Archive for September, 2009

Brett Favre Used to be a Bad-Ass

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on September 23, 2009 by Cardboard Icons

1991UDBrettFavreChecklist2Before Brett Favre became Brett Favre he was a weight room bad-ass, the leader of a crew of New Kids on the Block in Atlanta who was supposed to bring the Falcons back from the dead. OK, maybe I’m reading a bit too much into this image.

I don’t deal at all in football cards these days, but every once in a while I find a straggler while sorting my baseball cards. The one I found today: this 1991 Upper Deck Rookie Checklist featuring Bad-Ass Brett Favre and his Posse — Moe Gardner, Erric Pegram, Bruce Pickens and Mike Pritchard.

There’s not much to say about the card, it’s pretty much worthless, even if it is a Rookie-year issue of Brett Favre. I just love the fact that before all of these Wrangler Jeans commercials and non-retirement retirement press conferences there once was a guy from the south who wore his hat backward and sported Nike flat-footed Astroturf cleats. Word.

1991UDBrettFavreChecklist

Card of the Day: 1986 Topps Bill Buckner

Posted in Newspaperman, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on September 23, 2009 by Cardboard Icons

1986ToppsBillBucknerThis card is beyond words. There’s no action shown here, but the expression on Bill Buckner’s face speaks a thousands words. It almost like the baseball gods are talking to him, saying that he will have 2,700 career hits and bat nearly .300, but he will forever be remembered for a defensive play that will take place in the very near future. The result of this discussion: This look on Bill’s face, followed by an uncertain muttering of “Wha- What- What?”

“I have some old baseball cards …”

Posted in Newspaperman with tags , , , , , , , , on September 23, 2009 by Cardboard Icons

So the other day I wrote about how I had my letter published in Beckett, and it elicited a Facebook instant message from a friend of my wife. The general premise of his communication: He had some old baseball (and football) cards and wished to sell them. He offered to give me 25 percent if I helped. Before he wrote even another word I asked what he meant by “old,” knowing full-well that “old” to many former collectors meant cards produced between 1986-1994, AKA the worthless era. Well, sure enough I hit the time period right on the head. And because that is the case I knew that there was not much money to be made there at all; we were able to scratch the “million dollar dreams” without wasting much time.

Brian, if you’re reading this, know that I am not picking on you. Rather I found your reaction to my blog post to kind of interesting because it is a typical reaction from a former collector. They always want to know what their cards are worth and how soon they can collect their fortune.

The sad truth: The cards you purchased back in the day are worth almost nothing, especially if you started collecting any time in the 1980s and stopped about the time of the baseball strike (1994). In a nutshell, if you’re a former collector looking to determine what your cards are worth — and the duration of your hobby career fell in the aforementioned timeline — don’t even bother with the dollars and cents. Don’t go buy a Beckett. Don’t bother checking eBay. They’re worthless. Even that 1987 Topps Mark McGwire card that everyone likes to think is his rookie but really isn’t. Worthless.

And on the off chance that you own a 1989 Upper Deck Ken Griffey Jr. rookie — trust me, you’ll know if you do — all you need to know is that you can get $20-$25 cash for it right now. I’d bet that most former collectors would rather hold onto that iconic card then let it go for less than the price of a full tank of gas.

So what are you supposed to do with those cards? You have three options: 1) Keep ‘em as a momento of your youth, 2) Give ‘em to charity and get the tax write-off, 3) Give them to your kids later in life, particularly the ones who may enjoy baseball. Just know that if the third choice is your preference, the cards will still be worthless down the road, and that their value will be strictly sentimental.

I made it into Beckett

Posted in Newspaperman with tags , , , , , , on September 21, 2009 by Cardboard Icons

BeckettTommieSmithGetting published is something that is not new to me. I write for a living, so seeing my name in print isn’t a huge deal anymore. But when it happens unexpectedly, I must say there is a sense of giddiness.

Big thanks to Tom at South Bay Sports Cards for pointing out to me last week that I had been published in Beckett. I swung by the card shop last Friday for the first time in about six weeks to buy some supplies, and Tom asked if I was the guy who was published in Beckett. Turns out the magazine ran my letter in the “Readers Write” section.

In a nutshell, Beckett had created a list of most significant Allen & Ginter autographs since the set’s re-released in 2006. I noted that the 2007 Topps Allen & Ginter Tommie Smith card was not on Beckett’s list, but that I had considered it one of the most significant non-cut signatures Topps had released in the last decade. (You can probably click the image posted here and read the letter for yourself.)

