State Of The Hobby – November 1991

My post “State Of The Hobby – 1990” was met with positive reviews and even some requests to follow up with more similar posts.  As I am a blogger who aims to please, I felt the urge to do so.  It also helps that I enjoyed browsing that old Beckett and seeing those 1989 Donruss Rated Rookies priced at that moment in time when I was buying them.  If you collected in the late 80’s and early 90’s, I encourage – nay, I demand – you find a Beckett Magazine from that era and just read through it.  There are things that you’ll remember immediately and then there are some that you will have totally forgotten about.  Those forgotten tidbits are the gems that make the $5 investment worth every penny.

Yankees Slugger Kevin Maas
The last post covered the time that Jerome Walton, Ricky Jordan and Ben McDonald were vying for young superstar supremacy with Ken Griffey Jr.  By the time this 1991 edition of Beckett was printed, Jr. had left those guys in the dust and a new crop of 2nd year players were endearing themselves to collectors.  Guys like Kevin Maas and Scott Erickson were outperforming Frank Thomas and John Olerud in value.  Another hot young stud named Phil Plantier was making Jeff Bagwell and Ivan Rodriguez look like chopped liver.  The biggest takeaway from reading this edition was that baseball cards were skyrocketing in value and we were at the very beginning of the bubble that would burst just a few short seasons later.

Card Shows Were As Abundant As 90 Donruss
Perhaps nothing encapsulated card hysteria in 1991 like the card show calendar.  The calendar at the back of the magazine was 22 pages long…..22 PAGES!!!  There was a card show happening in every state including 1 in Hawaii, 3 in Idaho, 1 in Montana and 1 in the Virgin Islands.  There were 143 card shows for November in the state of Texas.  This was the height of the hobby that I remember when I was 14.  Premium cards were another hot item and they were met with hot and cold reactions from collectors as you’ll see when we get to the “Readers Write” section.

Enough rambling, let’s jump into the card collecting world from November, 1991.

Bo’s Back!
Bo graced the cover of this magazine just like he did in the 1990 edition I covered.  However, a lot had happened for Bo since that 1990 Beckett.  This cover has him in a White Sox jersey with a card in the lower left that says, “Bo’s Back!”  He was about 10 months removed from the hip injury that ended his football career and his time in Kansas City.  He was also climbing back up the Hot List as it reveals he was 20th after being 29th the month before.

Jose Can You See
The inside cover is a wonderful artist rendering of Jose Canseco.  I would love to have the actual print of this but I’m sure it’s hanging on Eric Norton’s wall at Beckett at this point.  What a beautiful photo!

I Totally Missed The Ho-Jo Craze Of ’91
The first article I read was this gem titled, “Ho-Jo’s Ris-in”.  It was interesting because I don’t remember Johnson having numbers this impressive.  He had reached the 30-30 club for the third time in 1991 and at the time, was ranked 2nd in franchise history for home runs and 3rd for stolen bases.  I don’t remember Ho-Jo being a base stealer but boy, was he ever.  He was a prime candidate for NL MVP in 1991 according to this piece.

Hail State??
The second article was on the superstars from the Mississippi State Bulldogs, beating 30 for 30 to the punch by about 25 years.  Included in the article was a rundown of Will Clark, Rafael Palmeiro, Bobby Thigpen and Jeff Brantley.  As usual there was a baseball card spin to the article that made you want to seek out those cards.

While Supplies Last!
Then we have an advertisement for the Ken Griffey Jr. Arena Holograms cards.  This REALLY took me back.  I remember collecting Jr. and Frank Thomas in these cards.  They took out a full page ad to display them too.  This was one of those forgotten gems.

Hammerin’ Hank
There’s also an interesting article that could get an overhaul since 26 years have passed.  “Most Memorable Mashes” covered a list of memorable home runs over the years.  1988 was the last year featured and it would probably be fun to complete the list with what’s happened since.  Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, Ken Griffey Jr., Barry Bonds and Albert Pujols are just a few that have had big time home runs since that time.

·         1951 – Bobby Thompson’s “Shot Heard Round the World” Wins Pennant for Giants

·         1953 – Mickey Mantle hits 565 Ft Home Run

·         1960 – Bill Mazeroski HR Beats Yanks in World Series

·         1961 – Maris Breaks Babe’s Season HR Mark

·         1974 – Hank Aaron Breaks Ruth’s All Time HR Record

·         1978 – Bucky Dent Breaks Boston’s Heart

·         1988 – Kirk Gibson Seals Oakland’s Fate

Bo Knows Cards!
Here’s a nice spread of Bo’s cards from 1986-1991, surprisingly leaving out the ’87 Topps Future Star.

I then found myself at the “Readers Write” section which was fun to read then but is even more of a blast now.  It really gives you a look into what was going through our minds as collectors back then.The first was “Bogged Down” in which a reader blamed dealers for “false increases in newer cards just to pad their pockets.”  I think the response from Beckett set the record straight on this one by breaking down demand of certain new cards vs. older rookies.“Speaking Out” and “Speaking Out II” covered the frustration that collectors were beginning to see as pricing for singles, packs and boxes were starting to rise.  It makes me miss when $4.00 packs were considered highway robbery.The final piece I found interesting was a question about the 1991 Topps Desert Storm cards.  With this being 1991, it seems that no one had a real handle on the production.  We were all even less sure of how value would look in the future.  Hindsight is 20/20 I suppose.

Is That Ron Gant I See?
Before we move to pricing, there was the Hot and Cold list.  The Hot List had some familiar names with Frank Thomas (1) and Ken Griffey Jr. (2) but Scott Erickson came in at #3.  This was right after his dominant rookie season and the ’91 World Series for Minnesota.  Meanwhile, Kevin Maas and Todd Van Poppel were dropping like rocks.  It was time to get out of those investments but I held on too long.  The Cold List featured some solid names with Jose Canseco (also on the Hot List), Pete Rose, Don Mattingly (Hot List) and Bo Jackson (Hot List).  But this is the first indication that we are about to see some disappointed Jerome Walton collectors as he checks in at #7.

There is a lot to cover in pricing because we were experiencing some record breaking prices around this time for sports cards.

I Pulled A Ton Of Ron Guidry
1982 Topps – Here we are starting to see Cal Ripken’s Rookie Cards start to take off.  It was $52 and climbing as of publication date.

Sweet Lou On The Rise
1983 Donruss – Here’s that bump Ho-Jo was experiencing.

Willie McGee A Solid $5.50
1983 Topps – Ryne Sandberg’s Rookies weren’t far behind Cal.

Nice Julio Franco!
1983 Topps Traded – Holy Cow!  Look at that Daryl Strawberry XRC!

A $3.50 Diamond King?
1984 Donruss – I had to check back in on the Kevin McReynolds from my 1990 post.  I found that it was starting to come back down to earth.  Side note – Tony Fernandez RC looked pretty good here.

Some Upward Action In ’84 Donruss
1984 Donruss – This set was also the home of a $75 Don Mattingly RC.

Valuable Cardboard In ’91
1984 Fleer Update – This set was still rocking and rolling with a huge $240 Roger Clemens, $185 Kirby and a $120 Doc Gooden.

My 1st Dream Card
1986 Donruss – Jose Canseco was hovering at $90 and was Priority #1 on my needs list.  It was worth $60 in my last post.

Woodgrain Was Not Popular in ’91
1987 – Topps has clung to that wood grain design for 30 years now and when you look at prices of the sets from that year, it makes me wonder where Topps would have been with a generic design.

My 2nd Dream Card
1989 Upper Deck – The world famous Ken Griffey Jr. #1 card was worth $13.50 in “State of the Hobby – 1990”.  One year later, it had risen to $55.00 and wasn’t even half way to its peak.  Hide your eyes Jerome Walton Collectors!

Craziness!
1990 Leaf – For a set from 1990, these prices were astronomical.  Frank Thomas was $60 and rising and Dave Justice was $28.

Better Than The Base Set
1991 Fleer Pro Visions – I’m not the only one who liked Pro Visions!

Pure Gold!
1991 Leaf Gold Bonus – These were as hot as a firecracker in November 1991.

Mark Whiten?
1991 Stadium Club – The “Leaf of ‘91”, Stadium Club was turning the hobby upside down with its UV coating and partnership with Kodak.  We get our first glimpse at Boston Slugger Phil Plantier at $9 and rising.

Somebody Say Card Show?
The last section of note in this edition is the aforementioned Card Show Calendar.  This was pretty unbelievable to see with my 2017 eyes.  The card shows were blowing up all over the country!  Look at this one spread and multiple that for 22 pages.  Totally unreal!!

3 Day Shows Were Normal
And what’s a card show section without an example of the autographs you could hit at one of those shows.  At a show in Arizona, you could get autographs of Rickey Henderson, Rafael Palmeiro, Ronnie Lott and Roger Craig for a total of $53!   There were numerous shows in November that were featuring Frank Thomas anywhere from $6-$10.  Do you realize how big of a name Frank Thomas was in November 1991??  He was #1 on the Hot List for a reason!

Next Time On “State Of The Hobby”
So as you can see by this revisit to 1991, the sports card industry was reaching unbelievable heights.  Card shows were popping up everywhere, card companies were starting to innovate in new and imaginative ways, some of the most recognized players in baseball history were at or near their peak and Bo was Back!  Hopefully you’ve enjoyed another look back to the heyday of collecting for me.  Maybe you collected at that same time and all of this is refreshing your memory.  Or maybe you’re a younger collector and don’t really understand just how big this hobby was in 1991.  Either way, the examples listed here should give you a pretty good idea.  The fun doesn’t end in 1991 though.  I can’t wait to get to ’92 and see what pricing was doing on Donruss Elite!

J-Dub

Camilla’s Always Home

I like to think I had a pretty normal childhood.  I grew up in a small town in Southwest Georgia during what I call, “the greatest time to be a kid”.  The town was Camilla and the time was the 80’s.  I’m sure people who grew up in the 60’s and 70’s think that about their childhood as well but they didn’t have Transformers, He-Man and VHS tapes!  Aside from some of the mainstream items that were popular in the 80’s there were some other local fun that Camilla provided to the kids.  I plan to cover a lot of the fun I had as a kid in that small town of 5,000 but I’m sure my readers have some of their own favorite memories that may not be the same in my memory bank.

Mitchell County Courthouse
I moved away from Camilla when I was 20 but I still go back quite often as my family, and my wife’s family, still call it home.  I technically still call it home too but I haven’t lived there in 20 years.  But that’s why they are called “hometowns” to begin with, right?  Because I go back to Camilla periodically, I have been able to see it change over the years, all in the name of progress.  And because I don’t live there anymore, I haven’t embraced the changes like a local resident might.  So with that in mind, this piece is not meant as a slight in any way to the local businesses in town in 2017.  I’ll cover plenty of closed establishments that are now new stores.  But this is coming from an entirely nostalgic perspective and is not meant as an indictment on the businesses that have taken their place.  This is less about economy and more about memories.
Original Wal-Mart Building Then & Now
We went to Camilla this past weekend for our niece’s 1st birthday and we had to stop at Wal-Mart to pick something up on the way in.  I think about it often but this time, I really stopped to think about the placement of the new Wal-Mart and the history of the area as it dates back to my childhood.  For those of you who haven’t been back to Camilla over the last several years, the old Wal-Mart closed and a new building went up right next door to it behind the old Phillips 66.  To enter the Wal-Mart parking lot coming from US 19 N, you have to turn in on the access road that runs between Mitchell County Ford and the “new” Phillips 66.  As I rode through that specific area, certain memories flooded back into my mind.  That’s what initially triggered this post but as we went through Camilla, my senses were heightened and I rattled off all the “old stores” that used to be around.
Winn-Dixie Then & Now
Back to the new Wal-Mart, that is always the first place my mind goes because it’s the first location I get to when I come into town.  The old Wal-Mart used to be the anchor tenant of the most frequented strip center in Mitchell County.  When I was a kid, the strip center was also home to Winn-Dixie, Subway, Video Superstore and a couple of local clothing stores.  Subway is all that remains from that time, although Ming Yong opened up when I was a teen and is still there.  The old Wal-Mart is now a Marvin’s Home Improvement Store AND a Hibbett’s Sporting Goods.  The Winn-Dixie is a dark, empty space.  The Video Superstore is long gone and is now the home of a beauty supply.  VS is probably the most missed for my nostalgia and got its own post HERE.
I Still Love ’89 Donruss
This original Wal-Mart location was the first place I ever picked up baseball cards.  I remember that card cube like it was yesterday.  It was loaded with ’89 Donruss, ’89 Score, card supplies and Beckett magazines.  It was the first place I went every time I entered the store.  I didn’t care what our reason for being there was; this was the only business I needed to conduct.  I don’t miss “Wal-Mart” because it’s right next door.  But I do miss the old building because it’s what I grew up with if that makes any sense.  I don’t really like the new Wal-Mart and it’s probably just for sentimental reasons.  Not only did it move out of the building I was always familiar with, it completed the destruction of another spot that I frequented often as a kid, even though the memories of this place weren’t always warm and fuzzy.  But even those memories are a big part of my youth and I always hate to see them wiped out.
Nothing Original Remains Of Phillips 66
The gas station that now sits in the location in front of Wal-Mart used to be a full service gas station, Phillips 66.  The gas station I am referring to is the small 2 bay garage type that sat in the middle of a large dirt parking lot.  In the back of the station, there was a place to park a couple of semi trucks and that’s where my dad kept his truck when it wasn’t at the house.  It was that dirt parking lot where I spent many Saturdays helping him change tires or change oil or replace carburetors.  To be honest, I didn’t know what we were doing half the time; I just knew that I was hot, bored and working on a non-school day.  Worse than that was the 4:00 mornings that dad would need to go tarp a load to protect it from rain, which couldn’t be done alone very easily.  I still remember walking on top of a load of lumber trying to stretch a tarp out in a light drizzle, still half asleep.  I’d get back home just in time to fall asleep and have to wake back up for school.

