In case you missed it, 2017 Topps Heritage Has been really, really good to me. So when my LCS owner sent me a text yesterday to let me know he got his '17 High Number in a day early, you know I was all over it.
I opened the box and, as is my custom, began by opening the first pack on the right. I don't know why I do it that way - I'm a creature of habit.
Anyway, the very first pack offered up my guaranteed hit:
A Clayton Kershaw Clubhouse Collection relic. I've never heard of this guy...I hope he's decent. You know how lefty pitchers are.
After that, I noticed this guy:
This is the image variation of Brandon Phillips' card. Not as nice as the action variations I pulled earlier this year, but I won't complain.
I also saw this in my box:
Evidently, Nolan has his own insert set centered on his career accomplishments. That's pretty cool.
I also pulled a blue parallel:
I know nothing about this guy other than he plays for Boston.
While opening the last pack in the middle "column" of packs in my box, I found something weird. As a superstitious person, this made me a bit uncomfortable.
These were the first two cards in the pack. Exactly the same, front...
...and back. In case you are wondering why this made me uncomfortable, check out the card number. I've never had a problem with collation in a Heritage product, so it was odd for me to find this in a pack. Even more strange (or coincidental) is the card numbering. I don't like it and I wonder how it happened.
Anyway, I was plugging along until I was opening the next-to-last pack. I opened it and saw a thick card. Once again, I assumed it was going to be a '68 Mint card.
Once again, I was wrong.
Another Clubhouse Collection relic auto card, this time of Addison Russell! It's no Mike Trout, but the relic is far superior. How sweet is that?!?!?!
Anyway, now I am debating buying another box. I know it's foolish, especially considering that don't need that many more cards to complete the set. But landing a big fish will do that to you.
Side note - I have a few posts in my queue waiting for scans. If you sent me something, please don't think I forgot you - I just haven't had enough time to scan everything yet!!!
Showing posts with label Cubs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cubs. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 13, 2017
Monday, August 28, 2017
Today Was A Good Day (I Didn't Even Have To Use My AK)
Today was the first day of classes. It is even more special for me, as I begin my last semester. If I keep on track, I'll finish my dissertation in October and I'll be done. October can't get here soon enough.
I also got a text from my LCS owner to let me know that my PSA order was in. I decided to drop in to pick it up. I had five cards in the order:
Five Kris Bryant rookies! Three PSA 10s and two PSA 9s (one of which is from Chrome). I decided a while back that I should get this graded and slabbed, for both protection and re-sale value. Bryant seems to have staying power (so far), and while I doubt he will be on Trout's level, it would be nice if his rookies grow in value in a similar way that Trout's rookie did.
While I was in the shop, I decided to grab a couple of boxes of the 2017 Topps Clearly Authentic. I watched a few case breaks of these and I really dig the cards. I opened the first box and thought to myself, "Oh great, a freakin' redemption." I'm still waiting on other redemptions, the last thing I need is another in in the queue.
But then I read the name on the card:
So...yeah. I'll take that. This is officially my first dip into the Aaron Judge auto-mania pool. I immediately listed the card on eBay. The card seems to bring decent money, and I would like to take advantage of that before his value bottoms out. That being said, there is definitely a part of me that wants to redeem this one.
My second box was okay:
Well, maybe it was better than okay. Alex Bregman is a nice pull, also! This is the second Bregman I have pulled (I also pulled one from 2016 Bowman's Best). That was a bad day at the shop!
If I am being honest, these aren't the first boxes of Clearly Authentic that I have bought. I also picked up a couple last week. The pulls weren't quite as nice.
Carson Fulmer was the first...
...And Javier Baez was the second. Baez isn't bad, and I think Fulmer can be a solid starter, but neither of these are on the Judge/Bregman level (in my opinion).
So there it is, a handful of PSA Bryants and a handful of Clearly Authentic.
It was a good day.
(And I didn't even have to use my AK)
Tuesday, April 4, 2017
A Questioned Answered
Last month, I wondered aloud why Aroldis Chapman was featured as a Yankee on his 2017 Heritage base card, but as a Cub on his Chrome and mini parallels.
Well, fear not: the blogosphere's most loved Sooz came to the rescue and gave a reason.
According to her,
"It's the timing of when the cards are due to the printer. The chrome and parallels have to be there much sooner than the base cards. There is essentially a late form that goes out for the base to get free agent signings and offseason trades. So Topps tries to capture it when they can."
Sooz is definitely an authority on the subject, so this answer is good as gold for me.
Thank you, ma'am, for your insight!
