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Shut Out.

on April 11th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Jim Leyland is not amused.

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Back to Back

on April 7th, 2011 by Grand Cards
#22 Victor Martinez 2011 Topps – Black Diamond (Redemption)

#57 Miguel Cabrera 2011 Topps – Black Diamond (Redemption)

I think that this may be the first time that I’ve ever gone to back to back baseball games to start the season. Based on last night’s attendance at Camden Yards I’m not the only one for whom this is a rare occurrence. Still, me and my 5-person party of Tigers fans thoroughly enjoyed watching the Tigers do what we all wanted them to do this year. Play well.

It wasn’t all perfect, but it made for a great game. At no point did things feel out of hand, but it was never at the point where I was sick-to-my-stomach nervous about things falling apart. Some points of note:

  • Brennan Boesch reached on an error–a bad error, since it really wasn’t very windy last night and that pop up should have been caught–which was folowed up by a walk to Peralta. With Alex Avila at the plate, having looked relatively helpless so far this season, a wild pickoff throw advances Boesch to 3rd. At this point my wife says something like “Avila is going to do something here. Weird errors like that have a way of snapping you into reality and breaking you out of a slump.” And lo.
  • Alex Avila was great. He won the game for the Tigers.
  • Verander. See Above. Was filthy and got better later in the game, while clocking in not too far from 100 pitches. A phenomenal start.
  • Back to Back home runs from Cabrera and VMart. Immediately prior to those at bats I thought that both of them had looked lost at the plate, especially Cabrera. Shows what I know.
  • Maggs crushed the ball all night, but got only two singles to show for it. He’s about to break out in a big way.
  • Jhonny “Rhange” Peralta. He took a horrible angle to miss a routine ground ball earlier in the game, but made up for it with a couple very nice plays on balls up the middle(ish).
  • Camden Yards. Still one of the nicest places to see a ballgame, especially on a 50 degree evening. The win made my walk home that much easier.

It was a great night all around. Back to back games for me and back to back home runs for the Tigers. Let’s see if the Tigers can make it back to back wins tonight.

The two cards shown above are part of the “Black Diamond” redemption set from 2011 Topps. I actually got both of them in the mail before the game yesterday, which made the Cabrera/VMart homer parade feel all the more appropriate. This is a great little set from Topps. I certainly hope it continues into Series 2 and the Update Set, as these are the only two (non-autographed) Tigers that exist.

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A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again*

on April 5th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Yesterday was Opening Day in Baltimore.

For those of you that haven’t experienced an Opening Day–my life has been blessed with attending all but a tiny handful of Opening Days in Detroit and Baltimore–it is the greatest day of the year, without exception. Sure, individual events may surpass it–a particularly important sports game or championship; a wonderful trip or night out; that one time when you found that nice sweatshirt that you thought you lost, but there is was in some bag that you hadn’t used in over a year, and then found $20 in the pocket–but there is no other day of the year that will be as reliably spectacular as Opening Day.

It has everything. The start of baseball season. The beginning of spring. Hot Dogs. Time with your family and friends before, during and after the game. Sure, sometimes it may be really damn cold, or raining or blustery, but with every Opening Day comes a duplicitous sense of hope.

This is the year my team can do it.
Winter’s death grip shall finally be released.

When you grow up in a place like Michigan, that second point can’t be understated.

So yeah, I treat Opening Day as a holiday, a proud family tradition dating back to my grandpa taking my mom and her brothers to Opening Day at Tiger Stadium. Every year he would tell the stories about how he would call in to their school and inform the receptionist that they wouldn’t be coming in today. “They have a previous engagement.”

Now I’m lucky enough to work for a company that literally shuts down to go to Opening Day. So just imagine my joy when I learned that my team–The Tigers–were going to be in Baltimore for the Orioles’ Opening Day. Oh, there was joy.

But I was wrong. It was wrong.

Opposing fans should not be allowed at Opening Day. They should be banned. Removed at the gate. Stricken from the crowds.

I say this not because opposing fans are obnoxious, or rude or even a distraction to the home fans–I saw very few Tigers fans today and of those that I did see before, during and after the game they were non-entities. No. I say this because it simply shouldn’t be. Opening Day is a sacred event. To not root for the home team is sacrelige. Hell, it’s in the damn defining song about baseball, the entire lyrics of which are basically a narrative of opening day. Root, root, root for the Home Team

So here I was, watching my favorite team play on Opening Day in one of my favorite ballparks, and from time to time I couldn’t help but think I shouldn’t be here. Or, more specifically, if I’m going to be here I should be rooting for the Orioles. I have never felt that before, and I have been to many games in many sports as an opposing fan.

Was Opening Day a loss? A bust? No, of course not. It was Opening Day, and I love Opening Day. But this one was different. I was an intruder who somehow managed to slip through the cracks.

That’s why I’m so excited to go back tomorrow. With Opening Day over, the baseball season can begin. Go Tigers.

*Full credit to my lovely wife and actual reader of ASFTINDA for suggesting a title vastly superior to whatever it was I had originally named this post, which I literally forgot the moment I heard her suggestion because it erased everything else from my mind with its superiority. Also, this post was in no way meant to evoke David Foster Wallace, or be written in the style of DFW or anything. I haven’t read his stuff and despite wanting to, a full life with classes and lack of a kindle or similar doesn’t make lugging around a 1400 page copy of Infinite Jest seem imminent.

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Home O-pener

on April 4th, 2011 by Grand Cards

I am literally the most excited person in Baltimore today. It’s the Orioles home opener, which has become an annual tradition for my wife and I and they are playing the Tigers. On Opening Day.

More good times:

- If you’re familiar with a Baltimore accent say “Home Opener.” It’s a blast. You’ll be saying it all day.

- Luke Scott pulled his groin and won’t make it back until Wednesday, at the earliest. This is spectacular news for Tigers fans (For why, see “Tiger Killer Kills Tigers” and “Why I blog, Luke Scott Edition”) To echo @sabrerosetiger on twitter the O’s should probably just sit him for the whole week just to be safe. Please.