What’s funny is that I had kind of stayed away from Beckett magazines in recent months because of my inactivity in the hobby so I had no intentions on buying the magazine. I actually held a copy of this same issue just days earlier while getting my oil changed at Wal-Mart, but I put it down before actually flipping to the Readers Write section. Had Tom not pointed out that I was in it, I probably would have never known.

This is the first time I’ve had my name in the magazine, but the second time something I did was recognized in print. In 2001, the magazine noted my $3,605 sale of a 2001 Upper Deck Hall of Fame Walter Johnson cut signature. And yes, I am kicking myself for not keeping a scan of the card or taking a picture with it. Gah!

Thrift Treasures Part XIII: Sons of My Native Land

Posted in Thrift Treasures with tags , , , , , , , , on September 6, 2009 by Cardboard Icons

I was born in San Francisco, but grew up primarily in the city of Santa Clara, California, the home of Major League Baseball’s Troy Tulowitzki. He’s a pretty big deal ’round these parts, even if he does play for the Rockies, a division foe of the San Francisco Giants. I actually saw someone — had to be a family member — riding around in a pickup recently with a license plate that read something to the effect of “TuloFn1.”

But my post today is not about Tulo. Actually, it’s about a pair of other local talents — Carney Lansford and Jeremy Giambi — whose cards I stumbled upon at a flea market on Saturday.

Now usually my thrift treasures posts actually contain what some believe to be treasures — or bargains –but here I’m only talking about three cards, 1979 Topps Carney Lansford rookie, 1982 Topps Carney Lansford (Red Sox), and a 1999 Bowman Chrome International Refractor of Jeremy Giambi. Yes, the OTHER Giambi.

I knew Carney grew up in the area. Hell, I played in the same Little League that Carney did — there is a picture of him as a kid in a Red Sox Briarwood-El Camino Little League uniform hanging in the snack shack — and the baseball field at the high school I attended is named after Lansford. And as a kid in the 1980s, Carney was big deal to us locals because he played for the A’s, who always seemed to be in the world series.

But now as an adult, and a Boston Red Sox team collector, I’ve been passively 1982ToppsCarneyLansfordlooking for a Carney Red Sox card to add to my collection. I knew he played two seasons for Boston in the early 1980s. Well, I finally uncovered the treasure at the flea market on Saturday for a whopping 50 cents. The card clearly came from a guy who was praying on locals who knew nothing about the current state of the card market, but might be intrigued enough to buy some of his common Raider or 49ers cards. You know, the same retired collectors who you might hear chatting up your local card shop operator to figure out what his 10 1991 Fleer baseball factory sets are worth. And then that pseudo collector tells the tallest of tales when upon learning his sets are worthless, he shoots back with an asinine statement about how he also has a handful of Michael Jordan rookies.

I digress. I typically despise these sellers because they often lie through their freakin’ teeth to get someone to spend a few bucks at their booth. But here, I can honestly say I am glad he was there.

After landing the Carney Red Sox card, my wife, daughter, and my brother-in-law continued our search down the flea market aisles. 1979ToppsCarneyLansfordAbout 20 minutes later I found another guy selling cards. Most of his stuff was crap piled atop of crap, but among his stack of cards on sale for $1 was this 1979 Topps Carney Lansford rookie.  I’ve always loved and admired this card, primarily because it was considered vintage and impossible to obtain when I was younger. The card shop never had them for sale, and the only time I saw one in person was at my friend’s home — his dad had one in his collection. Despite being valued at only at $1.50, this card has remained elusive to me, but alas it has found a home in my box of rookie cards. It should be noted that this image was shot at Oakland-Alameda Coliseum, home of the A’s, which also adds some intrigue to the card since he wound up spending most of his career playing at this ball park.

1999BowmanChromeGiambiRefAfter walking around for about two hours we decided to head home. But right before we left, I spotted a former collector who had nothing but baseball cards for sale at his booth. He had a few 5,000 boxes packed to the brim with cards for which he was charging a buck each. I quickly flipped through his baseball box and unearthed this 1999 Bowman Chrome International Refractor of Jeremy Giambi,  serial numbered to just 100 copies. I didn’t have a buck, but offered the guy 50 cents and he took it. The card isn’t that valuable, but I know that some of these “early” serial numbered parallels can be quick useful either in trades or on eBay as there are a handful of people still building this International Refractor set. Suffice it to say I can easily turn the 50 cents for a small profit, at least enough to say that I got my Lansford cards for free. As a bonus, I learned yesterday by reading the back of the card that Giambi was born in San Jose, California, just a few minutes from where I live.

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