Hardee’s California Raisin Table Ad 1987
Before we leave this northern corridor of Camilla, we have to remember what a big deal having Hardee’s open up was.  In the southwest parking area of the Wal-Mart strip center, Hardee’s broke ground and introduced me to my all time favorite breakfast, the chicken biscuit.  I still eat chicken biscuits at Pearly’s every Saturday but remember those Hardee’s days fondly.  This was where I collected the full set of California Raisins that came with kids meals and the cinnamon raisin biscuit, which Granddaddy (Grover) would often eat.  It was also where I would take my lunch breaks when I worked at Video Superstore.  The food at Hardee’s sustained me for a good 10-12 years before it eventually changed over to a Popeye’s.  Now, it’s a brand new looking Taco Bell and I have yet to eat there.

Former Camilla Playschool
We have to go back a few years before the Wal-Mart and Winn-Dixie to get to the next memorable location on my list.  This spot has been gone for quite some time but my first experience as a student was at the Camilla Playschool.  This was my first taste of “school” and “classrooms” and I met a few friends there that would stay with me all the way through High School graduation.   I don’t remember a ton from those days but I remember what the class rooms looked like, the playground and some of the faces from there.  I have taken a ride by there more than a few times just to remember the area.  I don’t really know what the building is now but it hasn’t been a playschool for probably 30 years.
The Old Firehouse – 2017
Back when I was going to the playschool on Stephens Street, my grandfather was the fire chief in Camilla.  The fire department was a small 2 story building that is still there and operates as a pediatrician’s office if I am correct.  This was an old school fire department where the firemen slept upstairs and could look over a railing and see all the fire equipment.  There was the famous fireman’s pole that helped them move quickly to the trucks when the bell rang.  One of the most vivid memories I have from that old fire department was the wooden ramp that was behind it that had fire hoses stretched out on it.  It was as good as any playground equipment I had access to and I would run up and down it much to my grandfather’s chagrin.  A newer public safety complex was built within eyesight of the old fire department when I was 11 or 12 and was much more safety oriented and thus not kid friendly.

Oh How I Loved Optimus Prime
Around the time I was running up and down on the hose ramp (I don’t know what it’s official name was), there was a store out in front of the P&C bank that had a lot neat toys for us kids to go look at.  As far as toys were concerned, there weren’t many places to shop before Wal Mart opened in ’85-’86 so this was a hot spot if you wanted to pick up the sweet item that was running on Saturday morning commercials.  The store served a much greater purpose I’m sure but there is one memory that I have about Western Auto that makes it worthy of remembrance still today.  The memory is one of Optimus Prime.  The #1 cartoon on Saturday morning for me and my friends was Transformers.  The series has come a long way from its roots in 1984.  But when this cartoon hit the morning rotation, it was can’t miss TV.  The hero of the show was Optimus Prime, Leader of the Autobots.  This Western Auto is where I scored my first Optimus toy and I will forever have a soft spot for that semi truck that turned into a walking robot.  I wish I still had it.  Not only for the memory but a quick scan of eBay shows that these original toys sell for around $1,500 today.  I always used to mess with my dad about his old baseball cards being thrown out but I guess I did the same thing with ole Optimus Prime.

This TV Weighed 1,000 Pounds
Another retail hot spot before the chains and supercenters arrived was the Curtis Mathes TV Store on Broad Street.  As a matter of fact, I think I found a photo of the exact TV we owned when I was a kid.  You know, back in the days when the kids were the remote control.  I remember seeing the end of Friday the 13th on this TV and being scared of The Incredible Hulk.  Aside from the TV though, the big draw for me at Curtis Mathes was the VHS rental room they had in the back of the store.  This was the first place I found VHS tapes and likely began my lifelong obsession of watching corny horror movies.  I can close my eyes and still see the way the videos were all lined up.  Even though I went on to work at the epic Video Superstore and Movie Gallery when I was older, I cut my movie teeth in that Curtis Mathes.
Parking Lot of BC Moore’s Looks Much Like It Did In 1988
You can’t talk retail and 80’s without a mention of B.C. Moore’s on Scott Street.  I probably got 95% of my wardrobe from B.C. Moore’s when I was 12.  They had t-shirts, shorts, church clothes, ties and belts.  But what I remember most about the store was the shoe section.  I got many a Chuck Taylor at that store growing up.  When I was a kid, they were neon yellow and orange and were actually original.  We never parked in the front, instead opting for rear parking where the concrete ramp where merchandise was wheeled into the store from trucks was located.  If the firehouse hose ramp was fun, imagine this concrete ramp for an adventurous young boy.  It’s so weird the things that stick out in your mind when you think about some old memories.
Old Piggly Wiggly – Now Farmers Home Furniture
Before Winn-Dixie came to town, the grocery store that got all of our business was the great Piggly Wiggly.  I remember loading up on 1989 Topps baseball cards at Piggly Wiggly because I could get Donruss and Score at Wal-Mart.  But interestingly enough, that’s not the most vivid memory I have of the store.  That memory belongs to the old President’s card game that was an occasional promotion there.  I can’t find any information on it now but back then, you received a card with all of the president’s names.  If memory serves, you were given a couple of tags or tickets when you bought groceries and you peeled them back much like the McDonald’s Monopoly game of today.  You had to match up all the tags with the names on the card and you would win some extravagant prize.  Not surprisingly, we never completed the cards but I can always remember a couple of presidents that were rumored to be very rare.  For some reason, I remember pulling a ton of McKinley’s and Taft’s.  I learned more about our presidents playing that game than I ever did in school.  In the not so fun memory department, I remember flipping a grocery buggy with my baby brother in it one time.  I got a good whipping for that one.
Middle School – Front, 7th Grade Homeroom, 5th Grade Hall and Gym
Speaking of what I learned (or didn’t learn)  in school, there has been a complete restructuring of the public schools in Camilla.  Now, the Elementary, Middle and High School are all at the same location.  When I was young, they were in three different areas of the city.  I’ve written before about the Elementary School HERE and the High School HERE but one I haven’t written about in great detail (yet) is the Middle School.  The Middle School I went to was on South Harney Street and used to be the High School if I am not mistaken.  This school holds a ton of memories for me.  I played marbles, started collecting baseball cards, went to my first school dance and learned how to play basketball at this school.  While a lot of memories are vague and spotty before Middle School, there are many that come in to focus during those years.
Methodist Church & Office During Rebuild
The Middle School was centrally located for the places I went after school.  My mom worked at the Camilla United Methodist Church, before and after the lightning strike and I would go to her office most of the time after school.  Even when the church was being rebuilt and the office moved to one of the historic houses on Broad, I would still walk up by the hospital (where my grandmother worked) and Dr. Shiver’s office (where my aunt worked) to use the emergency room alley as a shortcut to my destination.  Whether it was the actual church or the temporary office, I could get there pretty quickly after school and those were the days when it was much safer to allow your 10 year old to make that trip on foot.

There was another destination I would head to on some school afternoons that was within walking distance.  That destination was the old Ambulance Service on East Stephens Street where my aunt worked.  As far back as I remember, my aunt was the director of the EMS in Camilla (until a recent retirement) and I would go to her office sometimes with my cousin Adam.  We would play basketball or hassle the EMT’s inside about mundane kid problems.  There was also a small wooden house across the road that was a storefront aptly named Shiver’s Store.  They had candy, drinks and any other snack a 10 year old could desire.  The big memory I have of that store was the huge jar of sour pickles they kept on the counter.  I bought one every time I went in there and still think about it when I see pickles in a convenience store today.

Old Stop N Shop Is Now Flash Foods
The other two convenience stores I would frequent in those days were the Stop N Shop at the fork of Scott and Butler and the Suwannee Swifty on Highway 97 at the exit of my neighborhood.  I went into the Stop N Shop almost daily either with my dad or granddaddy and would later use the parking lot as a “cut through” for when I was going uptown.  The Suwannee Swifty was my before and after school stop where I would get a breakfast hot dog or an occasional pack of ’89 Donruss.  Next door to the Suwannee Swifty was Big Boy Meats and next door to that was Cagles, at full operation before the new plant on US 19 was built.  That area has changed so much.  The old Cagles looks like a kudzu factory now and the Big Boy Meats building was leveled.
Nuk Nuk’s Is Now Kebo’s
Later in my teen years, I would go to Danny Newton’s store late at night with my buddies on the way to Huddle House for a midnight egg sandwich.  Newton’s was the only place in town you could get a Mountain Dew and a Fur Coat Care Kit in the same visit.  I remember him telling us that he bought about 50 of the fur care kits for $10 at a flea market and was then trying to sell them for $5 apiece.  I didn’t even know anybody with a fur coat.  I am certain that fur coat owners didn’t frequent that store.  You could also stumble in every now and then on a horror or adult movie playing on his black and white TV.  It was probably the oddest store in town but we would somehow end up there several times a week.  Probably because it was open later than most but the stories we picked up were also a driving force.  That location is Kebo’s BBQ now and is still a mighty fine stop on a trip through C-Town.
Big B Shopping Center 2017
As the chain stores and strip centers started to pop up in town, one that was a frequent visit for me was the Big B Drug’s shopping center.  Big B had a good selection of baseball cards which, if you haven’t guessed by now, is one of the selling points for me in regards to the value of a store.  Big B was also a smaller, quicker alternative to having to go to Wal-Mart for essentials.  A couple doors down from Big B was “The House of Music” which provided one of the greatest technological advancements ever, the cassette single.  I was going through a rap phase when I first started driving and I could buy one song on a cassette there for around $2.50.  I didn’t invest in full albums back then as I only wanted what was hot at the time.

VHS Expert
At the end of the strip center was the Movie Gallery.  When my days ended at the Video Superstore, I moved over to the Movie Gallery to continue my development as a VHS expert.  Movie Gallery was a larger corporation and more structured than Video Superstore, which ultimately led to my dissatisfaction with the job.  But I was known in my circles as the video store guy for several years of my teen life.  I don’t know if that was really good or bad but I still wear it as a badge of honor and have a strong connection with Randall from Clerks every time I watch that classic.
Legion Entrance – Courtesy of Shaun Hall
While all of these places have special memories for me, there is one place that is as bold and vivid in my mind as any memory I have from my Camilla youth.  Unfortunately, it has deteriorated beyond belief and is no longer a place of joy and laughter.  The American Legion Pool was THE spot to be on a summer afternoon in the late 80’s and early 90’s.  The legion was a huge spring fed pool that had a high dive, springboard and the locally famous Super Slide.  The water was freezing cold and perfect for the 100 degree South Georgia heat.  The pool would open around 1:00 and close at 6:00 if memory serves and those 5 hours were never enough for one day.  The Legion is where I mastered the art of being shot down by pretty girls in bathing suits.  I was no Rico Suave like Jason Lee or BJ Harris.
Snack Bar and Volleyball Court – Courtesy of Shaun Hall
Aside from swimming, you could spend the day playing a couple of video games (1942 is one I remember), playing ping pong and of course, playing volleyball.  Volleyball was where you went to get noticed.  There and at the top platform of the Super Slide, where you would stand until the lifeguard blew the whistle to get you down.  The worst part about volleyball was that one of the out of bounds lines was the bathroom building and if you hit the ball on the roof, it was slanted away from the volleyball court.  You would have to exit the facility altogether and walk in the stickers to go get the ball.  The rule was that if you hit it over, you had to go get it, unless you were the young kid that could be forced to go get it.  The last time I went to the Legion was for my 10 year High School reunion and I believe I am one of the only ones that swam and tackled  the Super Slide.  I still have a hard time growing up and I’m 40.
Pool Images – Courtesy of Shaun Hall
Alas, like many of these other locations from my youth, the Legion is just a memory kept alive through pictures.  I don’t know why it fell apart like it did.  Maybe the spring stopped feeding the pool and the cost was too high to maintain otherwise.  Maybe interest waned but that is hard to believe.  Alicia and I both wish it was still open if for no other reason than to take our daughter to experience a fun place we experienced growing up.  Unfortunately, I don’t think I could drop her off and pick her up 5 hours later like our parents used to.  Things were different in 1988 in more ways than one but I sure do miss those days.