-Yesterday Brennan Boesch did a lot of this:

For those of you without a keen baseball eye, that is a picture of him doing awesome things with the bat. Yesterday it was to the tune of 4 hits, including a home run 4 runs and 4 RBIs. His partner in prolific offensive production was none other than…

It is Opening Day. He will play like a star. It’s in the cards (!)

For the rest of you Tigers fans, enjoy your mundane sandwich series between the true opener and the home opener. Me, I’ll be sporting all my Tigers gear down at Camden Yards, whereupon I will be mercilessly harassed by the large swaths of ignorant O’s fans that show up for 1) Opening Day 2) No other games*. It will be miserable right up to the point where the Tigers beat the undefeated Orioles, at which point I will quietly make my way home, careful to avoid large, belligerent crowds.

*It should be noted that I do not find actual Orioles fans to be ignorant. In fact, they are among the better fans in the game–not surprising if they’ve stuck with it for this long. The specific subset of fans to which I’m referring are the large drunk masses of people who care about Opening Day, but not about the O’s and are intolerable on every level. For the other 364 days of the year they are known as Ravens fans.

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Brightening an off-day

on April 1st, 2011 by Grand Cards

An off day already? What a letdown. Also, I’d really like for Opening Day to be a singular monster where all the teams are playing all at once and I struggle to keep my head on straight in a full day of baseball overload bliss.

Oh well.

It’s a cold, rainy friday and I need something to lift my spirits:

A friend of mine was upgrading his collection and didn’t have use for this nice little glass case. This allowed me to move my autographs from individual ball cubes in a cabinet to this little fella.

A lot of nice memories in that case. The perfect warm-up on a crummy off-day.

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Opening Day Is Go

on March 31st, 2011 by Grand Cards

Tigers vs. Yankees in the first game of the season on ESPN.

Go.

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Day 0.

on March 30th, 2011 by Grand Cards

It’s been a long hard winter for all of us. But Lo! Spring. Oh thank god, spring. A friend of mine called today “Christmas Eve,” and I could only nod in agreement. It’s enough to make me want to break out into song.

Indeed.

———-

This blog has been pretty quiet for a while, and for that I’m sorry. I’ve been busy, then in a funk, then busy again etc. For days I’ve asked myself, “what am I going to write about the Tigers this year?” Last year it was a season preview in which I predicted some things that proved to be pretty much true and also that Gerald Laird would hit .275 so, yeah. The year before it was THE YEAR, as painstakingly detailed in a multi-part series about how 2009 would be the year that nobody expected the Tigers–2008 cellar dwellers–to do anything at all. What did we get for that? 163 game crushing disappointment. Close but no cigar.

The problem is, I don’t know what to think this year.

I don’t feel like last year, when the team was both too young and too old, or the year before, where they really felt poised to take the division by storm. I don’t know what this is. I don’t know who the Tigers are.

———-

Individually you can see the potential.

Justin Verlander is going to win a Cy Young in his career, and I think he does it this year. You can write that down. Tell your friends.

Miguel Cabrera, sober edition, is an MVP.

Max Scherzer had a breakout 2nd half that could carry into this year

Austin Jackson, your should-have-been 2010 ROY, is back with a year of experience under his belt.

But geez, when I start reading things like “BEST ROTATION IN BASEBALL” by the person that you would absolutely expect to write something stupid like that, you just want to scream PHILLIES! in his face or hell, WHITE SOX! or a handful of others. But the problem is, we don’t know.

That’s why you get back-to-back columns in the Detroit News–Five reason the Tigers will be a hit and Five reasons the Tigers will be a flop.

We don’t know.

We don’t know if Phil Coke will be an effective starter all season, or if Brad Penny will be healthy.

We don’t know if Rick Porcello will be better than he was last year.

We don’t know if Alex Avila will be a good catcher.

Or if Will Rhymes will be a good second baseman.

Or if Ryan Raburn is ready to play a full season in the show.

Or if Brennan Boesch can take his place if he’s not.

Or if Casper Wells can take his place if he’s not.

We don’t know if Maggs is healthy after breaking his ankle last year, or if he can stay healthy.

We don’t know if Joel Zumaya or Carlos Guillen will ever return.

When you start counting up the question marks things become disconcerting. I don’t like disconcerting–it plays games with my defense mechanisms. I want to prepare myself for disappointment, or temper my enthusiasm, but now I’m left here bare, naked to the whims of a round bat hitting a round ball. I don’t know that I can take it.

It is Day 0 and the wait is over. Tomorrow will be Christmas Morning, and I have no idea of what I’m getting.

———-

This is the part of the season preview where predictions are made. Except, as my earlier ramblings may have indicated, I have no idea what is going to happen this season.

But this is the internet, dammit.

PREDICTIONS

YEAH. Serious predictions.

  • Justin Verlander wins the Cy Young
  • 40% of the Tigers starting rotation will be removed for non-injury reasons at some point.
  • Austin Jackson has pretty much the same year as last year, is viewed as a massive disappointment
  • The Tigers win 85 games, 2nd in Central to White Sox (91)
  • Jim Leyland’s contract is extended for two more seasons
  • Magglio Ordonez, Carlos Guillen and Joel Zumaya play their final seasons

Tommorow is a new day, folks. Welcome to the next six months of your lives and to a rejuvenated blogger.

Go Tigers.

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I’m back baby

on March 25th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Sort of.  I’m officially back on US soil, but am still operating with my phone as primary computer.  Regularish posting should resume this week…just in time for the start of the season!

For those of you that have hung in there, thanks.

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Must…Have…Fleer

on March 14th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Fact: Everybody collected Fleer as a kid and it was awesome
Fact: Everybody wishes Fleer were still around
Fact: Nobody collected baseball cards in the mid-2000s
Fact: You can get 7 boxes of mid-2000s Fleer cards for basically nothing.

How? Community Gum’s Super-Fleer Group Break. He just lowered the price and there are still a bunch of teams left like the Angels–who won a world series in this era, White Sox (who ALSO won a world series), Marlins (I’m sensing a pattern here) and a bunch of other teams that were actually good in this era.

