Wednesday, April 30, 2014

1969-70 Bazooka All-Time Greats: Cap Anson

Cap Anson is one of those Hall of Famers that I know solely through two sources of my nerdy childhood - Ken Burns' documentary and a Gigantic Baseball Encyclopedia I pored through to no end as that baseball mad kid. There wasn't even a chance for Topps to do one of my favorite things, the turn back the clock feature. Topps couldn't turn back the clock on Cap, because Cap existed before the Topps clock was wound up. But, this Anson card comes from the Topps era: 1969-70 Bazooka All-Time Greats.

The card on the left is my card. But, when I purchased this card I bought it as the 1963 Bazooka card and later found out that I had not in fact purchased the 1963 Bazooka card as I thought (pictured right). For awhile I figured I had just picked up a forgery. The card is on thick cardboard and looked like it was hand cut, so I chalked it up to my not following the caveat emptor rule of eBay shopping. But, in doing this blog I decided to do a little more research and found out that it was part of the 1969-70 Bazooka set.

Originally, the cards were attached to a box and looked like this (on left). But, since some kid in the late sixties or early seventies wanted the card, not the box he cut it off and kept it separately. I can't blame the kid because that's what I would have done as a kid. At least when he cut it, he cut it in such a way that I can get it in to one of the Tobacco Card Ultra-Pro sleeves for keeping sake. Besides that, strip cards were often cut in the 20s and 30s so it's not uncommon. Unfortunately though it cuts some of the value out of the card, but it's a nice piece of history nonetheless.
 

Monday, April 28, 2014

Sparky

My Dad went to Arizona State for his masters and has drilled into my head the love of Sparky. While his Sparky is a Disney style devil, the Sparky I'm collecting is a manager that won the Series 3 times: twice before I was born, but once since I've existed and one since I was at least alive. Even though his last world series win was captured when I was one year old I still had an affinity for him when I was younger. Honestly, I don't have a natural connection to Sparky Anderson as a manager, but some of his cards are fantastic. Right now I don't have any of the ones that I loved as a kid, but my collection does have a couple that I like. First, the 1981 Donruss card is great because I like that set. Second, the 1987 Topps card is awesome because I love that set. Beyond the beauty of the faux wood grain, that Friendly's connection to the 1987 Topps set runs really deep in my veins. The 1991 Topps card is a good one because 1991 runs smack dab in the middle of my 1987-1993 collecting hoarding era. If you've read my blog at all you'll know that 1987 was the first taste of collecting that I got and that 1994's strike broke my heart. Hence, I consider 1987-1993 my childhood collection. All others aside from those six years I consider my more mature collecting. That is a completely arbitrary line of demarcation, but it's how I break up my collecting strategy. Here are the three Sparky Andreson cards I have so far:




The Walt Alston Collection...

Walt Alston is one of those Hall Of Famers that I really don't know. He was a manager for some World Series Winning teams that featured some people I'm more familiar with. However, since Walt is a Hall of Fame member I'm collecting him and I'll learn more as I go along. So far though I've got 3 Alston cards: (2) 1969 Topps and (1) 1971 Topps. One of the 1969 Topps is in worse shape than the other; but, for the moment these are the three Alston cards I have:


Roberto Alomar Collection Thus Far...

1989 Bowman
Roberto Alomar has an interesting place in my heart. First of all, he went into the Hall of Fame as a Blue Jay playing under one of the people I detest the most in baseball - Cito Gaston. A) Cito Gaston didn't pitch Mike Mussina in the All-Star Game at Camden Yards in 1993 and B) he coached Carlos Delgado. Now, from an honest perspective Carlos Delgado isn't a half-bad guy. However, in the 1995 season he went up to rob a home run in an Orioles-Blue Jays game during batting practice and popped me in the face with his glove. The whole crowd booed him but that offered no solace to the fat lip I received in BP. Besides that, there was the whole spitting instance in Baltimore. But, nonetheless, Alomar is a deserved Hall of Famer and so, I collect him. Here is my collection so far: 1989 Bowman, 1990 Topps Stickers, with Wade Boggs on the back, 1992 Donruss Triple Play, 2005 Fleer Tradition and 2012 Panini Cooperstown.