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
A Post That Has Been Waiting For A While
Back in August, I posted about how my one-bedroom apartment is not conducive to a baseball card collection. I asked for input on how everyone stores their collection, and this turned into a contest, asking other bloggers to post about their card room. Finally, I asked my readers to read these posts and vote on their favorite.
P-Town Tom won the contest! He was slightly more excited to win my contest than he was to see the Cubs win the World Series (at least, that's what I tell myself). Tom's room is great, as were the other contestants. This was probably my most popular post!
A few weeks later, I asked Tom a series of questions about his "card cave" (see what I did there?!). I did so with the intention of starting a new series on my blog. That didn't happen - at least, not yet. I would love to do it, I just haven't had the opportunity.
Regardless, I want to share that information with you now! Also, be sure to read all the way through. I have information about a new contest after Tom's tour!!!
-------------------------
Your
name: Tom Olson
Blog
Handle: P-town Tom
Your
blog (with address): Waiting ‘til Next Year… (http://tilnextyear-tom.blogspot.com/)
A
little bit about you: I’m a high school math teacher and coach of a junior high
girls softball team in the fall and varsity boys baseball in the spring. I’m
very much a numbers guy and a bit of a neat freak. I’m more of an introvert
with my personal life and sure-fire extrovert at work. I love pizza, craft
beer, being active and anything that has to do with baseball. No kids, but my loving wife and I share a
house with three cats.
Why/when
did you get into collecting? Once upon a time there was a ten year old boy who was invited
to his best friend's birthday party. Each guest was given a brown paper
bag fun of trinkets from the local dollar star as a party favor. At the
bottom there was a rack pack of 1988 Topps. His first baseball cards.
Fast forward one year to the summer of 1989 and the same boy now has a bedroom full of 1989 Topps and Donruss; he has declared his favorite player to be Ryne Sandberg. His sister has claimed Andre Dawson and has a slightly smaller collection. Dad is working on the 1989 Fleer set and chuckles at the F-Face Billy Ripken card.
Mom? She likes the higher end Upper Deck set and has nearly a handful of Griffey rookies stashed away. Mom favors Mitch "Wild Thing" Williams... something about long hair and tight pants. In short, the house is more or less one big baseball card storage box.
It was something the whole family did together. How cool is that?
What
do you collect? I have always been a set
builder, but I try to only build one current year set every year. There are
no self-imposed limits on older sets.
I also have official player collections of Ryne
Sandberg, Kerry
Wood, Dan Vogelbach, Kosuke
Fukudome, Brooks
Kieschnick and Karl
Olson.
Lastly, the Cubs are my team and I’ll keep one copy of every Cub
card I can find.
Show
us your card cave! Please label pictures with numbers, then offer a brief
description for each picture.
Below are pictures of what one sees when they first enter the 12.5'
by 14' room.
There are bobbleheads on the shelves in the upper left corner and baseball
movies on VHS within the black shelving unit on the floor. Hugo likes to steal
my little stuffed dog wearing a Cubs shirt, which is right next to my Chicago
Bear wearing Joe Maddon glasses.
This is the other half of the exterior wall which contains the
garden view window. My card sorting table is in the foreground, which contains
many stacks of basketball cards from an inherited collection. (Anyone want some
basketball cards?) You can get a better look at the table here. I spend a lot of hours on the green two-seater, as you can
probably tell by the cushions.
For the record, the stop light works! I also have some ivy along the ceiling of
the room to give it a little of that Wrigley feel. If you look closely along
the baseboard on the right you can see a blue speck. That's one of my wife's
Dove chocolate wrappers that we give the cats to play with. Simple pleasures.
Here's a shot of the closet, which is pictured in the right of the above two pictures.
Here's a shot of the closet, which is pictured in the right of the above two pictures.
There are lots of baseball related things hanging on the wall
I could point out, but instead I'll point out the hanging black cape, which
I've used to dress up as "Math Man" on a couple of occasions. I'm a nerd, I know.
On the left are all of my non-Cubs cards. Binders of complete sets
and monster boxes of others. There's a shoe box on the top, which houses all of
my favorite non-Cub cards and just below that is the shelf where I keep cards
that need to be sorted into my trade box for specific bloggers. It's pretty
empty right now, because I made a concerted effort to get things in order
before the school year started. Go me!
The right half of my card closet is all Cubs cards. My Sandberg
binder, the FrankenSet binder and many others are housed here. On the the
shelves above the binders are my Cubs monster boxes, which contain all of my
unique Cubs cards including vintage, junk wax, modern cards, autos and relics.
The very top two shelves are where all of my packaging supplies are stored.