This stands in sharp contrast to the Tigers, who were terrible for most of the years represented by these cards. Yet here I am, getting in on the break, because it will yield approximately 1,000,000 cards I don’t have for the same price as a 2011 Topps Blaster.

I’m just saying.

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Wait, What?

on March 13th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Hmmm. These are the same card. They are supposed to be 1/1. For realsies 1/1 too, not like printing plates or all the other weird stuff that the card companies do to make faux-1/1s. This is a red refractor 1/1 from Bowman Sterling. So what is going on?

Auction 1

Auction 2

Both listings are active for at least the next 9 days. Anybody have an idea of what the deal is with these?

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The Card That Had To Be Made

on March 9th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Love it, love it, love it.

The only sad part is that Galarraga isn’t a Tiger anymore. Also, that it’s not crystal clear from that picture that Donald was out. Still, I couldn’t be happier that this card will exist and A&G is the perfect product for it.

HT to Sports Card Info for bringing this card to my attention.

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Best Trade of All Time?

on March 5th, 2011 by Grand Cards

I am so far beyond my days of Lynn Henning bashing, but I feel like it’s appropriate to provide some factual counterpoints to some of the things he says. Today, he writes:

[Austin Jackson] is one-quarter of perhaps the best trade in Tigers history. Dave Dombrowski will never make a deal that will have netted more talent — Jackson, Max Scherzer, Phil Coke and Daniel Schlereth — at such an affordable price (Curtis Granderson, Edwin Jackson).

I was the first to admit that the trade has worked out even better than expected. Personally, I still feel as though Granderson is one of the better all-around center fielders in the game, and that he will continue to prove that this year for the Yankees. But, Austin Jackson is incredible and will hopefully be a franchise player for the team. Also, Max Scherzer has been everything we hoped Max Scherzer would be and is going to be a star.

But. But! I don’t even think that it was the best trade of the decade. Once upon a time the Tigers traded for Miguel Cabrera. At the time, it seemed like they paid a steep price. In reality, they gave up nothing. The Tigers gave up no impact players, save a still-young Cameron Maybin who could potentially resurrect his career. In return the Tigers got Cabrera, someone who, if he can get his extracurriculars under control, could legitimately go down as one of the best players in Franchise History. Sure they got Willis too, but that was no big deal–it was resigning him that was the problem.

But that’s not it. The Tigers also acquired Carlos Guillen for Ramon Santiago and someone else (Juan M. Gonzalez, maybe?), and then got Ramon Santiago back! Certainly, that was a better trade at a cheaper price.

And it gets better. In what I believe may actually have been the best trade in Tigers history the Tigers traded Ugueth Urbina for Placido Polanco. Polanco went on to be one of the most consistent Tigers players around, won two Gold Gloves, nearly won a batting title and went to an All-Star game in his 4.5 years in Detroit. Urbina killed someone and never played another game.

So no, I’m not going to go on an anti-Henning warpath anymore. But dude. This is a man who loves his hyperbole and loves talking about the players that he has these pet-affections for (I’m looking at you Scott Sizemore and Casper Wells in their) and those that he loves to disparage for some reason (Granderson). To say that giving up Edwin Jackson and Curtis Granderson represents some sort of low-low price is ridiculous. These guys are former (and could be future) All-Stars and start on Major League rosters. The Tigers have made better deals than that. Not just ever, but recently.

——
Also, can someone please get Norm Cash on the phone? Or Rocky Colavito? Or MICKEY COCHRANE? Best trade in Tigers history…Humph.

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The Best Discontinued Set of the Last 10 Years

on March 4th, 2011 by Grand Cards

It’s here (sorry for the delay)

I had a lot of good responses in the comments That read something like Masterpieces, Masterpieces, GOTG, Masterpieces, Goudey, something Topps did 8 years ago, and you know what? Those were right on.

UD Masterpieces was a phenomenal set–in fact, 2007 and 2008 masterpieces remain the ONLY sets that I have completed in their entirety since I returned to collecting, so, yeah. It was pretty great.

I’ve collected cards from Greats of the Game and I love me some Goudey (especially 2007), but they’re not it either.

Then three people said “Topps All-Time Fan Favorites.” Let’s see: Retired players, no photographs on old card designs and on-card autographs. Yeah, I’d say that that is a recipe for fantasticness. One problem: with all the different designs, it didn’t really feel like a set per se. Oh, it was cool, but it falls just short of greatness for me.

This doesn’t:

That was Lance Parrish that you were looking at in my original post Lance. Parrish. Quiz time, how many mainstream, non-buyback cards does this 8x All Star, 6x Silver Slugger, 3x Gold Glove winning Catcher who sports 324 career home runs and 1000+ RBI have since he retired in 1995? 15. Four of those came out in 1996. Nine (!) came out in 2003. Was 2003 the year of Lance Parrish? Is there some reason that this borderline hall-of-famer has been effectively ignored by the hobby (who’s top comparables include 3 Hall of Famers, Jorge Posada, Ron Cey, Benny Santiago and Bill Freehan), but Ty Cobb has ELEVEN cards in 2011 Topps Series 1?!?!

Oh, and that’s another thing…

BILL FREEHAN MIGHT HAVE BEEN EVEN BETTER THAN PARRISH!

At least he got some love from Upper Deck, in Greats of the Game and Legendary Cuts etc.

At this point in the show, I realize that I may have digressed from my main point: Topps Retired is the best discontinued set of the last 10 years.

My reasons are twofold, and simple:

1. The cards use a modified design of each year’s Topps base set, giving the set a cohesive feel that ties in nicely with the flagship Topps release

2. The checklist highlights the many, many players who were STARS, including some should-be Hall of Famers that have barely graced ANY sports cards since 2006. Right Alan?

Right.

I’ve got LOTSLOTSLOTS more to say about this fantastic set and how it compares to things nowadays after the jump.

—–

So here’s the thing. When Topps and Upper Deck became the sole licensees of baseball cards in 2006(?) they were limited in the number of retired players they could use in products. Then, in 2008 they signed an agreement that gave them the rights to use the images of dead players that CMG owns the rights to, in a disgusting reminder that someone can own you after you’re dead. The result has been every retired player that you’ve seen in card sets for the last 3 years. Hint: They’re all in the Hall of Fame.

