My favorite: The Sizemore is pretty good, but the Thome has more character than the rest of the cards combined.
Your favorite: ???
My favorite: The Sizemore is pretty good, but the Thome has more character than the rest of the cards combined.
Your favorite: ???
My favorite: Several good junk wax cards here but 1993 is an easy pick for my favorite.
Your favorite???
My favorite: I have to go with the action shot of a great Yankee. These are all great cards though.
Your favorite: ???
Diamond Jesters proposed a nice blog bat-around idea, ranking the cards with your birthday number. I have a June birthday so there are a fair amount of cards that fit the criteria. Every set from 1969 on except for the late '90s when the set size shrunk for a few years. Even better, my birth date is the 25th, and 25 has sometimes been a "hero number" for Topps, so star players would be well represented.
I thought about doing a ranking, but instead decided on something a little different. There are 51 #625s in Topps flagship, so that breaks out into five 10-card posts (one with 11). I'm going to find something nice to say about each card and each player. Then I will pick my favorite, and invite the readers to pick theirs.
The first Expos star. Nice spring training shot.The 1964 Cy Young winner. If an all-sand card is a Tatooine card, then this should be considered an Endor card.HOFer, one of the best base stealers of all time. I like how on his jersey you can see the two birds but not the bat.Former White Sox owner Louis Comiskey is on the award, renamed for Jackie Robinson in 1987. I like all the yellow on the card.Hit a walkoff pinch-single in Game 4 of the 1972 World Series. Some more great yellow on this card.One of the best right-field arms of his era. Zero-year-card - Traded to the Angels in October; bought by the Astros in March.1970 AL MVP. Great shot of him saying "I've got it!" But why are the fans turned the wrong way?Led the NL in strikeouts twice. Great jacket.Five World Series rings, and the third and most recent no-hitter with zero strikeouts. Nice photo from the first year of the new Yankee Stadium.The only Astro to be named team MVP four times. Simple head-shot but it goes well with one of Topps' best, most classic designs.My favorite: The vintage era is tough, with players like Mack the Knife and Downtown Ollie Brown. But I can't vote against a great vintage Hall of Famer in Lou Brock.
Your favorite: ???
Oceanside School of Music operated from 1957-2018, when the owners retired and the shop was acquired by a chain of music schools. Like many local storefront music schools they also sell instruments. I noticed some very old decals among the many on their door. I guess guitar companies would designate certain stores as authorized dealers. There are decals from Ovation for 1987 and 1988, and one for B.C. Rich Class Axe Guitars for 91-92. Looks like they tried to peel them off at some point, but once they're on, they're on. For nearly 40 years now!
Great photo on the front.
A couple of interesting cartoons on the back.The 1987 Ozzie movie was basically just a documentary about the Wizard.
I remember the reference to the casually-dressed list on the back of his 1987 Topps card. It was a pretty obscure list - put out by a small retailer called California Mart in 1982 to drive some publicity for their casual clothes. According to their fashion director, "the casual look is the style of the Eighties". Joining Smith on the list was a varied group - 49ers QB Joe Montana, entertainers Pat Boone, Johnny Carson, Cary Grant, Hal Linden, Luciano Pavarotti, Robert Wagner and Billy Dee Williams, and the recently resigned Secretary of State, Alexander Haig.
Cake won the last 1976 matchup, 8-2. Who will kick off 1977 with a win?
Hostess goes with a simple spring training portrait of Palmer, while Topps gives us an action shot a Memorial Stadium with a red-orange Orioles jersey. One of the greatest pitchers of all time, Palmer won at least 20 games for eight out of nine seasons from 1970-1978. He twice led the league in ERA, and his 2.86 career ERA is third lowest since 1920. He was a six-time All Star and won three Cy Young Awards. In his 19-year career he never allowed a grand slam or back-to-back home runs. In 558 games he went 268-152 with 2,212 strikeouts. Well-known for a variety of advertising and commercial appearances, most notably for Jockey, Palmer has been an Orioles and national TV announcer since his 1984 retirement.Last time 1962 squeaked by with a 6-5 win. Who will come out on top here?
Hatless Ray Ripplemeyer poses in spring training in his Cincinnati Redlegs pinstripes. Originally signed by the Braves in 1954, Ray Rippelmeyer finally made his major league debut with the Senators in 1962. He pitched in 18 games in his only big league season, going 1-2 with a 5.49 ERA. After his playing career he was a long time minor league coach and owned a farm in Illinois. He died in 2022.Mike Brown hangs out in the dugout of Tiger Stadium. He had been an August trade acquisition from Boston. Brown pitched for the Red Sox and Mariners from 1982 to 1987. In 61 games (42 starts) he went 12-20 with a 5.75 ERA. After his playing career he was a long time minor league coach and scout for several organizations. He retired after the 2020 season.
Mets pitcher Jon Matlack at spring training.
April 2, 1973 in St. Petersburg.The back image comes from Kevin Savage Auctions. This went for only $14, by far the cheapest I've seen one of these go for.
This is the same date they give for the Tom Seaver card, which I suspect was incorrect. If that date was wrong, I can't feel terribly confident about this one either.
The front: Nice spring training shot for Thornton.
The back: This is an error card; Thornton's cycle was on April 22, 1978, not 1979.
The player: Andre Thornton was a good-hitting first baseman for the Cubs, who developed into a great hitter with the Indians in the late 1970s. He missed the 1980 season due to a knee injury, but came back for several solid seasons as a DH before retiring after the 1987 season. Thornton had three season of 32+ HR and 99+ RBI. The two-time All-Star played in 1,565 games over 14 seasons, hitting .254 with 253 HR and 895 RBI. He walked 876 times, more than his 851 strikeouts.The man: For over 20 years Thornton has been CEO of ASW Global, an Akron-based 3PL supply chain services company with over 100 employees. He is also on the board of several charitable organizations.
My collection: I have 40 of his cards, from 1974 to 1988. I would be interested in trading for 1979 Hostess #93.
So last Friday I did a roundup post, and mentioned that I'd gotten one PWE from robglessner of TCDB a week prior but was still waiting on another one. Guess what arrived later that day? Nice mix of vintage cards (the '59 Lollar, which is in very nice shape, is up for trade, as I'd goofed in my TCDB list and already had the card) and 80's oddballs.
The last of my incoming 2025s came in from tommystokes1976. I'm down to needing two cards to knock off Series I: #20 Coby Mayo and #74 Dylan Crews. Anyone got these for trade? As far as I know neither of these are big-name propsects.jbostic sent this fun mix with a lot of wacky photos from the days when card companies still did that. That '98 UD card is not a victim of being stuck to another card; that's Rockies catcher Kirt Manwaring running through an early-April snow.Vintage trades don't come around often on TCDB but I was able to swing a nice one with JJDaddio.OBC's Joe Isaac surprised me with five fabulous fifties cards.Finally, another terrific Time Travel Trade with Diamond Jesters. It's a bit Mets heavy, but I do love Polo Grounds shots with Manhattan apartment buildings in the background, like on the '81 TCMA Duke Snider, and the Home Run Apple is a cool card too. Adding a couple of needed cards from my first football card set ('86 Topps) was great too.