One of my summer projects was adding in three wood shelves to each side of my Card Closet. I'm much happier with the usable space I have now.
One of my summer projects was adding in three wood shelves to each side of my Card Closet. I'm much happier with the usable space I have now.
The green chest contains more completed sets and all of my
basketball and football cards from early collecting days. It's actually the
mother in-law's toy chest from her childhood. On top of those are two
2,400-count boxes of cards to be dispersed among my blogging brethren. The
trade boxes! They're not in the closet because I'm in and out of them so
frequently.
The above shot shows my Brandon Hyde (1st base coach of the Cubs)
jersey and my homemade bat rack, which I'm really proud of. One of the bats was
what my mom and her siblings played with when they were kids and the one on the
far right is my fungo for when I coach spring baseball.
The door is flanked by the recliner and bat rack on one side and
this corner on the other side. Hanging from the ceiling is my Fear the Fleer entry for Thorzul's Nightmare on Cardboard 2013
contest, which I couldn't part with.
The "Go Cubs Go" is a hand painted sign from
Grandfather. A scratching post for the cats is in the room... you know, because
of cats. Of the two cabinets on the wall, the right one is the fuse box and the
left one looks like this:
My wife bought this cabinet at a garage sale and re-purposed
it to store some of my collection. I use it to keep dust off my favorite
bobbleheads, autographed baseballs, pictures and ticket stubs.
Lastly, we have the television stand which I completed about a year and a half ago. It houses baseball singles organized in boxes, a couple of binders, DVDs, books and bobbleheads. I absolutely love this piece.
Lastly, we have the television stand which I completed about a year and a half ago. It houses baseball singles organized in boxes, a couple of binders, DVDs, books and bobbleheads. I absolutely love this piece.
We've come full circle! I really enjoy spending time in my man
room. I could be sorting cards, ripping packs, building trade packages, or
perhaps just kicking back with Gus and watching the Cubs.
It's my place to get away from the real world and be a care free kid
again.
Show
us your favorite piece of memorabilia in your card cave! I have plenty of autographs on cards, baseballs, and bats,
but that’s not what my mind went to first. I have an old bat my mom played with
as a kid (mentioned previously), which was what I thought of first. But I took
a stroll around the room I found something else that means more to me than a
bat I never swung.
This was my parting gift from my college baseball coach after I
played four years of baseball at Eureka College, a Division III school from Ben
Zobrist’s home town. Sure, as a team we went 31-119 over four years, but it was
so much fun. I went from middling bullpen arm to closer by the end of my
freshman year. I lost most of my sophomore year to arm surgery. I was the #2
starting pitcher my junior and senior years. We had spring trips, crazy
superstitions, and probably more fun than was allowed. I look at this framed
picture and the memories just come racing back.
Good stuff.
Show
us your favorite card! This card takes me back to the
days before adulthood. It was part of my very first peoria chiefs team
set. I loved that set, had it in a binder, and had every player's name and
face committed to memory. Eleven year old me was an autograph hound and
back then I had no trouble collecting autographs, but I was only after the
players. A card with Pete and Harry didn't really draw my interest.
Sometime in the early 1990's my family attended a cubs game at Wrigley Field. I'm still not sure how he did it, but my dad was able to secure a brief moment of time with Harry Caray. My dad had the card with him and Harry's pen reads, "Holy cow! Harry Caray". Every cub fan knew of Harry Caray. I was so stoked.
It didn't strike me until much later to ask Pete Vonachen, the "father of minor league baseball", for his autograph.
Fast forward a good ten years or so . . . I was still single, but I had started my career, and I was attending Peoria Chiefs baseball games at a huge clip. My sister, who was an intern for the Chiefs, would help score my friend and I tickets. We would usually go down to the park, have a couple of adult beverages, look at the talent (on and off the field) and then finish the evening in downtown P-town. Sometime during the summer of 2002, when I briefly re-entered the hobby, I asked Pete for his autograph. I would always say "hi" to Pete on the concourse. Even though I was just another fan to him, he was one of those people who I have always held in very high regard: he brought baseball to Peoria and he managed to keep the game I love in Peoria!
It's hard to top a card which has ties to myself as a young collector, my dad, the Cubs, the Chiefs, and Pete & Harry.
Sometime in the early 1990's my family attended a cubs game at Wrigley Field. I'm still not sure how he did it, but my dad was able to secure a brief moment of time with Harry Caray. My dad had the card with him and Harry's pen reads, "Holy cow! Harry Caray". Every cub fan knew of Harry Caray. I was so stoked.
It didn't strike me until much later to ask Pete Vonachen, the "father of minor league baseball", for his autograph.