Times change and I understand that as much as anybody.  Stores come and go and economies evolve.  But that’s not what this was about for me.  I truly miss walking into the old Wal-Mart and knowing exactly where I needed to go.  I miss Friday Nights at the Video Superstore, where every 17 year old wanted to be.  I miss going to see my Papa at the fire department and then riding over to Curtis Mathes to have my mom rent Ghostbusters.  I miss hiding from my parents in the dressing room at B.C. Moore’s because I didn’t want dress pants to wear to church.  I still wonder about what my life would be like today if I had hit that big prize in the Piggly Wiggly President’s Game.

There are places I didn’t even touch on that are long gone in my hometown.  The old wood yard across from Centennial Stadium is now part of the rec department and is cleaned up for soccer fields.  The Huddle House closed, AC’s Steakhouse is history, Estelle’s is no more and my high school isn’t even Mitchell-Baker anymore as Baker went back to their county and we are left with just Mitchell County.  Many of my friends have moved away, neighbors have changed and I see more people I don’t know than familiar faces when I visit.  But some of the faces have remained the same and some of the stores are still open.  And every time I go “home”, I see something that reminds me of another time in my life and it takes me back to that familiar place where life was a little easier.  And regardless of the modifications to the landscape, that will never change.

Now, if Krispy Chik ever closes, we are going to have some serious problems at the Shiver house.

J-Dub

Pigskin & Wax

I made a cheap eBay purchase a couple of weeks ago purely for some nostalgic fun.  I bought a series of Topps Football packs from 1987-1991; one pack for each year.  This lot intrigued me because I hadn’t opened these particular years of Topps Football in quite some time and there are some pretty solid rookies to be had.  Randall Cunningham is in ’87, Bo and Okoye in ’88, Barry, Aikman and Deion in ’89 and Emmitt in ’90.  I wasn’t too interested in ’91 but it completed the 5 year stretch.  Spoiler alert – I picked up my best rookie card in that ’91 pack.  The other intriguing part of the deal was that it was less than $10 shipped.  

Topps really didn’t change a whole lot from 87-90 and it wasn’t until ’91 that they came close to matching up with the baseball design.  All of the sets have a basic white border and they really only evolved just a tad from year to year.  Each pack comes with a 1,000 Yard Club card showcasing a player that topped the 1,000 yard mark the previous year.  I don’t suppose I really had to explain that.  The packs themselves are almost identical with only color schemes being different.  Each pack from 87-90 are wax packs but changed in ’91 to the new cello type material, just like baseball.  In ’91, the gum was replaced with one more card increasing the pack size from 15 to 16. I was prepared to pull some of the star players because we all remember them.  But there were a few players that I had totally forgotten about until ripping these packs.  I won’t cover every player in every pack but there are a few in each that deserve a comment.

1987 – ’87 has a pretty basic design with dualing flags at the top of the card with the players name and team name opposite each other’s.  Those flags were the two main colors of the team uniform.  The plus for this set was that I did like the 1,000 Yard Club card better than the others but that’s not exactly a huge compliment.

The first time Todd Christensen makes an appearance in my memory is courtesy of original Tecmo Bowl.  That version only had 12 NFL teams and 4 offensive plays but the Raiders were one of the best on offense.  If Bo, Marcus Allen and Tim Brown weren’t enough, Christensen was one of the fastest tight ends on the game.  He became even more memorable for me but I’ll save that for the second card I pulled of him, hint-hint.Anthony in Minnesota was one of two receiving Carter’s and together with Cris, made a formidable duo.  He began his career in the USFL and caught the game winning TD pass from Bobby Hebert in the USFL Championship his rookie season.  He seemed to rise to the occasion come playoff time.  He still holds the NFL record for most all purpose yards in a single postseason with 642.Steve Largent is another Tecmo Bowl Legend.  Largent is a member of the NFL Hall of Fame and is the first WR to catch 100 passes in a career.  He once held the record for consecutive games with a catch at 177 until Jerry Rice obliterated it on the way to 274.  Largent is also the only player I pulled in this lot that went on to be a congressman.Ozzie Newsome is better known in today’s NFL as the General Manager of the Ravens, for better or worse.  But for some of us older guys, he was a helluva tight end too.  He’s historically been ranked around #5 on all time lists from various outlets.  He’s a member of the Hall of Fame and gave the position some punch from an offensive perspective.  And not to mention, never missed a game in 13 seasons.Most packs from the 80’s include an oddball of sorts.  Mark Gastineau is the oddball in this one.  He may be an oddball in this pack but he was a stud on the field.  He still holds all of the major sack records for the Jets and made the Pro Bowl 5 times.  After football though, he spent some time behind bars for various crimes in the late 90’s.  Some people may know his daughter Brittny more than Mark but he was a very good player in his day.

1988 – ’88 was my best pack as a whole.  The ’88 base design is probably my favorite of this group.  The card uses the two primary team colors in the design at the bottom of the card in a very cool visual.

Henry Ellard was a stud with the Rams.  Everett to Ellard was a vastly underrated combo on my opinion.  This 1,000 Yard Club design was not underrated as it was rightfully poorly rated.  Out of the 5 years, this was probably ranked #4.  Lame is all I can say about it.Art Monk – Hall of Famer – 3x World Champion – 3x Pro Bowler – First WR to 900 receptions.  What else do you need to know?I’m sure Jim Kelly asked Topps if this was the best picture they could find in their file. It’s just a terrible shot of a star QB in ’88.  Kelly is another Hall of Famer with impeccable numbers.  But he’ll always have to carry around that 0-4 label in the Super Bowl, which is very unfortunate.Eric Dickerson was indeed an All Pro as this card would indicate.  Dickerson was a 6x Pro Bowler, NFL Rookie of the Year and led the league in rushing 4 times.  He even played for the Falcons for a short period.The only way you can really describe Ronnie Lott is “absolute beast!”  He could strike you, he could pick you off and he could sack you.  Extremely gifted with a combination of speed and hands at safety puts him on my favorites list.The ’88 oddball is the same player as the 1,000 Yard Club member in ’87.  But this is what he looked like the second time he enters my memory bank.  He was a commentator on American Gladiators and rocked the worst Afro/Mustache combo of the late 80’s.

1989 – ’89 had my second favorite 1,000 Yard Club design from this group.  I also like and remember the base designs well.  They come to mind when I think “Topps Football”.

Neal Anderson first got my attention on NES Play Action Football.  In 1990, it was the best attempt at the real thing on Nintendo.  It would only survive one year though as the king of all NES games would hit shelves in 1991.  Anderson was really good and ran for 1,000 plus in 3 consecutive seasons and he’s the #3 all time rusher for the Chicago Bears.  His career was cut short because of injuries.Andre Reed was an absolute beast in the Bills K-Gun offense.  Reed ranks 12th in all time receptions with 942 and was a 7 time Pro Bowler.  While he missed that elusive Super Bowl ring, he did get elected to the Hall of Fame in 2014.  The football stadium at his alma mater, Kutztown University, is even now named André Reed Stadium.  Reed caught 3 second half touchdowns in the great comeback against the Oilers in January 1993.While we are talking about the Bills, we might as well mention Scott Norwood.  I am not going to beat up on Mr. Norwood because I think he has probably taken enough abuse over the years.  True, he did miss the decisive field goal attempt vs the Giants in Super Bowl XXV but he was historically a very steady kicker in Buffalo.  He passed OJ Simpson as the Bills all time leadin scorer while in NY.  He no longer holds that record but it speaks to how many times his field goals were true.I included this card but I don’t really have anything nice to say about Mr. May.  He’s ruined his legacy with me with his college analysis on ESPN.  Oddball!!

1990 – More subtle changes from the previous year.  However, the 1,000 Yard Club design was the worst in the set history for me.  Can you say 1991 Fleer?  These were just horrible.  The ’90 pack was the slimmest on decent pulls but I did get my biggest star QB.

Brian Blades from The U!  He played college ball on the far southeastern tip of the US and pro football in the far northwestern tip.  That’s the farthest jump from college to the NFL if you exclude Hawaii.  Aside from Pro Football, Blades has one of the strangest convictions followed by acquittal you’ll see with an athlete.  He was charged with manslaughter in the death of his cousin.  He was convicted by a jury but the judge overturned the verdict and he walked.  Later, a discovery was made that the judges father employed Blades when he was a player at UM and the defense attorney was a part of the judge’s divorce case.  That is a strange one that probably needs its own 30 for 30.One of the best!  John Elway was a true gunslinger but also had wheels for a big QB.    We won’t rummage through all of his stats and achievements because you probably already know them.  I will say that when the Broncos played the Falcons in Super Bowl XXXIII, I pulled for the Falcons but was torn with Elway and Terrell Davis (UGA) on the opposing sideline.  If the Broncos had played ANYONE else that year, I would have been a happy man at the end of that game.

1991 – As I said before, the packs changed for 1991 from wax to cello and gum was no longer included.  There was obviously a shift happening in the hobby towards more progressive packaging and visuals but I miss the wax and gum immensely.

Jerry Rice, the greatest wide receiver of all time!  He was a member of the 1,000 Yard Club 8 times and caught 1,549 passes.  That’s dang near double Steve Largent and he was amazing in his own right.  Happy with this pull.This is the best rookie card I pulled and not even one I was looking for.  But super excited to pull it.  Hamp is sometimes known for his Pro Bowls and Super Bowl ring and 5 consecutive 1,000 yard rushing seasons in NY.  But for me, he’s a Damn Good Dawg that got after it while he was in Athens.  Hamp is 7th on an all time list that includes Hershel Walker, Todd Gurley, Nick Chubb, Garrison Hearst and Knowshon Moreno.  He was a fine tailback at Tailback U and is a beloved player to Bulldawg Nation!

I didn’t pull any of “The Huge” rookies from these classes but I had a great time ripping these packs and seeing the old designs and players.  I had forgotten about guys like Aundray Bruce and Ernest Givens.  For less than $10, I could do this 4-5 times a week and never get tired of it.  When you are sifting through $7 packs, remember that these gems are still out there and very affordable.  If you collected during that time, you’ll love the memories.  If you didn’t, you’ll love looking at what the product was like before gloss and serial numbers.  What is your favorite Topps set from these 5?  Which did you collect most?

J-Dub

State Of The Hobby – June 1990

With my recent post on my favorite Beckett Covers, I took out a few that I kept over the years.  If you’re my age, you remember Beckett Magazine before there was internet and eBay and Twitter.  We used the magazine as a Bible for collecting and we were able to keep up with who was hot, what products were coming out and where the next show was.  While I had the Bo Beckett out, I decided to give it another read.  I took my time too.  I started at the beginning, worked my way through a couple of articles, the “Readers Write” section, The Hot/Cold List, the price guide portion and then the show list.  I wanted to take the temperature of the hobby in mid 1990, so to speak.I was very much a part of the hobby in 1990 and I have many fond memories from that time but I wanted to see it in black and white again.  Believe me when I say, it didn’t disappoint.  First, let me point out very obviously that our hobby has changed quite a bit since 1990.  Card companies were printing cards with reckless abandon and we were buying them up as fast as they came off the press.  There is even one forboding comment from a reader in the “Readers Write” section that was a couple of years ahead of its time.  There were some hot rookies at the time that were making waves and forcing collectors to grab up their cards that are now only a part of cardboard folklore.  There were some sets that were just plain bad, even by 80’s standards and the market reflected it.  And let’s be clear about that part as well.  These prices we are going to discuss and the hot players were decided by their play and the market.  This was a sign of the times, not an indictment on the hobby by any means.Cards were popping up at drug stores, convenient stores, grocery stores, you name it.  The LCS was just the pricey alternative in those days.  The packs you got at Wal-Mart were the same as what you would get at a hobby shop; you just paid Wal Mart prices for them.  As you’ll see with one article that I particularly enjoyed, cards were popping up on Home Shopping Channels at this point as well.  Everybody was trying to get in on the action but we didn’t see the train wreck coming, or at least I didn’t.  I was 13 years old at the time and I was just trying to get my hands on as many Rickey Jordan RC’s as I could.  I hadn’t reached the point where I knew ’88 Donruss was oozing out of warehouses like a scene from the blob or that Jerome Walton was going to be a flash in the pan.  Maybe if I had a Beckett Almanac from the future back then!  All I knew was that cards had taken over my life and I was 100% sold just like everybody else.

So let’s look at the hobby as it was in June of 1990.

As we begin this trip down memory lane, how many of you remember this advertisement?  I always wanted this entire collection of books but was only able to score the Baseball Price Guide.  You couldn’t pay me to read a textbook in 8th grade but I would study these publications like my grandma at a book club meeting.

The first article I read was “Top Guns”, which covered the best arms at each position.