Sunday, April 27, 2014

1985 Woolworth Topps Grover Alexander

The sole Grover Cleveland Alexander card I have is this 1985 Woolworth Topps #2. Was 1985 the dawn of the Junk Wax Era? It might've been too early to legitimately call it a junk-wax card but when stores like K-Mart and Woolworth started to produce cards (through Topps) the mechanisms of the Junk Wax Era were at least being installed. While Woolworth was beginning to take steps toward its decades long slow death march in the mid 1980's it managed to put out a card set that isn't half bad. The card has nice coloring and while rather basic is a descent way of getting ahold of a player's card at an affordable price. Some of the strip cards from the 20's are affordable when they're in bad shape I guess, but this isn't a bad starter piece to get started on collecting Grover Cleveland Alexander.

Aaron Collection So Far...

So, if I were to blog every single card in the collection it might take a few years or so to get through it. I don't think that sounds fun for anyone involved. So, we'll just blast through the rest of my Aaron collection so far. Obviously we've seen the two 1972 Topps cards so far. The rest of my collection at the moment consists of the following cards:
1974 Topps #1

1974 Topps #4

1974 Topps #4 (double)

1974 Topps #6

1975 Topps #1

1975 Topps #660

1976 Topps #1

1988 Score Great Moments in Baseball #22


1989 Topps #663 (2 of them)

2001 Upper Deck Hall Of Famers #2

A couple of notes on the collection: first, I abhor the score card. It's ugly. It doesn't have a picture of the player on it. Second, I love the Turn Back the Clock Cards. I always have. I think they're pretty neat.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

1972 Topps Hank Aaron #89

Is there a sexier stat than the Home Run? Honestly, I struggle to think of a more enthralling moment in sport. Few memories shake the imagination like a blast to end the game. Of course, as a general sport fan there are moments that are incredible to witness that have nothing to do with a solidly hit home run. But, let's face it: Chicks dig the long ball. Heather Locklear looked right through Tom Glavine and Greg Maddux. "Hey, have you guys seen Mark?" Chicks dig the long ball. Stat heads dig the long ball. The long ball makes a methodic game surprisingly intriguing to a number of clubs. (It bounces toward the shortstop/mid centerfielder in the Church softball league). A home run is impressive to see. Hank Aaron hit the hell out of it in '71 and earned a #89 in the set. Aaron could've done anything after the record. Instead he played - albeit on bad teams, he played on.

This particular card has some rough corners, especially on the bottom right where there is a pretty noticeable crease. It's not perfect, but it's a good solid card from the Hammer himself.

1972 Topps Hank Aaron #87

In cataloging my collection it's obviously the first stop to start with a, or should I say, "the" hammer as I begin to build this blog. Hank Aaron is the first in my HOF collection because... duh, his last name is Aaron. Plus, the guy mashed 755 home runs and his cards are highly collectible. The origin of my collection, in the sense that it is the first Ultra Pro page (actually second, because horizontal follows vertical in my binder collating scheme. Sorry, vertical cards take precedence over horizontal in my pantheon. So you know, the pantheon goes as follows in the Linehan catalog: Magazine Cover, Vertical 9 Sheets, Horizontal, Miniature, Oversized, Horizontal Postcard. Other than that the catalog is based on ancientness. Find that confusing? Deal with it.) Anyway, the first of my HOF collection starts with the oldest of the Hank Aaron cardboard investments that happens to be on the second page of my first white binder and is the 1972 Topps Hank Aaron 1971 N.L. R.B.I. Leaders #87.

First of all, this card has three players on its front, each of which is a hall of famer. On the far left we have Joe Torre. In the middle is Willie Stargell, my fourth grade teacher's crush. At one point in my life I fell in love with Ms. Bohn and gave her my double of a 1990 Donruss #702 Willie Stargell. I thought my gift was a betrothal announcement. Her marriage in the third quarter of my last year at Worthington Elementary caused me serious emotional hardship and engendered in me a distaste for the Pittsburgh Pirates that I ought not to have had. Of course, October of 1971 & 1979 should've sealed my dislike for the Pirates, but my negative age in the 1970s made it hard for me to hate the Pirates in the early 1990s. Plus, they had Barry Bonds, Barry Bonilla, a personal favorite in Andy Van Slyke as hitters and some incredibly enjoyable collectibles like John Smiley and a certain knuckleballer named Tim Wakefield that patrolled the mound.