That has lead to a perverse situation. One in which Ty Cobb has had 1,518 cards released since 2008. In which Al Kaline has had 2,481.

Lou Whitaker has 0. Same with Alan Trammell*. Same with infinity other fantastic baseball players who were household names in their day and have been tossed aside like they were Rico Brogna or Paul Gibson or Scott Lusader or Milt Cuyler or countless players that I can name because baseball cards exist. Somehow, the card companies are incapable of recognizing that there are tiers of greatness, not “The Top 10% of the Hall of Fame” and “Everybody else.”

*Not counting unlicensed Donruss/Panini releases

—–

I didn’t get into this set until I lost an auction for that Lance Parrish card. I thought, “this is neat,” then it sold for more than $10 and I was like “oh well.”

Just my luck that the seller had two of them, and I got one in a second chance offer. And then the next day a 2003 Kaline came up for bid. Then within a week someone was listing their entire collection from the 2005 set. In two weeks I went from 0 to 60…err, 6

My subconscious obsession actually started earlier than that, at the National in Baltimore, when I found this fella for $3:

I have found that the worst part of these cards were those big honking cases they came in. This Evans was liberated from this encapsulation, something I would never have the balls to do. And then some jackass did this:

Put the sticker right on the case. Jackass. So I tried to get the sticker off, failed, and broke it out of it’s case. Much better. I think I’m going to do it with all of them. They are phenomenal.

—–

And that’s really it. The cohesive design, the on-card autographs, the simultaneous chrome (autographs) and not chrome (base set). These are players that should be on cards today but instead we’re force fed the same few stars over and over again until you just want to grab the director of product development at Topps by the throat and scream IDONTWANTTOSEEANOTHERTYCOBBCARDUNTILI’MINMYCOLDCOLDGRAVE. This coming from a man who recognizes and admits that Ty Cobb is the greatest Tiger of all time and used to like getting cards of him (and still likes the Topps SPs). It shouldn’t have to be this way.

Where’s my Kirk Gibson? My Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker? They’re in Topps Retired. And I’ll bet, if this set were still alive today, I’d get to see cards of them. And maybe of Virgil “Fire” Trucks and Cecil Fielder and Tony Phillips and Mickey Lolich and Willie Horton and Norm Cash and John Hiller and…

This is the way it should be. Don’t get me wrong, I want 90% of my cards to be of modern players in modern sets. But give me my retired players back. They’ve been gone for too long.

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Not Yet

on March 3rd, 2011 by Grand Cards

Sorry folks, some things came up tonight and I can’t post my best discontinued set of the last 10 years. Keep an eye out tomorrow. In the meantime, I still want to hear your thoughts. What was your favorite product that card companies stopped making?

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Inquiring Minds Want to Know: Best Discontinued Set of the Last 10 Years?

on March 3rd, 2011 by Grand Cards

I’m genuinely curious what everyone thinks about this. There have been a lot of cards released by a lot of companies since 2001, and many sets/brands that were short lived. What has been the best?

Are you a Masterpieces person? Goudey? Fleer Greats of the Game? Topps Gallery? There are countless options.

(PLEASE don’t be limited to the couple I’ve listed here)

I ask because I’m pretty sure that I know the answer. Let me know what set(s) you’ve loved and lost and I’ll show you my favorite later tonight.

Here’s a hint:

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Great Customer Service: The Sandlot Comes Through

on February 28th, 2011 by Grand Cards

For those of you who view this blog through an RSS feed (as I do with most blogs), over the last few months I have taken to using Lightbox to blow the thumbnails in my galleries. This does not come through in RSS. So, if you’d like to see my small pictures in a clean, large format, click on over and scroll through the gallery. I will issue some version of this disclaimer on applicable posts for the next few weeks, fyi.

A few weeks ago I thought that I had struck gold. A google search revealed that the elusive, nay, literally impossible to find, Andrew Miller 15b card was for sale on a site called Sandlot Cards for a pittance. So I ordered it.

About five hours later, I found this in my inbox:

Thank you for your recent order with Sandlot Cards. In searching our inventory I found that we did not have the Andrew Miller ‘Posed’ version of the 2007 Topps card in stock, we only had the version with him pitching.

Crap.

But wait, there’s more. In an exemplary show of customer service, Sandlot offered to refund my money in full, and give me a $5 credit on anything in their store plus free shipping. Bargain shopping spree ho!

It turns out that their is an odd assortment of cards on their site, but the site itself is very well organized and eminently searchable. Let me search by “Tigers” and I will be a happy, happy man. What I found was a variety of vintage cards, some stuff from the 80s, and then cards from the last couple years. In an odd way, it was like searching the inventory of just about every card blogger I know. Did 1995-2005 just not exist?

Anyway, I maxed out my $5 credit on 5 cards which came shipped in a bubble mailer, each with in their own sleeves and top loaders and immaculate condition. This is not a huge deal when you’ve ordered something like this:

Even thought that is THE LAST CARD I NEEDED to finish my ’83 Topps set. It’s a much bigger deal when you’re dealing with things like this:

That’s four ’69 Topps cards, all in absolutely perfect shape.

What can I say other than I am very impressed with Sandlot’s customer service and will peruse their site from time to time to see if they can help me out with some other cards I need. Next time on great stories in customer service: An ebay seller who gave me a refund on shipping. Yes, I’m serious.

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What’s The Story with Topps 60?

on February 24th, 2011 by Grand Cards

I thought that I was going to avoid this.

I like 2011 Topps, really I do. It’s just that sometimes certain things that are supposed to be cool or are supposed to resonate or are supposed to mean something just, well, don’t.

Take Topps 60 for example. What a concept! 60 years of Topps baseball, league leaders in major categories, a true chronicling of the greats of the game during Topps’ existence.

See?

LEAGUE LEADER baby. In HOME RUNS. That’s some good stuff. And even the design, which I’ve heard some griping about, is neat. The 60 gives a window into the context of the picture and makes the player stand out, all while being neither obnoxious or boring. Oh and it gets better, look at what Tigers are featured in this series!

