Saturday, September 28, 2024

50 years for 50 cents (or less)

It's shop hop season--which is a quilting thing, but I digress--and that means trips to card shops on the road. Aside from looking at different boxes and packs, it's a great opportunity to work through the discount trays. My favorite regional shop over in Peoria has a 50 cent box, which I thought would be more fun to flip through than the team boxes I usually sort through.

Early on in my browse, I spotted a bunch of 2001 Topps Baseball together. The 50th anniversary set with its dark green border and bold gold logo, is one that I missed the first time around. I have a few cards mainly from repacks, so it's a set on my long term to-build goals, though not yet on my want list.

My pull: 9 base cards and 2 insers. I didn't need much convincing on which cards to grab. Pedro Martinez & Randy Johnson, good start.

The front and back images of Topps 2001 card 60 for Pedro Martinez

I noticed on the Pedro card is that 2001 would be his 4th year with the Red Sox, and that he'd wait another 3 years before the team's epic run to the World Series. Boston finished 2nd behind the Yankees each of those years. In my time-compressed memory, I had remembered Pedro helped turn the team around, but thought his arrival came a lot closer to 2004. 

Card front and back images for Topps 2001 Topps Noteworthy card 11 for Randy Johnson

Johnson is on a Topps Noteworthy insert set. Sadly, the most noteworthy element of the card is the same broken typewriter font that Topps used on '94 Stadium Club. It's a bit like reading a ransom note. Still, I've always been a fan of Johnson, and 2001 is a season that really sticks for me, courtesy of the D-backs World Series run.

How about both Pedro and the Big Unit on the same card? Sure!

Front and back images for Topps 2001 baseball card 399 featuring Randy Johnson, with 342 strikeouts, and Pedro Martinez, with 284 strikeouts

A two-sided league leaders card is a different look, as is the foil treatment on the front. I feel a little bad for pitchers 2-10 in each league being left off the typical lists on the back, but I'll take the trade-off of two full-sized images. I wonder if anyone considered numbering this card as 626 for the combined number of strikeouts.

The other insert, also a Topps Noteworthy, is for 2023 Hall of Famer Scott Rolen. It's a good reminder of the bits in his early career that he could be good for a while. 

Front image for Topps 2001 card TN-21 Scott Rolen

Picked up another HOFer in Fred McGriff. I'll keep it in my PC binder until I get more of the set. Or get more copies--one for the set, one for the Rays team collection.

Front image of Topps 2001 card 110 for Fred McGriff.

Oh hey, another 6'10" pitcher in this group, courtesy of the three-headed prospects card: White Sox righty Jon Rauch. I feel like there was a time when the Sox would draft really tall pitchers hoping they could pitch like Johnson, or at least use the "shorter distance to the plate" theory as an advantage. 

Pitching prospects card for Topps 2001 showing Roy Oswalt, Pat Strange, and Jon Rauch.

Bonus White Sox trivia: Jon Rauch and Jon Garland share a birthday, with Garland born a year after Rauch, but also drafted one year earlier than Rauch.

BTW, the card also features Roy Oswalt, who would appear in the 2005 World Series against the Sox. White Sox fans give you thanks for giving up 5 walks and a homer in Game 3. 

Other pick-ups: Tony Gwynn, Rickey Henderson, Manny Ramirez. 

Front images for three Topps 2001 cards: Tony Gwynn, Rickey Henderson, and Manny Ramirez

Henderson in a Mariners uniform is a sad hole in my memory. I went to both Games 1 and 2 of the ALDS and didn't remember seeing him in that series.

Also, Alex Rodriguez, Will Clark, and Fernando Tatis. 

Three card images from 2001 Topps: Will Clark, Fernando Tatis, and Alex Rodriguez

Coming away with stars in hand is a pretty good day.


Sunday, July 28, 2024

Leading off: Number 1 (of 1!), Blake Snell!

 "Congratulations! You have received a 1989 Topps Baseball autograph card from 2024 Topps Baseball."

A baseball card of pitcher Blake Snell wearing a San Diego Padres uniform. The card has a black border and yellow frame to the image of Snell pitching from the stretch. Snell's autograph in blue appears on the card.

 Cool! Thanks! Nice image using the classic 1989 Topps design, a nice bright blue ink and a compact signature on the front. And hey, it's a two-time Cy Young winner and player I'd like to have. This is a cool card.

"1/1"

Excuse me? I mean, is this real? 

I stared at the card for a good two to three minutes, wondering if I had any brand new top loaders.


For the record, I do have a several serial numbered cards in my collection--according to TCDB, I have 74 baseball cards with serial numbers. I would estimate that I pulled about half of them from a pack. The other half, I picked from sale bins, opportunity pick-ups of players that I liked and wouldn't mind having. That said, I don't consider myself a hit chaser. If I get a serial numbered card, that's great. It's a fun find that makes the moment a little more special. Maybe it earns a few more looks from time to time than some other cards.

A 1/1 though. From a single pack, not a box, not a break. Truly a unique experience for me. Intuitively, it seems like it should be fairly unique for a lot of collectors. 

I continued hovering over the Detailed Add button on TCDB, slowly thinking about typing "1" in the serial number box. My wife called down that dinner was ready. I shouted up, "Wait, look at this!" I ran up the stairs, holding the top loader that now contained the card and sleeve. She spotted the autograph. I flipped the card and pointed to the foil embossed marking. 

"Okay, that was worth asking me to wait."

It had been a wait between buying the 2024 series 2 pack--shout out to Baseball Card Connection in Effingham, Illinois--and opening the pack. Definitely worth the wait in that respect. 

50 years for 50 cents (or less)

It's shop hop season--which is a quilting thing, but I digress--and that means trips to card shops on the road. Aside from looking at di...