Tim taught me how to hold the ball in his 1992 Score card. He taught me how to pull it back in his 1993 Donruss card, and through his 93 Fleer Ultra card he showed me how to follow through. The only problem with the Wakefield approach was basically everything about the Wakefield approach.
As a 9 year old in the Spring of 1993 I didn't have large enough hands to throw a Knuckleball. My dad could throw a mean one and I wanted to match him. So we played catch throwing nothing but knucklers for hours. His danced all over the place and sank and bobbed so much that one time it gave me a fat lip and a bump on my shin at the same time. My knuckler though, sort of hung around in the middle at belt high with fantastic accuracy. I was so proud of that pitch that I threw it in my only appearance as a pitcher in the 1993 summer session in Elkridge, MD. That pitch I was so proud of cemented my position in the storied Elkridge travel team as its catcher.

Now that that nostalgic rabbit hole has been slowly escaped from, let's return to the aforementioned 1972 Topps Hank Aaron that I've highlighted in this post. The 1972 Topps set featured four cards that had Hank Aaron on it. Numbers 299 and 300 had only Hank; number 87 featured the RBI leaders of '71; number 89 featured the HR Leaders of '71. This post is dedicated to the RBI Leaders.

My card is in descent shape. The top of the card isn't super sharp, but it's OK. The top left corner has a minor crease. There is also a bend/crease under the "R" in "R.B.I". The top right corner is bent and beginning to split as well. Honestly, on a 1-10 scale I'd give it about a 4. And that is my "grading" of this card.

Wishlist #1 - Ripken & Ryan

Considering that this is my first (of probably countless) wishlists I figure I might as well go big with two of my favorite players as a kid.

First, there is the Cal Ripken Jr.

While the three RC's from Donruss, Topps and Fleer are certainly part of my collection goals, they are a bit more achievable than these others for now. So, the wishlists that I put up are going to be a little more exclusive stuff or rarer stuff or Tuff Stuff.

The four Cal Ripken Jr. cards on my wishlist are:

1980 Charlotte O's Police Orange












1980 Charlotte O's WBTV Blue












1981 TCMA Rochester Red Wings #15












1982 Topps Traded













My other two favorite players growing up were Nolan Ryan and Kirby Puckett.

Obviously the Nolan Ryan cards that I'll put up here are his oldest cards and thus a bit outside of my current tax bracket.

First, there is the 1968 Topps RC. I'd also eventually like to pick up the O-Pee-Chee version as well.









Second, the 1969 Topps card is fantastic as well.












If you're gonna go, might as well go big.


How Friendly's changed my life.

Baseball has been and continues to be my favorite sport since I was very little. Growing up in the Beltway area in the 1980's convinced me that since I was a good baseball player I was going to be Cal Ripken Jr.'s replacement at some date. Even up until I was about 17 or 18 I was convinced that I would eventually be a shortstop in the major leagues. While that dream may have since passed into some nostalgic fantasy that is probably impossible (I have some hope yet), the side effect of obsessing over baseball brought about my waning and waxing obsessive compulsive behavior concerning tiny pieces of cardboard. One of my earliest memories as a child is actually opening my first pack of baseball cards. I don't know why, but I can still remember the cards I pulled from the pack.

 Hitherto this fateful day the best part about heading to the Crofton Center Friendly's was the ice cream combination you got as a kid after eating your meal. In my family you got that only after eating your entire meal. It was a difficult task to work through a grilled cheese and fries or some chicken tenders to get to the coveted ice cream sundae, but I was a determined youngster. On a side note, at Friendly's you used to be able to pick the combination in your sundae. You may still be able to do as much, but I haven't eaten at one in many years. A few years after this fateful incident my brother discovered his perfect combination: snickers and pineapple. The combination enraged me. I don't know what repulsed me so much about it, but the anger at this combination and the combination of flavors itself has burned into my mind's eyes almost as vividly as the day Friendly's changed my life. As I write this, I realize just how much that simple restaurant in Crofton, MD changed my life. While I salute you Friendly's and thank you for putting such a deep appreciation in me I do have to ponder whether first, my mother and now my wife have a such an affection for you.