Al Kaline! Mr. Tiger Himself!

“The Bird,” Mark Fidrych! (may he rest in peace)

Max Scherzer, the up and coming Ace in #2 starter’s clothes!

Johnny Damon! Sure, he was only a Tiger for one year, but he was good, and nice, and my wife likes how he looks, and he’s been a darn good player for a long time.

This, my friends, is a Killer Series 1 checklist for the Tigers. It gets my seal of approval many times over.

But, oh and there is always a but, it’s not all rainbows and lollipops. The checklist is good, and I guess that is what matters, but just because you can slap a sticker autograph on something doesn’t mean you’re allowed to get lazy. AN AUTOGRAPH DOES NOT MAKE THE CARD, THE CARD MAKES THE AUTOGRAPH. If you think I’m wrong, then tell me why some autographed cards sell for many times more than other ones of the same player. It’s about the card. If it wasn’t, you’d spend your money on an 8×10 or a mini helmet or on some other memorabilia.

Why then, on these “hits,” are we subjected to such elite records as:

“Most Consecutive 80 Run Seasons in the AL”
“Most MLB Strikeouts Per 9 Innings 2009-2010″
“Most Times Played in MLB All Star Game for AL”
“Most Single Season Complete Games, Last 35 Years”

Actually, now that I look at these a little more, I don’t hate the category selection. All Star Games? Complete Games? Somewhat obscure records? With the exception of the (stupid) K/9 2009-2010 “record,” I can deal with these. It actually makes them kind of fun, and more interesting then AL HR Leader (sorry Miggy).

Oh, but it gets worse:

3(t) :-/


4(t) :(

4(t) :’(

9 >:(

Weak. I’m so glad that I have an autographed card of the person with the 9th best K/9 ratio in 2009-2010. Or that the person tied for the 3rd-most complete games in the last 35 years has been recognized. I get it. You want a strong checklist and need to figure out some way to do that, but if you’re going to just opt for the everybody’s got a record route, at least make sure they have a record, right?

I guess I won’t punch a gift horse in the mouth (Edit: Apparently I have the intelligence of some boob on Yahoo Answers but I wouldn’t look a gift horse in the mouth either. Thanks to my Johnny Damon-loving wife for pointing this out to me.), but I just have to ask. Why?

To make matters worse, I’m 99% sure that they don’t fill out each category. In other words, each of the Top 10 in each category isn’t featured on a card, making things seem even more arbitrary and random.

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Redemption Thoughts

on February 21st, 2011 by Grand Cards

I feel like Topps has been pretty good about redemptions recently. I’ve never had to deal with them before this year, but I dealt with three redemptions in 2010, all of which are now in my hands and in good shape.

I’d imagine if I were purchasing a high end product like Triple Threads that these redemptions would get on my nerves a bit. At the original release, pretty much anything with a Miguel Cabrera autograph was a redemption, which boo. Well, no more, as the real cards have now started to hit eBay:

#TTARC-6 Longoria/Beckham/Cabrera; 2010 Topps Triple Threads

#TTARC-8 Porcello/Damon/Cabrera; 2010 Topps Triple Threads

#RRARP-5 Porcello/Scherzer; 2010 Topps Triple Threads

#TTAR-121 Miguel Cabrera 2010 Topps Triple Threads

#TTAR-122 Miguel Cabrera; 2010 Topps Triple Threads

#TTAR-123 Miguel Cabrera; 2010 Topps Triple Threads

Also, there’s a fancy jumbo I hadn’t seen before:

#TTJPAR-1 Miguel Cabrera; 2010 Topps Triple Threads

So there you go. 2010 Triple Thread redemptions are now real cards with autographs and jersey bits and everything. Get them while they’re hot.

No, I don’t have any of these cards. When I get some more time, I will swap out the old redemption pictures in the gallery for these fancy new cards, but I figured since nobody ever goes through the old galleries to browse, that I’d feature these cards as part of a new post so that you can see that they actually do exist and that they came into existence about three or four months after the product’s release. /public service.

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Happier Times

on February 17th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Today has been a bad day for Tigers fans. I think a trip to Happier Times Blvd. is necessary. I give you the 1984 World Champions, in a “World Champions” commemorative set put out by Wendy’s in 1985. Everything is happy. The people that don’t look happy are happy on the inside (I’m looking at you Chet Lemon). Even Zombie Jack Morris is happy.

Someday we will be happy again.

#1 Sparky Anderson

#2 Doug Bair

#3 Doug Berenguer

#4 Dave Bergman

#5 Tom Brookens

#6 Marty Castillo

#7 Darrell Evans

#8 Barbaro Garbey

#9 Kirk Gibson

#10 Johnny Grubb

#11 Willie Hernandez

#12 Larry Herndon

#13 Rusty Kuntz

#14 Chet Lemon

#15 Aurelio Lopez

#16 Jack Morris

#17 Lance Parrish

#18 Dan Petry

#19 Bill Scherrer

#20 Alan Trammell

#21 Lou Whitaker

#22 Milt Wilcox

Checklist Card

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No Comment.

on February 17th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Well, this is just about the worse news that Tigers fans could have gotten this morning. Hint: it features a smiling mugshot of a plastered Miguel Cabrera

Let me just say this: Alcoholism is a disease, and it needs to be treated consistently and vigilantly. On the plus side, this just happened at the very start of spring training, with plenty of time for a program to be put in place. On the minus site, this is now a chronic problem, and is likely much worse than any of us thought when it reared its ugly head at the end of 2009 (and was seemingly eviscerated in 2010).

My advice is to call the Texas Rangers and find out what they do with Josh Hamilton. Get Miguel Cabrera a handler. He has clearly shown that he has a problem that is too large to deal with on his own.

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Now What Are These?

on February 16th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Note: 2011 Topps moratorium over

Some of my favorite cards every year are retail exclusive inserts. To me, they present a true collector’s challenge that can’t be solved by buying case after case. Hell, half the time, we don’t even know these cards exist. They are never officially released by Topps, they seldom make their way to Beckett, even Baseballcardpedia, which is fast becoming the go-to resource for checklists and product information, misses some of these.