  • C – Benny Santiago
  • 1B – Keith Hernandez
  • 2B – Jose Oquendo
  • SS – Shawon Dunston
  • 3B – Ken Caminiti – Dude had a rifle!
  • LF – Bo Jackson
  • CF – Andy Van Slyke
  • RF – Jesse Barfield

They also covered some weaker arms by position.  Some of the names surprised me.

  • C – Craig Biggio – Guess the move to 2nd was warranted
  • 1B – Dave Magadan
  • 2B – Ryne Sandberg – Surprise #1
  • SS – Ozzie Smith – Surprise #2
  • 3B – Bobby Bonilla – Wild Arm
  • LF – Kirk Gibson
  • CF – Gary Pettis
  • RF – Ivan Calderon

The first article was awesome and gave me information I had either totally forgotten or I never knew!  The names took me back immediately and made me realize I was going to enjoy this adventure.

Next, I moved to the “Readers Write” section.  This is where the readers would write in with a question or observation and get responses from various writers or editors at Beckett.  Let me first say that there were some very arrogant readers back in the day.  There were a couple of comments that made me bristle at the tone they were taking.  While some were cringeworthy, others were pretty interesting in hindsight.

First, the one that made me cringe a bit.  It was a comparison between Jim Abbott and Gregg Olson.  But the response was dead on.  Abbott was a starter and Olson was a reliever.  How many relievers have ever looked good in the price guide?

Then there was a reader who was no fan of Rickey Henderson.  I get that his career had not completely played out yet but he was not interested in Rickey being a member of the All 80’s Team.  The whole thing seems pretty laughable today.

The last one I’ll share is the one that is a bit foreshadowing.  M.V. In California seems to have seen the writing on the wall!

Moving on to the Hot and Cold List, this was what we were after in a big way in mid 1990, or either trying to dump.Canseco, Jefferies and Chris Sabo found themselves on both lists.  Bo was the hottest player in the hobby and his cover photo (’89 Score) was one of the hottest cards.  Todd Zeile was in the Top 5 while Ben McDonald and Eric Anthony were in the Top 10.  Delino DeShields was making his first appearance on the list.  In August of ’89, Pete Rose was placed on Baseball’s Ineligible List and his spot at #1 on the Cold List was reflective of his removal from the game.  Sportsflics was getting hammered too but more on them on a moment.

When I got to the price guide portion, I automatically thumbed to certain cards that I remember being on my want list.  While doing so, I stumbled across some that I never knew were as popular as they were in June, 1990.  Again, this is a great indicator of where the hobby was at the time.  The current market always tells the story.  As I said before, the hobby has changed!

The first out of place card I saw was this 1983 Donruss Howard Johnson.  It was running only $2 less than Ryne Sandberg.

What was going on with Kevin McReynolds in 1990 to make his already $12.00 RC be on the rise?  I can’t figure this one out.

In the 1984 Topps Traded set, two American League pitchers were surprises.  Gooden was the obvious stud in the set but Bret Saberhagen at $24 and Mark Langston at $18 didn’t quite hold up.

All collectors from this era remember the ’85 Topps Mark McGwire.  Your window of purchasing this card at a reasonable price was closing fast by this point.

The window had already closed on getting the Canseco at a low level.  He was a bonafide star by this point and the card would continue to climb.

Here’s a name from the past.  Kevin Mitchell was rocking a $9 Fleer card in 1987.  For a 13 year old, a $9 card was as good as a $50 card.

Not to be outdone, Will Clark popped in with an ’87 Fleer valued at $35.  The last 4 players (McGwire, Canseco, Mitchell and Clark) were fresh off of the “Battle of the Bay” World Series of 1989.  Their cards were hot!

Here is where that Beckett Almanac from the future would’ve paid HUGE dividends!  I could have purchased 20 Barry Bonds ’87 Topps and made $2,000 on them a few years later.  This was a true buying opportunity missed!  But at the time, I would’ve traded Bonds and Frank Viola for the Greg Seinfeld RC!

Remember that Sportsflics mention above? This was ’86 and ’87.  This is what we call abandon ship time!!

This ’88 Score Update Mark Grace totally took me by surprise.  He was a hot young player but this card was huge value for 1988.

Want to know just how much Collectors thought of Jerome Walton?  Look no further than the ’89 Score and Topps Traded Sets.  In June of ’90, he was valued at a mere .50 cents less than Ken Griffey Jr. and was the second highest value in the sets.

Speaking of The Kid, this was one of the last times you could get his ’89 Upper Deck for a decent price for a long time!

Finally, ’90 Score brought us a hot young rookie who was just starting to blossom.  Big Hurt’s rookie card was .90 and would not see a 2 digit value again.

The next section of the mag was the show listings.  Shows in 1990 were abundant to say the least.  I just attended my first show in many years this past weekend and wrote about it HERE.  In 1990, you could take your pick on any given weekend within a 50 mile radius of anywhere in America.What I really found striking in these ads were the players that would be present and how much an autograph would cost.  What a time to be alive!

  • Eric Dickerson and Jim Palmer were free with admission
  • Barry Sanders – $7
  • Whitey Ford – $8
  • Willie Stargell – $5
  • Brooks Robinson – $7
  • Johnny U – $8
  • Al Kaline – $7
  • Sterling Sharpe – $5

I wrapped up my review with a read of this article titled, “Beware of Mass Media Hucksters”.  This just screams 1990 and is a perfect synopsis of how mainstream the hobby was becoming.  I tried to scan this so you could read it fully.  Great stuff!

This was our hobby in 1990.  No Twitter trading, no eBay sales to effect the market, names that we’ve forgotten were household names, a chance at Hall of Fame autographs for the price of a pack of cards today and no filter on collectors who wrote in to magazines.  As odd as it all may sound to some of the new collectors, I think I speak for a lot of Junk Wax Era hobbyists when I say it was one of the funnest eras ever!  I miss those days and in many ways, never left them.  Those that follow me know that I am a sucker for ’89 Topps, Pro-Vision and washed up prospects of the 80’s. That’s because it’s what I cut my teeth on.  And we never stray too far from our roots.  Even when those roots are made out of wax paper and high fructose sticks of gum.  It’s just a part of me and always will be.

J-Dub

Let’s Go To The Card Show

It’s been a really long time since I’ve been to an actual card show.  I remember going to a huge one in the 90’s in Atlanta and being on the budget of a 14 year old.  As in, I got what mom and dad agreed to buy.  I remember the tables and seeing cards I assumed I would never own.  I’ve always wanted to replay that day and take my time and let it soak in.  I’ve been to every card shop in Georgia, or so it seems.  I’ve turned over 100 rocks at antique shops looking for interesting finds.  But none of that searching could bring back the excitement and wonder of that card show.That’s where Charlie Heinisch and Middle Georgia Sports Cards comes in to play.  I’ve mentioned Charlie and his card shop in Warner Robins here before.  It’s the best shop I’ve been to in a long time.  Charlie cares about the hobby and the collectors in it.  He helped jumpstart an area of Georgia that had really fallen behind in collecting.  Along with the card shop, he formed a Facebook page with trading and auction days and general helpful info for collectors interested in the Braves, Hawks, Falcons and UGA.Charlie has also brought back card shows to our area.  He has a card show in McDonough, Ga every month and tries to have one in Macon a couple times a year.  McDonough is still a decent haul for me (about 2 hours) but is a little closer than Atlanta.  But 2 hours is as close as a card show has been to me in the last 15 years.  He’s been having them for a little while now but I’ve never been able to make it.  I have a wife and 2 kids and the weekend is the only time we really have to unwind.  So asking them to take off with me to McDonough to look at cards is not really an option.  And I’ve not been able to take off and just leave them with nothing to do either.  This weekend worked out perfectly as my wife had a women’s retreat (literally a day at the beach) and my girls went to grandma’s for the weekend.  So there was nothing standing between me and that sweet hotel conference room of cardboard this time!

I’ve actually been planning this day all week.  The show started at 10 so I would get up and leave the house around 7, allowing time for a good breakfast and leisurely stroll up I-75 North.  I’d spend half the day planted in front of quarter boxes digging to my hearts content.  Mrs. Dub was leaving at 6:30 so it timed out perfect.  When this morning finally arrived, she asked me for some help around 5:30 and I laid back down to just catch a few winks before having to get up and ready.  After what I thought were a few winks, I woke up and the clock read 9:32.  Bad start.  I jumped up, hopped in the shower and rolled out about as quickly as I’ve ever moved.  I had the truck gassed up, a McGriddle in my hand and was northbound by 10.  Only 3 hours later than I had planned.  

The ride was nice because I had some Beckett Radio and Wax Ecstatic podcasts to listen to.  I made it to the Hilton in McDonough around 12:30 thanks to some heavy traffic for the last few miles and my heart actually started racing when I went to get out of the truck.  I am not kidding when I tell you that I was full on excited like it was Christmas morning!  I was at a card show, had some change in my pocket and had nothing on my schedule for the rest of the day.  Totally unfettered.  So let’s get to the fun!

When I walked in, it was hard not to quickly become overwhelmed.  I had to slow down and realize that I had all afternoon.  I had to pace myself.  The first thing I had to do was find Charlie’s table.  Another thing about Charlie is that he is the king of the sweet hobby boxes!  I have had more luck with his product than any other CS or website.  I went ahead and set aside a couple of boxes and started sifting through his quarter boxes.  Here are the finds.

I picked up a box of 2017 Classics, which is one of my favorite affordable football card sets.  I also picked up my second box of Archives.  Maybe a Jeter Auto in this one, who knows?  I’ll be working on a review post for Classics as soon as I bust it.

I picked up these 2 Fleer Gwynns that I needed for my 80’s collection.

These vintage football cards had my name written all over them for 25 cents!  ’78 White Shoes and Joiner – ’80 William Andrews and ’81 Winslow.

I nabbed this ’80 Largent specifically to try the TTM address that Alex Kent recently shared with me.

How about a couple of ’88 Rookies of Tecmo Super Bowl Legends?  The Boz and The Nightmare!

I couldn’t pass up this sweet Pro Vision!

My last .25 pick up was this Eric Lindros ’90 Score Baseball Rookie.  Always loved this card!  Then I found some autographs at Charlie’s booth!

This would have been the purchase of the day if not for the next Auto that I found!  A Tony Pena autograph in the amazing Yellow Pirates uni!  Unbelievable!

The Pena finished a close second to this beauty.  Yes, your eyes are seeing this!  A 1990 design Kevin Maas autograph.  If you collected baseball cards in 1990, you know how momentous this actually is.  I could have left when I found this and the day would have been complete.  But, there’s more goodness to show.

A couple of booths over, I found another Archives Auto to add to my collection.  Tony Fernandez was a great name from the late 80’s.  Easy call to purchase this.

Then there’s this half naked Willie Gault Pro Line Auto.  I won’t spend too much time looking at the front but if you put a Pro Line Auto in front of me, I’m going to buy it 100% of the time.

I then found the vintage booth and shopped there for quite a while.  I don’t have much to show because a lot of that got packaged up to ship out to some of my friends when I got home.  I did get this ’77 Dave Parker.  I think ’77 will be my 70’s PC since it was my year of birth.

I picked up this ’84 Oriole’s checklist because it had Ripken on the front.  Couldn’t pass it up for .50 cents.

Very proud of this pick up of a 1958 Curt Flood RC for $2.50.  Its vintage and it’s also a very pivotal player in MLB history.  Score!

My best pickup at the vintage table was this 1955 Ernie Banks for $10.  I did not care about condition as I snapped this up the minute I saw it and the price tag.  The price tag was a little higher but the seller cut me a deal when I bought multiple cards.  The rest of the vintage cards will be turning up on Twitter over the next week or so.

The next booth was a “Junk Wax” booth so I picked up this ’90 Pro Set and ’91 Pro Set Platinum for $3 apiece.  He had ’91 Fleer Baseball too but I just couldn’t pull the trigger.

The final piece for the day was this lot of Junk Wax packs that I bought to refill my “When I Was A Kid” box that gets heavy usage for giveaways.  I picked up 15 packs of ’89 Donruss and 5 packs of ’91-’92 Skybox for a total of $4.  No brainer.

Well, this was my day at the card show, for the most part.  Like I said, there are some things that I can’t really show because it would ruin the surprise for those that are getting envelopes this week.  I can’t wait until the next show and I will beg and plead with Mrs. Dub to let me go.  But I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it.  For now, I’m going to bask in the glory of what was a truly successful day for me and my card habit!

J-Dub

Classic Cardboard

I remember the first time I saw a baseball card.  Well at least I think it’s the first time I saw a card.  It’s possible that I stumbled across one at 5 or 6 but I don’t actually remember it.  With this card, I remember where I was, what grade I was in and the actual card I saw.  I even remember how I was able to get it from the owner and into my possession.  I suppose it stands as the first baseball card I ever owned, though it was a year or so before I officially started collecting.  It remains in my collection today and is one of a handful of older star cards that I was able to pick up when I was first starting to collect.  I use the term “older” to describe cards from 70’s to early 80’s.  I’m sure it means another era to some but I consider anything 5+ years before I started collecting, older.