That rabbit hole now successfully explored and escaped from, back to the task at hand - the beginning of my obsession. After the aforementioned sundae, the waitress placed a clear plastic wrapped pack of picture cards in front of me when she presented the check to my mother. Having never been exposed to baseball cards I had no idea what to do with it. I picked it up, examined it on both sides. On the front was a sliding Wally Backman with dirt flying everywhere. My interest was piqued. That looked like fun. I want to go slide in the dirt. However, that figure behind Wally looked like he was about to pummel him. That didn't seem too fun. On the back side was some numbers and words. Very much less interesting. I ripped the plastic away and much to my delight discovered that there wasn't a single card in there, but three. On top was the Wally Backman card that displayed some very fun and inspiring action. The third card, which I flipped over after opening was Jim Presley swinging a bat. I'm not sure why I did it. Maybe it was easier to open this way, but I opened the pack from the back - something I still do nearly three decades later. So I had discovered two cards - the Wally Backman that made me want to go play in the dirt and the Jim Presley card with some cool looking "M" in the top left corner. But, what was sandwiched in the middle, a hidden gem much like pineapples and snickers to other palates, was a Cal Ripken Jr. All-Star card. He was wearing a baseball hat much like mine. I squealed in excitement. We left Friendly's as a family, but I left changed. When can we go back to get more ice cream? When can we go back to get more cards?

Friendly's was the extent of my collecting in the early days. I don't know when I discovered that packs could be bought at 7-11 without having to eat your entire meal and then ice cream to get to the baseball cards. But when I did it was a great day for Topps because they became a duopoly in control of my $2/week allowance. There only competition was the arcade.

A few years later, when my family moved to Ellicott City I discovered the greatest thing ever in Chatham Mall. Flickers, the arcade was directly across from The Dugout, the baseball card shop. Since I was a bit older I was allowed to venture out to these two shops while my mom shopped in Caldor. While I enjoyed games that didn't provide tickets a bit more, when I found out that you could turn your tickets into gift certificates to The Dugout I was hooked. Now my quarter would become 10 tickets, those ten tickets would be accumulated until I hit 500 and those 500 tickets would be converted into $5 in dugout money. (If you do the math I spent $12.50 at the Arcade to Buy $5 worth of Baseball Cards, but that extra $7.50 was more than worth it in terms of joy).

This leads me now to the title of the Blog: "Cardboard Investments". There have been numerous iterations of my collection. I collected heavily from 1987-1994. The Baseball strike really angered me as a child. After a two year hiatus, the cards that had sat in the closet suddenly became interesting again when I went to middle school and my best friend was also an avid collector. He had over a hundred Ken Griffey Jr. cards, including the 1989 Upper Deck RC in a screw locked case. I pulled my collection out to compare. 1996-1997 was a flurry of investing to top one another. But in 1997 I moved to Indiana and by the middle of 9th grade I realized that nobody thought baseball cards were cool. Wanting to fit in, the collection went into the closet yet again. By the time I was a senior though I was confident enough in my own skin to enjoy my collecting once again. In 2001 I opened up shop on eBay and ran a pretty successful card business. But, by 2004 everybody was looking to get rich on eBay selling the cards they had stored in the attic for years and the values of cards became severely depressed. Apparently there wasn't a scarcity, just that everyone had put their collections in closets to fit in at some point. Plus, I was living in a very small room and had an inventory of over 2 million cards and had invested into game cards like Yu-Gi-Oh and Pokémon. Yu-Gi-Oh and Pokémon made me more money but there was no attachment to the cards. It was purely business. Even when I bought baseball cards for the sole purpose of flipping them there was still a connection, a joy, associated with flipping through them. I sold everything, including my personal collection. I regret that a little bit. I did make a nice profit. I sold even the infrastructure of the business and made some money. I know there is still money to be made in that market, but I'm not really interested in that side anymore.

I chose the word investment for the title because of its many uses. Baseball Cards can be an investment that turns a profit. Maybe someday my collection will turn a profit when I decide that I want something else more in retirement. I also chose the title to hopefully hook some people with similar interests to me into the blog so we can chat, trade, show off, compete against one another in a hobby that is meant to be sort of a community thing. But the way I think about the word investment is the time, energy and emotions invested into the art of collecting that I hope to convey on this blog through every post. I hope that if you like baseball cards and the art of collecting that this blog will be of some use to you. If nothing else, the blog will allow me to catalog my collection for my own enjoyment in an easy and searchable format.
-Chris