Sure, we know about the Red Diamonds (Target), and the Blue Diamonds (Walmart). But did you know that there are Purple Diamonds (Toys R Us)? Does anybody have a clue as to what that checklist looks like? No.

But that’s not all. Now, there are these:

Those are “Blue Sapphire” inserts that are allegedly exclusive to Wal Mart. I have no idea what product option they come from, no idea if there is a Target equivalent, and no idea of the checklist. There are at least two (and probably only two) Tigers though. WHM-3 (Cobb) and WHM-15 (Cabrera).

Other than the fact that they really, really look like they belong in 2010, I like them.

Let the chase begin!

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So Groggy

on February 12th, 2011 by Grand Cards

I say that because as you’re reading this, the following has happened to me: Took a 12am (PST) red eye flight from California that gets into Houston at 5:53am, then I sat around in the airport for another hour before boarding a flight to get back to Baltimore by 11:15am.

Alternative scenario: one of those two things screwed up, meaning that I am definitely not in Baltimore, which you know will make me groggy.

In case you couldn’t tell, I have pre-scheduled this post. Why? Because of the above, and the fact that prior to embarking on the above, I have some time to kill and no hotel room and the cumulative effect of two days of coffee in me.

Fortunately, I get to come home to this*

Why do I care about Jack Billingham? He just happens to be the last card that I needed for my ’79 Topps set. He came to me courtesy of Greg, formerly of Lake Effect Cards, and now of Nearly Mint and who has a habit of sending me cards out of the goodness of his heart.

Clearly, this is man who has a lot of goodness in his heart, because he also sent me a load of vintage goodness (and early 80′s cards that come this close to closing out sets for me);

Most (or all? I need to check my checklist again) of the 1999 Topps Opening Day cards I needed;

and this:

Wow. I don’t even know what to say. There were also assorted other cards that I needed and some more cards that I probably needed at the time he bought them, but that I bought before they got into my hands…Sorry about that!

So a BIG BIG BIG Thank you to Greg (@grogg on twitter) for the phenomenal cards. I can’t tell you how much I appreciate your generosity!

*If I had my druthers, I would show multiple pictures of my lovely wife. But, I’m guessing that she wouldn’t be pleased with me slathering pictures of her all over the internet. However, I felt it appropriate to include the “*” so that if and when she reads this post, she will know that I was not only thinking about coming home to baseball cards and was, in fact, mostly thinking about coming home to her. It is almost Valentines Day, after all.

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Hey Now…

on February 11th, 2011 by Grand Cards

You see what I’m doing here? If you’re like me, any number of songs may have popped into your head. …the dream is over… and, if you’re like me, you now have the horrible all star song in your head. I’m sorry, but that’s just how it is.

Consummate Tiger fan and card blogger sixtyfeetsix (aka Jim) was digging through some boxes and found a bunch of extra cards from the 2005 All Star fanfest in Detroit. I happened to be in Detroit for all of the All Star festivities, but didn’t make it out to fanfest and also wasn’t collecting cards at the time. That’s where Jim comes in.

The 2005 All Star Fanfest set had 9 cards, thanks to Jim, I now have 6 of them. I also happen to have a few extras if anyone is interested.

First, there are some great dual Tigers Hall of Famers/HOFer-to-be cards:

Next, a couple of Bronx Bombers:

And finally…

JIM!

I know that people are tired of relic cards, but you know what? I’m not. When someone sends me a card like this out of the blue, I can’t help but become overwhelmed with gratitude. Thank you so much for the cards, Jim. I am now officially on a mission to complete the rest of the 9-card set.

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Always.

on February 9th, 2011 by Grand Cards

As someone who loves Oddball sets, you’re sure to see me going ga ga over one that features a rookie card of one of the Tigers greats. This 1981 set was made by Topps and distributed by Coke in the Detroit area. There were sets made for 11 teams, most of which mirrored the 1981 Topps versions, but some which had subtle variations. Aurelio Lopez is the only Tigers card with a different picture than it’s 1981 Topps version.

As oddball sets go, this one in fine, but nothing special. Really, it’s just a 1981 set with a logo plastered on it. Still, for the Gibby alone, it’s worth the price of admission (This came last week for $1 plus $2.50 shipping).

Title Card

#1 Champ Summers

#2 Al Cowens

#3 Rich Hebner

#4 Steve Kemp

#5 Aurelio Lopez

#6 Jack Morris

#7 Lance Parrish

#8 Johnny Wockenfuss

#9 Alan Trammell

#10 Lou Whitaker

#11 Kirk Gibson (RC)

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Going Toppsless

on February 7th, 2011 by Grand Cards

I have nothing against 2011 Topps–in fact, all indications are that I am going to like it very much. It also seems that everyone in the world has been talking about it for days, to the point where, less than a week after its official release all card blog readers know everything there is to know about 2011 Topps.

So, to help balance the world out, this blog is going (2011) Toppsless for the next week. The good thing is, I’ve actually had quite a few nice card packages come across my desk, so there should be some good stuff to fill the void.

I’m not going completely Toppsless, I’m just not posting on the 2011 version. Everything prior to this year is still fair game.

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RIP Woodie Fryman: We’ll Always Have ’72

on February 7th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Former Tigers pitcher Woodie Fryman died on Friday, at the age of 70. Woodie is one of those players that I know only from baseball cards. He was, by and large, a non-descript journeyman of a pitcher.

Except for in 1972.

Fryman was a portly 32-year-old southpaw whose career appeared all but over. He had never won more than 12 games. He was 4-10 with a 4.36 ERA for a lousy Phillies team when purchased Aug. 2

–snip–

All Fryman did was go 10-3 with a 2.06 ERA in 14 starts for the Tigers. He even won the division clincher on the next-to-last day of the season.

That, from a very nice Detroit Free Press article that remembers Fryman for being Doyle Alexander before Doyle Alexander was the guy that led the Tigers on an improbable stretch run to win the pennant in 1987. Fryman did it in ’72.

He struggled for a few years, was traded, then struggled a few more, before turning to the bullpen to revitalize his career. He stayed in the majors until he was 43.