I don’t really own a ton of cards that are pre-1980.  I have somewhat angled my current collecting preferences to mid 80’s.  I have a pretty fair amount of 1985 or newer cards and those are some of my favorite sets to this day.  But other than a box here or there, I don’t have a ton of really early 80’s and I have even fewer 70’s cards.  The ones I do have all usually carry a story with how they wound up in my collection.  Many of them were picked up in my early collecting days because they really weren’t that old at the time.  I don’t remember exactly what was traded in many instances but I do recall certain events that surround obtaining the cards.  Here are some of the cards I have that fit what I’m describing.  Some of the details have become fuzzy over time but the cards live on to tell their story.1980 Topps Ozzie Smith – This is that very first card that I remember.  I was 10 years old at the time at Mitchell County Middle School.  The reason I remember my age is because of where I was when I saw the card.  I remember being in one of the “mobile units” of the 5th grade wing that was for our music class.  We went to this class to play all of the old weird noise makers from that age.  They weren’t instruments per se, although I think we may have been introduced to the recorder that year.  Anyhow, my friends and I played marbles in the 5th grade.  We had the perfect sandy playground area for this activity.  There were some players that could clean my clock but there were some that I could hang with too.  I remember one of my friends showing off some cards in the music room and one of them was this Ozzie Smith.  Being 1987, I knew Ozzie as The Wizard in St Louis from watching the Braves and Cubs almost daily.  I wanted this card, even though I didn’t collect.  There was something cool about that baseball card.  Well, we played marbles at recess and I won that card from my friend.  It would be the first card of several that I won (or lost) playing stupid kids games.  But I won this one and I was thrilled.  I didn’t have toploader’s or binders or anything like that so I believe I just took it home and put it on my bookshelf.  It’s in a toploader now.1981 Fleer Willie Stargell – This was a sweet trade in 7th grade but did not cost me a card in exchange.  This was a food item, much like the Dave Winfield Twins/Indians trade from 94.  In 7th grade, we had this small brick standalone building that was fenced and locked 6 1/2 of the 7 hours we were at school each day.  But that small 30 minute window it was open was magical.  It was a small snack stand that had drink machines, snack machines and a small ice cream/popsicle stand.  Everything could be had for .35 cents or less.  I remember it being a BIG deal to be able to drink a soft drink at school during the day.  I always went with a grape soda for some reason.  One of the major items available was the “superstar” popsicle.  We’ve all seen some version of this and it’s most widely known as a “bomb pop” I believe.  It was first come-first serve and was the the first item that ran out every day.  I happened to procure one on this hot South Georgia afternoon and there was another student who missed out.  I might as well have been holding a $100 bill in my hand instead of the popsicle.  After some strong 12 year old negotiations, I was able to pry away this 1981 Fleer Willie Stargell.  So I essentially traded a popsicle for a Pops.  Ok, that was a lame play on words.1978 Topps André Dawson – I’ve mentioned my early infatuation with the Cubs and how much I was able to see them play on TV.  One of the players I really loved on that team was André Dawson.  The Hawk was a power hitting outfielder that could crush a baseball.  It’s amazing when I look at his stat totals now that he didn’t reach 500 home runs.  He had double digit home runs in 18 of his 21 seasons and the 3 that he didn’t were partial seasons that combine to only equal 145 games.  He hit 10 homes in those 3 seasons so he still hit double digits in less than a full seasons worth of games.  He even hit 49 one season.  Just totally surprised to see his total at 438.  In the early days of collecting, I tried to target Dawson in trades because of his stud status.  I remember having most of the 1991 Score Superstar set and one of the neighborhood kid collectors like myself wanted some of them.  I don’t even remember the cards he wanted but when I saw this 1978 André Dawson in his collection, I figured we could make something happen.  Remember in 1991, this Dawson wasn’t all that old.  It was like owning a card now from 2003, sort of.  The eras don’t match up but that gives you an idea of card age at the time.  We pulled off the deal and I still have this card.  I’ll bet you a bomb pop that he doesn’t have those ’91 Superstars anymore.1979 Topps Johnny Bench – I’ve mentioned my Uncle Speedy here before.  He had two kids that were my age, Corey and Jared.  We did pretty much everything together.  We played on the same little league teams, we played pick up games with buddies, we played marathon seasons of Tecmo And RBI and we collected baseball cards.  They had access to more vintage cards than I did because Uncle Speedy had some in his collection.  One specific thing I remember about baseball cards and Uncle Speedy was playing RBI 1 against him and he would tell us about the players that he really watched closely or even played with at one point or another.  I remember him talking about the California Angels with Tony Armas, Doug DeCincs and Bob Boone, who I knew absolutely nothing about at the time.  We would cross reference the backs of baseball cards to corroborate his stories about their stats and he was always dead on.  He was a real wealth of knowledge as it related to 70’s and 80’s MLB.  Well, one of the older cards that Corey and Jared had in their collection was this 1979 Johnny Bench All Star card.  We pulled of a trade on one of our many late night sorting sessions and even though it’s an all-star card instead of his regular card, I still love it.1981 Topps Nolan Ryan – I’m going to be perfectly honest with you here.  I don’t remember exactly how I got this card.  But for some reason, I keep going back to a memory of the flea market with my granddaddy.  We would go eat at Western Sizzlin in East Albany some Saturday’s or Sunday’s after church.  That would be followed by a trip over to the flea market across from Cooper Tire, now known as Kitty’s Flea Market.  It may have been called that then but I have no clue.  It’s a relative ghost town now with just a few booths of knockoff items that are more cheap new items than cool nostalgic ones.  But back in the day, Kitty’s was rocking and my granddaddy was a wheeler and dealer.  I watched him work deals on CB Radios, fishing poles and truck parts like a modern day Pawn Star.  Every now and then, we would run up on a booth that had some toys or Atari games and I would spend some time there.  For some reason, I keep placing this Nolan at that flea market.  I know I picked up some cards at the flea market from time to time and most of them were very early in my collecting days and I had no idea who the players were.  They were just sports cards so I liked them.  Maybe I got this card there and maybe I didn’t but it certainly makes me think of those days so I’m going to tie the two together unless a clearer memory comes to the forefront.

I still find it amazing that certain small objects can trigger such great memories.  Sports cards and video games are the most nostalgic for me in that respect.  I can tie so much of my youth to those inanimate objects.  I was just a regular kid who liked sports and these cards will always be a reminder of those days.  There aren’t many other interests from our youth that can be held with such high regard.  Nintendos have eventually broken and there’s been no one to fix them.  Our toys have gone by the wayside.  We can’t go in the front yard and play football anymore because either me or one of my friends will break a hip.  I don’t even have a VHS to play old movies on.  I have to go out and buy the DVD if I want to watch an old classic on TV, but it’s not the same.  Sports cards are the one thing I can still tangibly hold in my hand that places me back at those awesome moments in my life.  And without memories, what are we really?  We are who we are today because of the experiences of our youth, for better or worse.  Mine just happened to be great and I hang on to these cards to constantly remind me of the good ole days.

The Favorites

There was a recent “copy and paste” post going around on FaceBook which is something I don’t usually participate in.   However, this particular post was “List Favorite MLB Players By Position During “Your” Lifetime.”  I completed this one and posted it up with some thought but not real in depth consideration.  I have gone back and reconsidered the list and thought I should modify it somewhat.  Once I revisited the idea, I realized that I had gotten most of them right the first time but there were couple of glaring omissions in my initial attempt.  And as is a Dub Mentality staple, I also thought that I should include a card that was memorable for me of the player.  It wouldn’t be as much fun without some cards.  These are not their best card issues but they are ones that immediately pop in my mind when I think of the player and when I collected.

I’d like for you to review my list and let me know what you think but I also want to hear what you have to say in the comments of this post.  Obviously there is no right or wrong answer as we can’t control who others’ favorite players are.  Remember, this is your “favorite” players, not necessarily the greatest at the position of all time.  That is another discussion entirely.   So in order for you to fully complete the process, let me lay out some basic parameters for the task.  While it’s not easy and you will second guess every position at times, it’s a really fun thought process.

• Positions include C, 1B, 2B, SS, 3B, OF, OF, OF, DH, RHSP (Right Handed Starting Pitcher), LHSP and RP.

• There is some room for “cheating the system” with the DH and RP spot if players moved to those positions later in their careers. Be as liberal with your list as you would like but don’t list Ken Griffey Jr. as your favorite SS ever.

• The title includes “your lifetime” so you can choose players that retired if you were 2 years old if you want to but I stuck with players that I collected heavily and/or saw play.

• Trust me; this is harder than you think. Just wait until the last paragraph that outlines some of the players that had to be left out.

Catcher – Tony Pena

This may seem like an odd selection to some but there is a reason that I always think of Tony Pena when I think about catchers.  First, he was pretty dang good.  He was a 4x All-Star and 4x Gold Glove Winner.  He also was the master of the fake intentional walk!  But that’s just part of the reason he is on this list.  When I first started watching baseball, I was drawn to jersey color.   I was a young kid and was entertained by some of the louder colors like the Astros and Pirates.  My Braves were powder blue and I loved it.  But I remember watching the Pirates on a family vacation to Atlanta.  They had Bill Madlock, Willie Stargell and Dave Parker at the time.  Their catcher was Tony Pena and the way he sat behind home plate with his one leg straightened out caught my eye.  I thought he was awesome!  I followed his career as I grew up and always liked him.   Of course, the card that catches my eye every time is the ’85 Donruss pictured above.

1B – Frank Thomas

This one was pretty easy for me but I almost swung him to DH to add another 1B to the list.  Turns out, I had to do that when I got to the OF position because it is loaded.  The Big Hurt was from Columbus, GA, which is about an hour and a half from where I grew up.  He then went on to play at Auburn, which is clearly a rival for Georgia but is my favorite team in the SEC West (except for the Cam years).   He was at Auburn the same time as Bo Jackson in 1986 and was recruited to play football as a tight end.  He went undrafted in baseball out of high school and called it the worst moment of his life.  He wanted to play so badly that he once said, “I could have been drafted for a dozen baseballs and a couple of fungos.”  He played only one season of football at Auburn, catching 3 passes for 45 yards.  He suffered an ankle injury preparing for the ’87 season and turned his focus to baseball.   Coach Pat Dye pushed him to pursue the baseball career after the baseball coach told him he would be a 1st round pick but he kept him on football scholarship.  He won the triple crown twice at Auburn and the rest is history.   Frank is and always will be a top 5 favorite player regardless of position.  The Braves had the 5th pick in that ’86 Draft and chose Kent Mercker.   What could have been…. The card I chose for Big Frank was the ’93 Ultra All Star.   I love this subset!

2B – Ryne Sandberg

I have written about watching the cubbies growing up on the blog so this one had to go to Ryno.   It was actually kind of close with Craig Biggio but my youthful days of watching the Cubs after school won out.  I collected Cubs along with the Braves when I stared in ’89 because of my familiarity with them.   They were loveable losers like us too at the time.  Ryno’s stats speak for themselves and he might be the greatest 2B to ever play the game but that isn’t what this list is about.  He was a career .285 hitter with 282 home runs, which is good for 4th all time among 2B.  Biggio is #3 on that list by the way. He was also a 10x All-Star, 9x Gold Glove and 7x Silver Slugger winner.   Is there much more to say?  I watched him play every day on my TV and he was a star.   That pretty much seals it.  And my favorite card of him is the ’89 Topps for nostalgic reasons.

SS – Ozzie Smith

While this started as a tough one, it was turned out to be an easy selection.  SS is a position that I paid a lot of attention to growing up and there were some great ones.  Barry Larkin and Cal Ripken Jr. immediately come to mind.   But the player that I always loved and still do was The Wizard.  While Bleacher Report ranked him 2nd behind Omar Vizquel, I think he is the greatest SS of all time.  The smile was so memorable too.  He looked like he enjoyed the game and made me want to play!  He won 13 consecutive Gold Gloves and holds the record for career assists.  Then there’s the backflip too!!   Check out this video if you want to experience The Wizard at his best.  If you’re clicking videos, here’s Here’s a great one with Will Clark.   The Ozzie pictured above is the best looking card I have of him.  The powder blue pants, the red border, the spring training top.  I love this card.

3B – Chipper Jones

Did you honestly think there would be another choice here?  Sure, there are several great third sackers that could have made this list and there are quite a few that I really like.   But Chipper is a Brave and he is one of the all time greatest.  He was an 8x All-Star, 2x Silver Slugger, NL MVP, Batting Champion and World Series Champion.   And he played his entire career in Atlanta, which is very rare in this day and age.   Admittedly, there were times when he wasn’t my favorite player on the team but I never wanted him anywhere else.  He was a gamer and one heckuva team player.  So while 3B is loaded with talent, Chipper gets the nod for me.  And the card chosen was his 1991 Macon Braves Classic card.   I thought this card was going to be worth $1MM one day.  I couldn’t have been more wrong.