Fast forward a good ten years or so . . . I was still single, but I had started my career, and I was attending Peoria Chiefs baseball games at a huge clip. My sister, who was an intern for the Chiefs, would help score my friend and I tickets. We would usually go down to the park, have a couple of adult beverages, look at the talent (on and off the field) and then finish the evening in downtown P-town. Sometime during the summer of 2002, when I briefly re-entered the hobby, I asked Pete for his autograph. I would always say "hi" to Pete on the concourse. Even though I was just another fan to him, he was one of those people who I have always held in very high regard: he brought baseball to Peoria and he managed to keep the game I love in Peoria!
It's hard to top a card which has ties to myself as a young collector, my dad, the Cubs, the Chiefs, and Pete & Harry.
Identify
two or three of your favorite pieces in your card cave!
I am really proud of the items I have made with my own two hands.
Do
you have anything else you want to share with us? Please do so here!
Nope, but thanks for the opportunity share what I did!
--------------------Thanks, Tom! Your collecting room is amazing. My personal favorite is your piece from your playing days. Really cool!
Now, for the contest!
There were quite a few people who didn't see the post until after the deadline when I ran the original "show us your card cave!" contest. Therefore, I am going to run it again! (Sorry Tom, as defending Champ, you have to sit this one out) Those of you that entered before, you are free to enter again! You can even use the same post if you like. For those of you that didn't participate before, now is your chance!
All you have to do is create a post giving your readers a "tour" of your card cave. When you are finished, post the link in the comments section below! This time, I will leave the contest open though Midnight (Central time) on February 1. Then I will create a post with all entries and open up voting to my readers so they can select their favorite room! The winner will receive a prize pack from me that will be determined based on your favorite baseball team! I promise the prize won't suck!
So there ya go. Let's see those card caves!
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
LCS Black Friday Box: 2014 Panini Prizm Perennial Draft Picks
Still trying to catch up on my posting. Last month, my LCS had a Black Friday sale. I was home for Thanksgiving, so I missed it. However, I made a point to visit when I returned to Lubbock. The only box he had left over was a box of 2014 Panini Prizm Perennial Draft Picks. I'm not much for logo-less cards, but I couldn't pass up the deal.
The box had a good bit of color. I snagged three colored prizm parallels:
I've heard of Castellani, but the other two are foreign to me. I looked up Norwood, and I now feel sorry for the guy. He shares a name with a European footballer (i.e. soccer player) who dressed up in blackface for a team party. Not a great look.
My box also had four autographs.
I've definitely heard of Derek Fisher. This is a base Prizm auto.
This is a Purple Prizm auto of Royals backstop Chase Vallot. Never heard of him, either.
This is a blue pulsar auto of former Dodgers' farmhand Grant Holmes. I've actually heard of Holmes. This card probably had a lot more value before he was traded to the A's.
And the final auto:
Another Grant Holmes! This one of the red prizm variety. It was a Holmes hot box!!!
Not bad for what I paid for the box. It was a fun break. All of the cards shown in this post are officially up for trade!
Saturday, December 17, 2016
Topps Sent Me a Christmas Gift
You may have seen a few of these posting up on Twitter and other blogs, but I'm going to go ahead and share just in case you haven't.
I checked my mailbox earlier today and found a Christmas card from Topps.
Included with the Christmas card was an actual card. More specifically, a Topps NOW highlight card:
Naturally, the card would feature the Cubs, the Yankees....
...and the Red Sox. Nice to see a nod to Ichiro included, also.
Now don't get me wrong, Kris Bryant represents just about everything that brought the Cubs their first title in more than 100 years. And I understand acknowledging Big Papi, as this was his last season. And Ichiro is, well, inhuman......
I don't hate Gary Sanchez, I really don't. What he did this year was incredible. But aligning that with the other three moments featured on the card isn't quite right. To me, the other moments represent a culmination of events: careers for Ichiro and Ortiz and an entire century (and more) of waiting for the Cubs.
So, you ask, what would have been more appropriate for the card?
Well, including this guy would have been my first choice:
Of all of the people retiring, I'm not sure many represent a true history of the game in the way that Mr. Vin Scully does. The man has made some of the most iconic calls in the sport's history. Scully represents the final tie to times of old. With him gone, the sport has lost it's history's keeper, essentially.
I didn't sit down to criticize Topps for their card design; the thoughts came to me as I was typing. In reality, I think it is a very kind gesture by the company to send out these cards to everyone who purchased a Topps NOW card. We often spend a good bit of time complaining about Topps, but on occasion, they get something right. This is one of those times.
Thanks Topps!
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