So RIP Woodie Fryman. For Tigers fans, we’ll always have ’72.

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Card Cameos: Will Rhymes Makes His Topps Debut

on February 4th, 2011 by Grand Cards

There’s a lot to like about Will Rhymes. He’s the Tigers’ most prolific twitterer. He’s a humanitarian. He’s tiny. He’s a scrappy, gritty gritstein dirtball type in the mold of David Eckstein except way better and he doesn’t throw like a girl. The hell with David Eckstein.

But to this point, there has not been a Topps baseball card made of Will. Sure, he made his major league debut just last year, but they found a way to fit Andy Oliver in, didn’t they? And Danny Worth? Well, with the introduction of 2011 Topps Baseball this week, Will Rhymes finally makes his Topps Debut. Kind of.

Hey, you have to start somewhere, right?

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WANT. (More 2011 Topps Tigers)

on February 2nd, 2011 by Grand Cards

Ooh boy, the good stuff is flowing now.

I love the SP of Ty Cobb driving a freakin’ car.

Mark Fidrych autograph is a great addition, following up on the unofficial RIP George Kell auto from the 2010 set.

Kaline, Obvs.

I’m liking these retail exclusive inserts. Here’s a “Red Diamond” from Target of Miguel Cabrera. There’s also a Cobb and Walmart has “Blue Diamonds”:

Topps introduced silk cards a couple years ago, as some sort of quasi-parallel set with 50 cards. This year they are full fledged inserts (still 50 cards, I think) with different pictures and all!

More and more cards will appear in the days ahead, and I’ll put a gallery together once I have images of everything. In the meantime, here’s the working checklist

It also appears as though my crazy gold foil/silver foil hypothesis was just a trick of the light. Sorry if I got anybody in a tizzy.

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First Take on 2011 Topps

on February 1st, 2011 by Grand Cards

Working Checklist Here.

2011 Topps officially releases tomorrow, but cards are popping up in retail stores and have trickled on to eBay. I like what I see.

But first, things first. Here’s a Tigers team set on eBay from TNT cards:

Now here are some cards posted by Dropped Third Strike last night:

See any difference? It looks to me like the first cards have Gold Foil and the second ones have Silver. In other words, it is possible that Topps has created two complete parallel sets–one for Hobby boxes (Gold) and one for Retail (Silver). This is an interesting (disturbing?) development, if true.

Anyway, onto the Tiger show. The base checklist is small, but I kind of like it. There is nobody on there that makes me go WHO? or WHY? the way that certain people have in the past (Brent Dlugach last year, Chris Lambert in 2009 etc.)

33 Max Scherzer
94 Ryan Raburn
109 Hamilton/Cabrera/Mauer LL: AVG
121 Brandon Inge
150 Miguel Cabrera
175 Brennan Boesch
179 Armando Galarraga
181 Magglio Ordonez
182 Jeremy Bonderman
202 Bautista/Konerko/Cabrera LL: HR
264 Ryan Perry
306 Cabrera/Rodriguez/Bautista LL: RBI

I dig it, especially with Miguel Cabrera on all three triple crown league leaders cards. Bondo and Galarraga are gone, but those are recent developments and they deserve a Series 1 card, IMO. Props to Ryan Raburn for making the cut.

There are a ton of inserts, as always, but it feels like there are especially alot this year. Already, I have spotted SEVEN cards of Ty Cobb. Ridiculous. It’s their 60th anniversary, so I’m going to give Topps some slack on this one, but next year I’d really like to see this Topps slim down its set to just a couple of inserts.

Speaking of which, I really dig the look of the Topps 60 subset. Relevant, nicely done, maybe a little dull, but I like it. Here’s Johnny Damon, on the only Tigers autograph or relic that has surfaced yet:

“Most consecutive 80 run seasons in the AL*” Hmm. I wonder what the asterisk stands for. I guess everybody does have a record, right Heartbreaking Cards?

One of my favorite additions in recent years have been the retail-only commemorative patches. I talked about them the other day. Well, this one may be the best yet, featuring my the old-school Tigers logo that I’ve always loved.

Having not seen the whole card, I’m not exactly sure what they’re commemorating, but I dig the concept of a current player somehow paying tribute to the past, although for the life of me, I can’t figure out what stands out about the 1961 Tigers.

Finally, although no Tigers have cropped up yet, I wanted to point out the new “Platinum Diamond” parallels.

Yeah, I’ll be collecting these. They look amazing. I may try to collect a Gold set, as I typically do, but with INSANE ODDS for them (1:25 Blasters and 1:17 Retail?!?!) I may have to take a pass. Hopefully my OCD side can forgive me. I guess we’ll see.

I’m sure that there will be more to come from me as more cards leak out. I’ll be putting together a gallery as soon as I can get a definitive checklist and good images start cropping up. In the meantime, welcome to the real start of 2011 everyone!

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A Lot of Great Catch Up Mail!

on January 26th, 2011 by Drew

Hey guys, Drew back here. It’s that time again folks, the one where I have to show off all of the recent trades and acquisitions I’ve made with bloggers recently, because I’m too lazy to do them all separately! So, here goes, starting off with a packag…

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Last Piece of the Pie

on January 25th, 2011 by Grand Cards

When Topps T-206 came out earlier this year, collectors were treated to a very nice framed autograph set for the second year in the row. The Tigers had four autograph cards…and a redemption.

Now I used to be fearful of redemptions. Used to think that if I got a redemption card that my pot of gold at the end of the rainbow would never really come. That I’d end up with some crappy replacement card that I wouldn’t care about. That it would take forever. So I’ve avoided redemptions up until this year, when I cashed in three. Now, within a couple months all three have been delivered safely to my home, including this, the last piece of the T-206 autograph set:

2010 Topps T-206 #TA-RPO Rick Porcello

Rick Porcello!

Is this the year for Rick? He’s only 22, had a bit of a sophomore slump last year but appeared to rebound well. I think that he makes the leap this year to legitimate big league starter (and hope that our infield’s defense doesn’t betray him).