OF – Ron Gant

Of course Ron Gant is on my list. Don’t act surprised.  I have waxed poetically about #5 before on the blog and you can read that here.  My favorite Gant card is this ’89 Donruss.  Love the colors!

OF – Ken Griffey Jr.

The Kid.  This was a unanimous decision in a sea of uncertainty when I started looking through the outfielders.  But there was no way I could leave him off of this list.  He had the most beautiful swing of anybody that ever held a baseball bat.  He had a smile like Ozzie that would just make you understand how fun the game could be.  We don’t even have to bust through the stats but he was an All-Star, Gold Glover, Silver Slugger and Home Run Leader more seasons than some players actually play in a career.   I was able to see him play in person once in Atlanta when he was with the Reds.  We watched the game from our outfield seats but with the game out of reach, the stands started emptying so Mrs. Dub and I made it to some prime real estate behind the plate to see his final at bat.  He laced a double into the left center field gap and I was a stones throw away from that sweet swing.  I will see that ball flying into the night sky for the rest of my life.  It was truly one of those baseball moments that make me love the game.  For my childhood memories, you can’t beat the Ken Griffey Jr. Dream Team Card.

OF – Jose Canseco

With Gant and Griffey locked in, my challenge was to find one OF to fill the final spot.   My list was about 20 players long too.   This one may not be a unanimous decision but I couldn’t go in any other direction when all was said and done.  Canseco was the first cards in my binder for many years at the beginning of my collection.  Plus, I’ve told the story about dressing up as him in the 7th grade to do a public speaking autobiography.  He was the king of baseball in the late 80’s and could mash a ball like nobody’s business.  We found out why that was the case as his career started going off the rails.  He also had the humiliating baseball off of the head for a home run incident.  But nobody was more fun to watch at the plate during his heyday.   Because of what he meant to me when I started this hobby, he made the cut for the final OF spot.  The 1987 Topps was the first card of Jose I owned and remains a favorite of mine.

DH – Bo Jackson

This is where I had to pull another outfielder in.  I could not have a list of favorite players that didn’t include Bo.   He had a shorter career than most but it was as explosive as any.  He was as big as an ox, fast as a deer, could play the outfield with the best of them, mash the ball with the power hitters and steal bases like a leadoff hitter.  And none of that even touches his other abilities like flattening Brian Bosworth on the gridiron.   Bo was truly robbed of a more fruitful career when he suffered his hip injury but sports fans all over the world were also robbed of seeing his otherworldly talent on display.  A great 30 for 30 is “You Don’t Know Bo” and I would definitely recommend giving it a watch.  Bo is a dude’s dude, a man’s man.  The aforementioned coach at Auburn, Pat Dye, was asked who the greatest athlete he ever coached was.  His answer, “Bo Jackson was the best athlete I ever coached. Frank Thomas was the second best athlete.  And I might have had it reversed.”  Both of them made my list.  My absolute favorite Bo is the ’87 Topps.  It could be my favorite card of all time but that’s a bold statement off the cuff like that.

RHSP – Nolan Ryan

This is one I got wrong on my first attempt.   To be honest, I missed Ryan during my list process and I have no idea why.  My first choice was Doc Gooden and he remains my second choice but Nolan Ryan moves to #1 without much debate.  The Ryan Express threw so hard, he broke his catcher’s finger on a routine basis.  He was throwing harder in his mid 40’s than a lot pitchers when they were 23.   The thing I always heard about his fast ball was that it was heavy.  It was thrown so hard, it just felt heavy when it was hit or caught.   I shared my TTM success from earlier this year on him and I couldn’t have been more excited about the return.  Even though I like Robin Ventura as well, my favorite Nolan Ryan moment was this.  The card of choice here is the 1989 Upper Deck Football Toss.

LFSP – Tom Glavine

Tom Glavine is an Atlanta great.  He should have been a Brave for life but that didn’t happen.  Glavine was a key component on the Braves teams that made so many memories for me as a kid.  He was an artist on the mound and could hit pretty good too.  The one blemish he has for me is that whole “Player’s Union Rep during the ’94 Strike” thing but I can get passed that as I understand what his role was at this point.   It doesn’t diminish what he did on the field for my team.   I also got a chance to meet Glavine at a Braves game a few years ago and he signed for me, which was really cool.  He finished his career with 305 wins, 10 All-Star appearances, 4 Silver Slugger Awards and a World Series MVP.  He also led the NL in wins 5 times.  He would have been more decorated today had he not been sandwiched in the rotation by Greg Maddux and John Smoltz for all those years.  My favorite Tom Glavine card is actually a John Smoltz card, sort of.

RP – John Smoltz

Speaking of a John Smoltz card, this was another unanimous decision, even though I was accused of cheating on FaceBook when I listed Smoltz as a Relief Pitcher.  While he was a stellar starting pitcher with 213 wins, Marmaduke was also lights out in the closer role for many years for the Braves, notching 155 saves.  He remains the only pitcher in history to have 200 wins and 150 saves in a career.  He is also the only pitcher I can think of that made the move from SP to Closer and back to SP effectively.  Dennis Eckersley was moved from SP to RP but his days as an SP were over.  Number 29 will always be my favorite Braves pitcher of all time.  He was what our organization was all about in the 90’s.  My favorite Smoltz card is the ’89 Upper Deck.   I would not have wanted to be in the batters box for that photo.

That is really about the best I can do without driving myself insane. The names I had to leave off of this list are a who’s who of baseball royalty from the 80’s and 90’s. I had to pass over Benny Santiago, Pudge, Bagwell, McGriff, Mattingly, Biggio, Cal, Larkin, Boggs, Hawk, Gwynn, Rickey Henderson, Puckett, Clemens, Maddux, Doc, Big Unit and Eckersley! Some of these players could be on the list but I am sticking with this final draft. What about you? Let me know in the comments who your favorites were!

J-Dub

The Dark Period

There is a song that takes me back to the prime of my life every time I hear it.  When I hear this song, I remember being 18 and riding the strip at Panama City Beach with my friends.  I have it on my iTunes playlist but I go through phases where all I want to hear is Deftones or Thrice or Starset and it gets lost in the 200+ songs that live there.  It rolled around this morning and I put it on repeat a couple of times because it’s just soothing to my soul when I hear it.  I’m sure you have certain songs that travel right through your ears and into the limbic system of your brain to put you in a different frame of mind.  Or is it just me?  Anyway, this particular song is “1979” by Smashing Pumpkins.  The Pumpkins were my favorite band in high school before the Deftones came along.  They are still in my all time top 3 and “Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness” is one of the greatest albums ever!Smashing Pumpkins – 1979

The odd part of the memory of this particular part of my life is that it doesn’t include sports cards.  As Eric Norton so eloquently calls it when asking collectors on the Beckett Radio Podcast for their backstory in the hobby, it was my “dark period”.  Everyone in my age range has one.  Mine was from 1994 until around 2002.  I do remember picking up some football cards in 1998 because I have a bunch of Manning, Moss and Ricky Williams rookies but that was a short time frame.  And believe it or not, the cards I bought in ’98 were because of a girl.  That’s odd because the “girl” is usually the primary reason for the dark period to begin with.  But I actually dated a girl one time that liked ripping football cards.  The hobby side of me enjoyed those times but the relationship side is happy that we moved on.My dark period began in 1994 with the baseball strike.  It was really a perfect storm that led to me walking away from the hobby for a while.  For a 17 year old baseball fan, my mind had not evolved to the point of understanding salary caps, arbitration and antitrust legislation.  For me, it was greed, plain and simple.  I wanted baseball in my life and it wasn’t there.  I remember thinking that I would have played Major League Baseball for free and these owners and players were fighting over millions.  To complicate matters, one of the players at the forefront of this was a player on my home team, Tom Glavine, the President of the Player’s Union.  Unfortunately, he was the face I remember most often when thinking about the back and forth of the strike.  At the time, I partially blamed him, which may have been unfair.  There was blame to be passed around no doubt, but I put too much of it on him.The 1994 season was shaping up to be historic.  That’s easy to say some 23 years later but there were some major things happening.  The Montreal Expos were 74-40 at the time the strike happened and were 6 games ahead of the Braves.  That would have either been a great end to the season for the Expos or the Braves would have made an awesome comeback and won the East.  Either would have been considered wins in my book because the Expos were fun to watch.  The ’94 Strike has been credited with being a part of the eventual downfall of the Expos.  They sold off players after ’94 and attendance dropped.  They would never recover and could not get funding to build a new stadium.  MLB would eventually purchase the Expos in 2002 and then move them to Washington for the 2005 season.Tony Gwynn was hitting .394 with only 8 weeks left in the season.  Matt Williams was on a mathematical pace to break Roger Maris’ home run record.  The strike also cost Don Mattingly a chance at the postseason as the Yankees were 70-43 and 6 1/2 games up on the Orioles.  Up until that point, he had been kept out of the postseason.  He finally made it in 1995 but the team was not considered as good as in 1994.  He would retire at the end of ’95 and the Yanks would beat the Braves for the ’96 World Series title.  That was painful for me as a Braves fan but imagine how Donnie Baseball felt.By far one of the strangest results of the ’94 strike was a trade involving Dave Winfield and filet mignon.  While playing for the Twins in 1994, he was traded to the Cleveland Indians just after the strike began for a player to be named later.  Because the ’94 season ended early, Winfield didn’t play any games in Cleveland that year and the player to be named was never named.  To settle the trade, the Indians and Twins executives went out for dinner and Cleveland picked up the tab.  That’s probably the cheapest any team has ever bought a 3,000 hit, Hall of Famer.  I wonder how many calls were made after this story surfaced that requested Wade Boggs for a few lobster dinners!So the strike had me backing away from the hobby but there were other reasons that kept me away.  The Summer of ’94 is also when I started dating my future wife.  When we started dating, I didn’t care about baseball cards, Clerks or Tecmo Super Bowl for a while.  A hot chick can have that effect on a man.  My day was consumed with thoughts of my new girlfriend.  We went to different schools in our town and I would call her from a pay phone in our lunchroom cafeteria and she would stand by a pay phone outside her lunchroom waiting for the call.  Let that sink in for a moment young people…..a pay phone!  If I missed her, my afternoon was shot.  After school, I would drive by to see if she had left yet and then would ride around town hoping to bump into her.  No cell phone in those days and we couldn’t talk until we both got home.This relationship continued until 1997 and my cards stayed locked away in the closet during that whole time.  When we broke up, I was 20 and was galavanting all over the place hanging with friends and just being a dumb kid.  I was playing basketball, working, going to Huddle House at 2am and taking spur of the moment road trips with my buddies.  We did look at cards from time to time but it definitely didn’t classify as a hobby.  As I mentioned above, I did dip my toes back in the water in ’98 and dropped some coin on football products but I still didn’t go back to baseball yet.  I loved the Topps and Score boxes that could be found at Wal-Mart at the time and I would buy them every time I took a trip.  I still like that Topps set and it had some really cool inserts like Hidden Gems that are still pretty nice looking today.  The rookie class was awesome; Manning, Leaf, Hines Ward, Randy Moss, Fred Taylor, Ahman Green and Charles Woodson.  Even though I started picking these back up, I still wasn’t diving back into the hobby again.Part of my hesitation was still from the strike, some of it was from life just catching up with me during my young adult years and the rest was just the sheer mass production that was happening in the mid 90’s.  As a 20 year old, I was really starting to consider value in the cards and I wasn’t really finding it anymore.  The late 90’s were filled with products that I just couldn’t keep up with.  There were things like Zenith, Collectors Choice, Fleer Metal, Fleer Traditions, Pacific, Aurora and 20 different Pinnacle offshoots.  Supply had certainly met and passed demand and I didn’t want any part of the glutton of cards.  I still loved sports but couldn’t justify spending my fun money on sports cards that were worth .50 cents.  There were certainly some valuable cards to be found but I wasn’t in a stage of life to be searching.After spinning my wheels through young adulthood, my path led me back to my original girlfriend from 1994 and we would go on to get married in 2001.  When we got married, we moved away from our hometown (about 40 minutes) and we made Sunday the day we would go back and see our parents.  On Sunday’s, we would watch NASCAR at my parents house and we all had our favorite drivers.  I’ve been a Tony Stewart guy since 1999, my dad was Dale Earnhardt (and Jr.) all the way, my mom liked the LaBonte brothers and my wife liked Dale Jarrett and Sterling Marlin.  Those Sunday experiences soon got me into NASCAR collectibles like die cast cars and racing cards when I could find them.  We had a spare bedroom in our duplex at the time that was full of NASCAR memorabilia.  That led to me pulling out my old cards from the late 80’s and early 90’s.Once I started looking through my old cards, the feelings of nostalgia came rushing over me and that was when it truly sunk in that I wasn’t a kid anymore.  I was married, had a 9 to 5 and only went back “home” once a week.  It also made me understand the “growing up conundrum”.  All kids want to grow up and be adults while most adults want to go back to when they were kids.  When you become an adult, you spend your time worrying about bills, health, kids and work so you forget what it was like to only worry about beating a video game or pulling a Ken Griffey Jr. in your pack of ’89 Donruss.  Nobody told me that when I became an adult, my days would be consumed with worry and responsibility.  If I had known that, I would’ve stayed 14.These worries and responsibilities are all relative to your age and situation.  They always seem heavy and you look for times in your life when the worry wasn’t such a big deal.  When it rains, I’m not going to tell my 10 year old daughter not to fret because she can’t play outside because I know that was devastating for me at that age.  But I do know that she will have bigger concerns one day.  I just don’t want her to have them yet.  I know that worry and stress evolves over time and I’ve learned that you have to combat them by any means necessary.  For me, that has become sports cards once again.  I guess it’s the circle of life to some degree.  When I was a kid, you could give me a few packs of ’90 Fleer and I was as happy as a clam.  Understanding that the cards were a source of happiness when I was young, I decided to fight off adulthood by buying cards again.  And it’s worked into my 40th year of life.In fact, I’m going stronger than ever now and I’m still buying 1990 Fleer!  I buy other stuff too but I’ll never stray from my roots.  I would rather have an ’88 Topps Jose Canseco than a 2017 Mike Trout.  That may not make sense to some people but that’s the way I operate.  That doesn’t mean I wouldn’t enjoy a 2017 Trout.  It doesn’t mean that I wouldn’t love to have an Aaron Judge autograph.  But the true happiness of collecting for me comes from living in the moments from when I was a kid.  Unless Doc Brown comes along with a Delorean and Huey Lewis and the News, this is as close as I’ll get to those years.  So I’ll keep ripping “Junk Wax”, as it’s labeled.  I’ll keep collecting Fleer stickers and ’89 Bowman wrappers and ’90 Upper Deck holograms.  Who knows, I might pull a Donruss Elite along the way or that Juan Gonzalez reverse negative we all remember.  But whatever I pull, it will be memorable and will remind me of the days before my “dark period.”

