two eyes.  This is a Gold Diffractor from Topps High Tek, numbered to /99.  At $1.10 I think I got more than a fair deal on this one, especially since I'm a sucker for acetate.

The Electric Ice parallels in the mid-'90s Upper Deck hockey sets take me right back to my collecting youth.  They came at one-per-pack in the 1995-96 set, but this one's an Electric Ice Gold, which fell at just one-per-box!  I'll occasionally scoop these up when I can find them at less than a buck, as was the case with Kris Draper here (75 cents).  Can't go wrong with a Paul Coffey cameo either.

At $2.65, this Xander Bogaerts is the most expensive card in today's post.  It might be the best deal as well though, as these Orange parallels in 2015 Bowman are limited to just 25 copies.  A nice relatively rare piece for my ever-growing Bogaerts collection for less than $3, can't beat that!

This one's actually been waiting to be pulled for posting since 2015 if you can believe that.  I was drawn to it because I'm a sucker for colored parallels and for serial-numbered cards, and this meets both criteria (the Blue Refractors were numbered to 99 in 2011 Topps Chrome).  Not a bad pick-up for 85 cents.

My love of buybacks is generally constrained to the flagship Topps sets as far as baseball goes, but this Allen & Ginter buyback of J.D. Drew was a neat addition to my Sox collection for just 40 cents.  I don't make a habit of seeking these out but at that price I couldn't resist.

Thanks to Upper Deck's ePack promotion, it's been possible to land Young Guns rookie cards for pretty much dirt cheap for a couple of years or more now.  I took advantage of this and grabbed one of the talented young forwards from Nashville's roster in Viktor Arvidsson.  Hailing from Sweden, Viktor possesses some good speed and a knack for putting the puck in the net.  He's already accumulated more than 50 career goals and more than 100 career points, and he's still only 24 years old.  Not a bad rookie card for $1.25 if you ask me.

I still remember Robin Van Persie from the days when he was scoring constantly while teamed up with Wayne Rooney for Manchester United.  This Blue parallel (#'d /299) from one of my favorite soccer sets, 2015 Select, was too good to pass up at just 59 cents.

This is the last Red Sox card in today's post.  Why would I buy a Topps Bunt card on COMC?  Because this is actually a Platinum parallel, serial-numbered to /99.  I thought I got a great deal on it when the seller accepted my low-ball offer of $1.15, especially since Mookie seems to be one of the hottest names in the hobby.  It'll be interesting to see what kind of numbers Betts puts up in 2018.

I have a few really great Mario Lemieux cards, but in truth he probably doesn't get the amount of love in my collection that he deserves.  This awesome, bright sticker insert from O-Pee-Chee helps rectify that in some small way for 74 cents.

I love the playing card inserts that Panini did for 2013 Golden Age.  This is just my second one to date, though I think I have a few more floating around in the chest waiting to be plucked for a future post if memory serves.  How much did Henry Ford here set me back?  Just 50 cents.

I've been meaning to get plugging away on the multi-product Gretzky Record Collection insert set from Upper Deck for a while now, and as card #1 on the checklist this is a great start.  With a fantastic photograph, this card is a solid addition to my collection of the greatest player ever to lace up skates, especially for just 89 cents.

The 1994 Action Packed Minor League set had a small Roberto Clemente subset towards the end of the checklist, honoring the fact that four decades had passed since his Major League debut.  Finally got around to grabbing one here for 75 cents; what a visually striking card.  I certainly miss Action Packed.  As cool as this one is, I've landed two incredible Clemente cards in the past month or two that absolutely dwarf it.  Look for those to debut on the blog in the near future!

65 cents spent, one card closer to my casual goal of attaining every Golden Seals hockey card.  That was really my sole motivation with this one.  Well, that and the fact that I really like the '72-73 Topps and O-Pee-Chee hockey sets I guess.

I'm really having a good time plugging away at the beast that is 1959 Topps baseball.  I know I won't finish it this year given the number of HOFers and tough high-series cards that I'm still missing, but it sure does feel great every time I slide a new card into the binder.  Feels especially good when it's a high-series card like Darrell Johnson here that I paid just 59 cents for.  Insane.  I picked this up during 2016's Black Friday sale, and I don't think I've seen a high-series card for this little coin since!

Here's another high-series card, from just a couple spots before Darrell Johnson on the checklist.  The infamous Wally Moon and his eyebrow.  This one's in a bit rougher shape, and I had to shell out $1.60 for it.  Still a good deal when it comes to that tough final series of the set honestly.  Just two '59s in tonight's grouping, but still feels like significant progress and it puts me at a nice, tidy 275 cards in my set now...

Here's the final card for tonight, from another set I'm working diligently on, 1971-72 Topps hockey.  The checklist is relatively small, so this set won't pose quite the challenge that '59 Topps baseball will, but it's still far from easy.  When I worked out a deal for this Alex Delvecchio for just $1.24 I was pumped.  A HOFer, in great condition and well-centered (which can be a challenge with these) for just a shade over a dollar was an easy call.

Well, that brings tonight's running total to $20.10, so I'll stop there for now.  With 21 total cards in the "blaster" I basically ended up paying just shy of a dollar per card here if you average it out.  I say this every time, in fact it's kind of the point of the exercise, but I'll take that over a random blaster from Target any day!

Thanks for stopping by as always!
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