Admittedly, this card is not as nice as the other autographs in the set–the solid blue background is in stark contrast to the sunset/ball field backgrounds in the rest of the cards. But, it’s also happens to be of Rick Porcello, which makes it the best (2nd best?) card in the set.

But now the real question. What do I do with it?

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Tigers Trade Armando; Rotation Set, But Not Really

on January 24th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Not that this is a surprise, considering he was DFA’d last week hours after signing a $2.3M contract extension, but Armando Galarraga is officially a Tiger no more. The Tigers pick up minor league pitchers in return, which, fine. Call me in five years and ask me how it worked out.

This whole thing has been quite strange. Galarraga, struggled though he did last year (a perfect game aside), was looking like he would compete for the 5th starter spot. Then the Tigers signed Brad Penny, who pitched in a Dontrelle Willis-like 9 games last year, and apparently the competition was over. What we’re left with is a rotation that includes Phil Coke, freshly converted from the bullpen, and Brad Penny making a comeback.

Does this seem strange to anyone else? Does nobody feel that maybe, just maybe there is a chance that one or both of those pieces won’t work out? It doesn’t make sense to have a little bit of an insurance policy in place?

Certainly, somebody thought this, but their math came up with a different result. Basically, the Tigers are saying that one of Furbush, Oliver or Turner (PLEASE GOD NOT TURNER, NOT YET) is a superior option to Galarraga in the event that Coke or Penny doesn’t work out. Long-term I agree, but I’m not sure that that’s the right way to think about it at the moment. I guess we’ll see.

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Gus Zernial 1923-2010

on January 24th, 2011 by Grand Cards

Shame on me. I am now the third card blogger to have written something about Gus Zernial, who died last Thursday from congestive heart failure. That response time is unacceptable, especially when I actually have a Gus Zernial card:

Ozark Ike (where do they get these nicknames?) was 87. MLB has a nice writeup that highlights his involvement in bringing AAA Baseball to Fresno.

Zernial ended his career as a part time player for the Tigers, and actually had a pretty good 1958 before his worst-of-his-career-in-all-categories 1959 wrapped things up. Baseball Reference provides the meat and potatoes.

Rest in Peace, Gus. Baseball Card Icon.

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Tigers Gallery & Review: 2010 Bowman Sterling

on January 23rd, 2011 by Grand Cards

2010 Bowman Sterling is another quick and dirty set, so I’ll spare you the long write-ups and any normal “after the jump” content. Let me just preface this whole post with this: Bowman Sterling costs $223 per box at Blowout, and more elsewhere . A box has 6 packs with 5 cards per pack. 30 cards. Of course, 20 of those cards are “hits.” Still, when your best Tigers hit is Chance Ruffin, $223 is just a tad steep. This post will show you ALL of the Detroit Tigers that this could possibly get to.

Base Set I actually like these cards–they are nicer looking than the 2009 version. The Prospect Cards are especially nice with their rounded frame. The best way to describe the set is that this is what 2010 Finest should have looked like.

I’m showing you the Gold Refractors (#/50) here because I think that they really pop and I was somehow able to get images of the whole set, which is usually tough to do for a low-numbered parallel set. Of course, there are base cards, and many flavors of refractor including regular (#/199), Gold (#/50), Black (#/25), Purple (#/10), Red (1/1) and four printing plates.

For an All-Rookie checklist it includes the two must-haves (Jackson and Boesch), a solid prospect that Topps has fallen in love with of late (Oliver) and a player who was so bad in his only appearance as a Tiger that was sent down two days later, was cut from the 40-man roster in November and has been invited to join the Braves for Spring Training. He shouldn’t be here.

#5 Brennan Boesch

#8 Austin Jackson

#33 Andy Oliver

#37 Jay Sborz

Not bad, right? Even the regular versions of the cards look pretty nice, a stark contrast from Topps or Bowman Chrome or Finest, where the base cards tend to look dull:

What I don’t understand are some of the production decisions. Like, why did they decided to make the purple refractors in reverse?

This is odd and, dare I say, stupid.

Prospects A slightly different design and numbering system for the prospects. There are two–Daniel Fields who is one of the better positional prospects in the Tigers system (and looks like he’s put on a little weight since the last time we saw him), and Chance Ruffin, the 2010 supplemental pick out of Texas who looks to have high upside but got roughed up in the AFL this fall. He given the coveted Autograph Prospect card, and doesn’t have a non-autographed version.

#BSP-DF Daniel Fields

#BSP-CR Chance Ruffin

Other Stuff Ooh, so descriptive. There happens to be a box topper in this set that is a dual relic of Albert Pujols and Miguel Cabrera. It’s pretty sharp–this is the Black Refractor (#/25) version:

For $223 it can all be yours!

Seriously though, if you’re anything but a prospect-mad collector, this is absolutely a waste of your time and money. The Tigers checklist is small and decent, but all of these singles can be had for a pittance. I hypothesize that I could put together a full rainbow of the entire team set, prospects and autographs for less than the price of a box. If anyone would like me to test that theory, I’ll happily accept donations.

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One of these things is not like the other…

on January 22nd, 2011 by Grand Cards

Another card off of my Big Ten Wantlist (#4) came in the mail the other day, and it’s swell.

This is a Red Back mini retail insert from Target, one of three made of Tigers players in 2010. I think that this one is particularly nice, featuring a vintage looking picture of Hank Greenberg, and an apt card design. I mean:

Greenberg, a two-time AL MVP, smashed the third most home runs (331) by a player in a career of less than 1,500 games.

Other than the fact that I’m not really sure what that means, I can tell you one thing. He deserves an “HR” design for his card.

This one, from Series 2 (I think), is similarly well done:

That’s Ty Cobb in a Wal Mart Blue Back, and again we are given a card that makes perfect sense.

In a game during July 1911, the daring Cobb stole second base, third base and home on three successive pitches for Detroit.

Not only is that story awesome, but it ties the whole card together. Another nicely done example.

Then there’s this:

Fly Out?

I guess somebody needs to be on the fly out card, but they didn’t feel like using Pete Rose? What about Eddie Murray?

Oh well. You can’t win ‘em all.

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