J-Dub

Beckett – More Than A Price Guide

No matter how old I get or how many miles I put between 12 years old and now, there are certain images that I still have from those days.  I remember the McGwire ’90 Fleer I got at Halloween that year.  I remember the back of ’89 Score because that’s the way I went through packs to maintain suspense.  I remember the ’89 Mel Hall Donruss card that I used in the make believe baseball games on my blue shag carpet.  I don’t know why we remember certain things that seem so insignificant but I understand why memory loss is such a traumatic event as you get older.  I don’t want to lose these images or memories.  So to combat the issue, I keep doing what I do and I never turn my nose up at a cheap box of cards from the most overproduced era in history.I’m here today to talk about some of those images that I still have from that time in my life.  When I go through Camilla on my way to my parents house, I instinctively glance over at the new Wal-Mart that was built right beside the old Wal-Mart that is now a Marvin’s Building Supply.  I’ll never forget that old Wal-Mart and wish it was like it was when I was a kid.  I remember the first time I saw the card display in that store.  It was a cube display with cards on every side.  There were ’89 Topps, ’89 Donruss, ’89 Score, ’90 Pro Set, ’90 Hoops and ’90 Skybox.  Talk about a card cornacopia!  Along with the cards were other items like Ultra Pro 9 pocket sleeves, a couple of binder choices and the magazine source for all of my baseball card knowledge in those days, Beckett Baseball Card Monthly.If you mention the name “Beckett” to anyone in the general range of 40 years old, chances are that they will know exactly what you are talking about.  It was better than Sports Illustrated for me!  I’m not going to give a full blown history of Dr. James Beckett but we’ll start with the founding of Beckett Publications in 1984.  Sports cards really took off in the early to mid 80’s and Dr. Beckett, a statistics professor, decided to launch a magazine that would cover pricing and other aspects of the industry.  The magazine was as popular as any when I was 12-13 years old and was the end all for all trade discussions and fairness gauges.  There was no eBay, no Twitter, no FaceBook or even the internet itself in those days.  Availability and pricing was limited to your friends and Beckett.  So when I went to Wal-Mart, sometimes the cards weren’t even as important as buying the new magazine.  You couldn’t even start a discussion with the potential trade recipient if you hadn’t memorized the updated values.The first thing I did when I got my new magazine was scour the current sets for the much sought after ⬆️ (up arrow).  If cards were on the rise, they were coming out of the binder and going into safe keeping.  If, heaven forbid, I found the down arrow, they usually went back into the binder as I shed a lone tear for the player.  I recall one period where EVERY SINGLE 1990 Leaf card had the up arrow beside it.  One of my best friends had the entire set in a binder and I was so jealous!  After looking at the price changes, I went over to the Hot List to see what was going on.  It ranged from Elite Cards to hot Rookies but almost always had a Ken Griffey Jr. there.  My next stop was the section that had the upcoming card shows.  I’d find Georgia and see if I was lucky enough to have one coming to South Georgia.  More often than not, Atlanta was the hot spot.  After reading the articles, the last thing I would do is take it to my dad and show him the vintage prices and make sure he hadn’t stumbled on any of his old cards.  That answer never changed.  They were likely destroyed by his playing with them or thrown out by Granny years later.  I always had to check though.Now Beckett is so much more than “just a price guide.”  They have grading services, which is my go to for the few cards I’ll get graded.  They also have a website with an online marketplace where you can search for needs and fill in the gaps if you don’t want to go the eBay option.  They are on social media too and are active in that arena.  The most useful aspect of Beckett at this time for me is the Beckett Radio Podcast (@BeckettRadio) hosted by #TheFatpacks (@EricNorton316 and @PaulWirth23).  They have turned me on to so many new products (even some outside of sports) and are a wonderful resource for upcoming events, products and hobby happenings.  They are also very active on Twitter with fantasy leagues and giveaways so you have to follow them if you like sports cards!  You also need to subscribe to the podcast, Beckett Radio.  You won’t be disappointed.

So as you can see, the magazine that brought me such a big part of the hobby in my youth is still a vital part of the hobby today.  By now, you may be asking, “what does that have to do with images from your youth.”  Well, I’m about to get to that.  Last week on the podcast, the guys opened up the mailbag and I had a question that was discussed on air.  The question was, “What’s your personal favorite Beckett Magazine Cover of all time?”  It even made me think back to the tons of covers I’ve seen over the years and I started doing some ranking.  I thought I would share my thoughts here but was not able to really nail down a complete list.  I wasn’t able to pick just one, or five or even ten so I decided to list my twelve favorites.  They are in reasonable order from 12-1 but the ranking has changed several times and I may not be married to this as my final ranking for good.  I don’t think #1 will change but each time I look at these I feel guilty for having any of them ranked lower than #2.  So take the ranking with a grain of salt except for #1.

#12 – November/December 1990 – David Robinson #5 – I did not have a ton of friends who collected basketball cards but we all watched and played.  I was pretty heavy in collecting the cards though too.  My cousin Coop was big in it too.  We had our teams and players and would trade quite often.  For those that didn’t collect basketball, let me tell you that the ’89 Hoops David Robinson was sort of like the ’89 Ken Griffey Jr. Rookies.  I had to have these cards and still love them today.  There were actually two versions in the set.  One card featured him holding his Spurs jersey and the other was him shooting a free throw.  David Robinson was one of my favorite players back then and he came in and handled business quietly.  I simply loved this cover with The Admiral standing in front of The Alamo.  I also liked 90 Fleer basketball cards as well and the card featured was a favorite.#11 – March 1992 – Cal Ripken Jr. #84 – Who doesn’t love Cal?  You show me someone who doesn’t love Cal and I’ll show you someone who doesn’t love baseball.  He was still a couple of years away from breaking Lou Gehrig’s consecutive games played streak but was right in the thick of a Hall of Fame career in 1992.  This was also the year he appeared in the Donruss Elite insert set and this remains one of my all time favorite chase sets.  It was the first after all.  This was a great shot of Cal and I’ll always remember this cover.#10 – March 1991 – Ken Griffey Jr. #72 – Our first Jr. makes an appearance at #10 but there will be a more iconic cover in the top 3.  This one I loved because of the image.  It was Jr. in his classic follow through that was the envy of every young baseball player that hit left handed.  I had never seen a smoother swing and don’t know that it’s been beat since.  Jr. was a graceful player that was always admired for the fun loving nature he showed in his cards.  The Jr. on this cover and the one later are what I remember and loved so much about him back then.  The game got heavy a little later in his career and people tried to slander his good name but I’ll always hold him near and dear to my heart as a collector who started in 1989 when he broke through.#9 – December 1990 – Nolan Ryan #69 – This may be the lowest Nolan Ryan has ever been on any list ever concocted and that’s why I still struggle with my rankings. But the covers ahead of this one can’t be justified at any lower ranking.  This was truly tough.  “The Ryan Express” was a hero of mine in my young pitching days and I even had his “arm workout” book from my sophomore season in high school.  I remember curling jugs of water and throwing to a taped square on the wall outside my house as the guide was instructing me.  I don’t know if I ever got better because of it but I felt like I did and that was all that mattered.  Nolan was as intimidating a pitcher as there ever was and I only imagined the fear I would have looking at this pose from the batters box.  A great cover that probably is ranked too low.#8 – October 1990 – Jose Canseco #67 – This one was a classic and I could see it from several rows over as I approached the card cube at my Wal-Mart that day.  This was the same year I had performed my Canseco “autobiography” I spoke of in a previous post.  Canseco was THE MAN in ’89-’90 and he had the first page in my card binder.  I couldn’t get enough Canseco in my life and the cover here depicted the aforementioned 1990 Leaf that was totally on fire!  He’s sporting the A’s yellow jersey and has a look of confusion and bloodshot eyes but this is definitely top 10 material for my list!#7 – December 1989 – Bo Jackson #1 – This was the first Beckett Football installment and had the hottest player in sports on the cover.  He was at the top of his game and was only a couple of months away from taking the video game hero title away from Mario.  I remember this being one of the first magazines I got but I didn’t save them back them like I should have.  In fact, I would roll them up or fold them to get them to fit in my bookbag every day so it probably wouldn’t be in great shape even if I had.  I got started with baseball cards but football has always run a VERY close 2nd and has been #1 at some points.  My first big football set was ’90 Pro Set but I do remember picking up some ’89 Pro Set as well.  I still have the Bo Super Rookie and it’s one of my favorites.  You may wonder why Bo comes in at #7.  Don’t worry, there’s another one coming.#6 – May/June 1990 – Barry Sanders #4 – Bo was an absolute beast in baseball and football.  But no running back ran with the shiftiness and wizardry of Barry Sanders.  He was as close to Bo on Super Tecmo as you could get and was underrated because of the Raider RB.  I loved collecting Barry and I had a crazy ton of the ’90 Score pictured on the front.  My two favorite cards from the base set were two players that you’ve probably never heard of, or you’ve forgotten.  One was Percy Snow, a linebacker from Michigan State that was drafted by the Chiefs.  The other was Fred Washington that played at TCU and was drafted by the Bears.  I loved those cards and never got to see Washington’s career take off because of a fatal car accident his rookie year.  We were also robbed at the end of Barry’s career as he hung up the cleats very early and still had a lot left in the tank.  I loved that “Beckett Football Card Magazine” was in blue and silver like the uni’s and it really set off the image.#5 – April 1991 – Dominique Wilkins #9 – First, just look at the beautiful inset ’90 Hoops card.  Nique throwing down a windmill jam with the awesome silver border.  I don’t know that I have owned more cards in a set than ’90 Hoops, except maybe ’90 Pro Set.  I loved these Hoops cards and still do.  I have the equivalent of a full box of unopened Hoops packs at my house that I throw in giveaways from time to time.  The rookie class was awesome with Kemp, Hardaway, Payton and Glen Rice.  This was the heyday of great basketball and weekly Sunday matchups on NBC.  And of course, my main man was Dominique Wilkins.  Not only a star in the NBA and one of the most exciting players ever but he was playing at Stegeman Colliseum in Athens, GA even before that.  This is a top 5 no doubter!#4 – April 1992 – Frank Thomas #85 – This is one of the covers that I automatically picture in my head when someone says “Beckett”.  There was a card too from 1992 from this same setting in the Topps set but The Big Hurt has a big smile and looks friendly.  He looks like he is ready to pound a fastball in this photo!  Frank was a loveable player and grew up just about an hour and a half from where I’m from so was as close to a hometown superstar as we had at the time.  He played for Auburn, which was a slight knock but he remains a big figure in Georgia today.  I never owned the ’90 Topps error card as it is pretty rare but I loaded up on the corrected version along with ’89 Score update Rookies.  And this is a great time to mention again that I just recently added a great Frank Thomas autographed jersey thanks to the kindness of Robert Ballis (@RBallis)!!!#3 – September 1991 – Michael Jordan #14 – There are very few images in sports as iconic as MJ kissing the trophy.  And Beckett captured it perfectly with issue #14 of the Basketball edition.  Jordan may be the only player to grace both the Basketball and Baseball covers.  I’d have to do a little research but I can’t think of another.  Bo got Baseball and Football and Deion may have at one point as well.  MJ shocked the world when he announced he was retiring from basketball to play baseball and the hobby world went nuts too.  He also has a Basketball cover in the #45 Bulls jersey when he returned to the league that was very memorable but not quite Top 12 material.  This one was easy and belongs in the Top 3 for me.  I appreciate MJ more and more as the years pass and the NBA becomes more watered down and free agency driven.  In my day, The Dream Team represented America, not just one city.#2 – July 1990 – Ken Griffey Jr. #64 – Here is the iconic Jr. for me.  I don’t remember the specific hot list from this guide but I can assure you that half of them were Jr. cards. There was truly no hotter name in 1990 than Ken Griffey Jr.  He even made Canseco take a back seat.  And this smile was what you saw from Jr. on a routine basis except when they made him into a villain in 1994’s “Little Big League.”  1989 Upper Deck is obviously his marquee card and you may know by now that I still haven’t pulled one from a pack.  But I had a cache of ’89 Donruss rookies that I would horde like they were ’52 Mantle’s.  This was such a great time to be a baseball fan and collector.  This magazine brings back such fond memories and I can’t help but smile when I see it.#1 – June 1990 – Bo Jackson #63 – You had to know this was coming, right?  It is quite a coincidence that the top magazine on this list is issue #63 and it’s followed by #64 that is second on this list.  This was collecting to me.  If my life as a collector was an old VHS movie, this would be the box cover.  Bo in the pads with the bat over his shoulders may be the most iconic image on a sports card ever but is certainly the top photo in my lifetime.  It’s even better because it’s black and white.  Score football put out a similar card with Bo in the batting stance but it didn’t have the pop that this one did.  Maybe it’s because of the purple border.  Or maybe it’s because ’89 Score also had Aikman, Barry and Deion rookies.  Either way, this image takes first prize and is why this magazine cover lands at #1.
What are some of your favorite Beckett covers?  There are plenty more out there like Jordan with the Sox, Rickey Henderson and Larry Bird that I didn’t get to.  And there’s an entire catalog of Hockey that I know nothing about.  Technology has come along and hurt a lot of physical publications and made them move to the internet.  But even still, nothing beats holding a Beckett Price Guide in your hands and looking up your card prices!  Comment below or on Twitter and tell us your favorite Beckett Magazine memory.  And if you’re a podcast fan, I urge you to check out Beckett Radio this week!  

J-Dub

Cardboard Time Machine

Have you ever stopped to think about how memories work?  Of course, as I get older, the memories get fuzzier and harder to recount.  But there are some that remain vivid and when I stop and focus on them, I can almost place myself in the exact moment in time.  I think about this a lot because I have a 10 year old daughter that is starting to really enjoy a lot of new things.  She reminds me so much of me as a kid.  She loves watching those teen Nickelodeon shows, making slime, playing video games on her iPad and even collecting sports cards.  I was wondering just the other day how much from this age she would actually remember and it immediately took me back to my youth and what I remember.  She may not be able to retain it all but I certainly hope she remembers the role I played in trying to create them with her.

When we went to Disney in April, she rode Space Mountain for the first time and as we stood in the line, I could totally remember the feeling of wonderment I had going through that futuristic environment to ride an indoor roller coaster at 10.  When these moments arise, I always make sure she understands what’s going on around her. I point things out, I ask her what she thinks and I get her to recount the event to her mom or sister so she’ll take it all in and let it soak in.  In today’s fast paced world, it is hard to stop and focus on something that is really meaningful; we have phones in our face, Twitter spilling news everywhere and fidget spinners taking the world by storm.   We are constantly chasing the next exciting thing.  That’s sort of how modern day collecting has become.

Collecting sports cards doesn’t have to be that way.  I can sit down with a stack of cards and show my daughter various memorable players and share memories of my youth with her.  The cards are more to me than a value in Beckett or a dollar sign on eBay.  Do they have those meanings as well sometimes?  Sure, but it’s not why I do it now.   It’s why I did it in 1989 but I’ve evolved over the years into more of a collector than a cardboard entrepreneur.   Cards don’t just take me back to a specific player or baseball moment.  These old collectibles take me back to the year they are from and I remember the world around me at the time and what I had going on in my life.  Let me see if I can explain a little better with a few cards.

1987This time period was just before I started collecting but I have since gone back and bought tons and tons of ’87 cards for my collection.  Topps that year remains one of the most iconic designs in sports cards and I had more woodgrain in my collection than Ford did in the station wagon.  But when I look through these cards, it doesn’t take me back to actual sports cards memories.  At age 10, I was totally engulfed in baseball.  I was cutting my teeth in little league baseball at Centennial Stadium and watching it as much as possible.   I remember Jason Lee having the hardest fastball and always being thankful that my Uncle Speedy drafted him to be on our team.  I remember always wanting to hit a homerun into the O’San parking lot but never being able to.  I remember playing wiffle ball with the neighbors and watching my uncle Greg play with the big boys.

I also watched a lot of baseball on TV.  In 1987, I was blessed with two TV stations that played baseball every day.  We didn’t have MLB Season Pass “back in my day”; we had 2 channels.  One station was TBS, the home of the Atlanta Braves, America’s Team and my local guys.  We would watch Dale Murphy, Ken Oberkfell, Bob Horner and Gerald Perry every night even though they weren’t very good.  Skip Carey, Pete Van Wieren and Ernie Johnson were soothing to the ears and made me long for the baseball field.  The other station was WGN out of Chicago.  The great thing about Cubs baseball in 1987 was that most every game was played in the afternoon because Wrigley field didn’t have lights until late summer 1988.  I would get home from school around 3:30 and a Cubs game would be on and I would get to here Harry Carey and Steve Stone call the game.   The Cubs weren’t very good in ’87 either.  The Braves finished 20.5 games out of first and the Cubbies were 18.5 games out.  But at the age of 10, watching baseball was more important than watching the standings.   And the Cubs had Ryno, Andre Dawson and Shawon Dunston who were all fun to watch!

1988Believe it or not, the first thing I think of when I see 1988 baseball cards is pro wrestling.  That aforementioned TV station, TBS, had a show on Saturday nights called WCW Saturday Night!   I can’t get into today’s wrestling because it is so overproduced and the storylines are all so outlandish.  The storylines were probably the same in 1988 but I was 11 so I thought they were legit.  Also, WCW “rasslin” was way different than today’s WWE wrestling.   These guys got nasty in the ring and they would bleed and poke eyeballs and kick below the belt.  It was more about what happened inside the ring as opposed to the lead up and fall out after what happened in the ring.  And there is also no better ringside announcer for me than Tony Schiavone!

The wrestlers were so much better back then as well.  We had names like Dusty Rhodes, Ric Flair, Lex Luger, Arn and Ollie Anderson, Barry Windham, The Road Warriors and The Midnight Express.  There were hateable managers like Jim Cornett and Paul E. Dangerously.  There were vixens like Miss Elizabeth, Madusa, Missy Hyatt and Georgous George.  A new face had joined WCW with Sting and he is an all-time favorite, along with The Nature Boy.   So yeah, it may be odd but 1988 Score takes me back to Jim Cornette and his tennis racket and wanting Hawk and Animal to demolish the Midnight Express.  I didn’t realize until a recent Beckett podcast that Cornette is doing his own podcast now.  He was such a heel but is such a legend at the same time!

1989I have a lot of baseball card memories from 1989 but I also have other memories that are tied to when I started collecting.  One person I always think of when I am looking through my original ’89 Donruss and Bowman is my late friend, Josh Haire.  Josh and I became friends in Middle School and were best friends until late in high school when we had a falling out that I regrettably was never able to reconcile before he passed away far too soon.  But back in 1989, we were two peas in a pod.  We would spend the night at each other’s house on the weekend and watch movies, trade baseball cards and fish at his pond.  He had a ton of Bowman and I had a ton of Donruss so we would trade with each other to try and help build the sets.

There are some very vivid memories I have of my time with Josh and I will always hold on to them.  It was at his house on a scary Friday night that we played “Bloody Mary” for the first time.  His step dad was the “Voice of the Eagles”; our high school football team that won state in ’89 so we were at all the games and got to sit in the radio booth for many of them.   I learned how to play records at the radio station he DJ’d at on Saturdays.  I watched “The Lost Boys” behind my parents back at Josh’s in the attic bedroom he had.   I wasn’t supposed to watch horror movies at 12 but we watched that one!  He had a couple of Doberman’s that were as gentle as could be but still made me very nervous when I was alone with them.  Josh was a great friend during childhood and I will always remember the good times we spent together.  I also look back on the days we were immature and not so good friends to each other with regret and remorse.  But when I look at cards from ’89, it’s only good memories.

1990I was introduced to the second best video game ever in 1990, RBI Baseball 3.  It is close to Tecmo Super Bowl but nothing can ever top that sports classic.  I got my start in 1986 with RBI 1 at my Uncle Speedy’s house.  Unc was a great ball player and was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals but his quest to make it to the majors was derailed by Vietnam.  He even knew a couple of the players on RBI 1.  Our area baseball all-star teams were loaded in the mid 60’s from my understanding as my dad and Uncle Speedy both played on teams with Ray Knight and Harry Spielman.   And to hear the legend, my Uncle Speedy was the best player out of all of them.  He was a SS and I do remember seeing him play softball in his 30’s and he was as smooth as Ozzie Smith.   Who knows, the Cards may have never traded for Ozzie if Unc had stayed on the baseball path.  History as we know it could have been altered!

By 1990, we had moved on from kid games and RBI 3 was what you would routinely find us playing.  It had all of the major league teams at the time and even included the division champs from ’83-’89.  I liked playing with the ’87 Tigers and taking out the Twins but that was more for personal reasons.   My favorite two teams on the game were the ’89 A’s and the ’90 Reds.  I loved Eric Davis and Barry Larkin.  But I also loved Chris Sabo or “Beebo” as we called him for some strange reason.  We would even keep season long stats in a notebook and I drove one of my friends crazy because I would steal bases with Beebo.  He would famously remark one day, “I’ll outrun Beebo backwards!”   I remember that because we would record ourselves on cassette tape while playing the games and then go back and listen to the radio gold.  To this day, I strongly feel that Chris Sabo is one of the most underrated baseball players in major league history.

1991I was on my way to being a trading ace by 1991 and was moving all of my non-favorites for Frank Thomas and Robin Ventura and Ken Griffey Jr.  I was only 2 years away from pulling off the awesome (at the time) move of those Igor ’92 Bowman rookies for the Griffey Jr. forgery discussed Here.  But any reminder from 1991 takes me back to the Buffalo Bills.  I know what you’re thinking – Why does a South Ga 14 year old care about the Buffalo Bills?  Three words – Tecmo Super Bowl.  When this game came out, I latched on to the Bills and have really been a closet fan ever since.   I suffered through 4 Super Bowl loses as much as anybody could outside of the state of New York.   I loved Thurman Thomas, Jim Kelley, Andre Reed, Nate Odomes, Cornelius Bennett, Bruce Smith, Don Beebe, Daryl Talley and Steve Tasker.

I went to a post-church youth Super Bowl party every year being the guy that was pulling hard for the Bills.  Every one of those parties ended in disappointment.  The one I especially remember was the loss to the Cowboys because there were a ton of Cowboys fans at this shindig.  Buff was never able to get over the hump but I was consumed with Bills football in 1991.   Remember, the Falcons were not very good at the time.  I pulled for them as my home team but aside from Deion, Tuggle and Rison, there wasn’t much happening by means of stardom.  My heart was broken earlier this year when the Falcons lost in the SB but it really took me back to how I felt each time the Bills lost in the early 90’s.   I know that’s probably crazy to some of you but I can tell you that I will be cheering for Buffalo when they make it back to a Super Bowl, unless they are playing my Falcons.

You see, there are other reasons for me to continue to collect that outweigh trying to get rich.   Besides, I tried that with Gregg Jefferies, Eric Anthony and Kevin Maas and it didn’t pan out.  So when you see me post a review of 1988 Score, don’t think that I’ve lost my mind or that I’m trapped in the junk wax era.  Sometimes, I just want to take a trip down memory lane.  For me, the best (and most fun) way to do that is to go through old sports cards.  The images conjure up the old days for me.  They take me out of the here and now and sit me down in my old bedroom with the Jordan poster and the nerf hoop and the Nintendo.   My stress melts away, if only for a short time.  They are a time machine and I will cherish the junk wax as much as National Treasures for the rest of my days for these very reasons.  I hope that Bailey has something that she can use as a memory inducer when she’s 40 and I’m long gone.  Maybe it will be the cards.  She asks me regularly who is going to get my cards when I’m old and the answer is always, “You, Bailey.”

J-Dub