A half-hearted attempt at a baseball card blog, and occasionally other baseball musings
Wednesday, January 19, 2022
Repack Haiku #239 (Mark Gubicza)
Wednesday, January 12, 2022
Repack Haiku #238 (Tom Trebelhorn)
1987 Topps Traded #121T Tom Trebelhorn (MGR) |
In his Hall of Fame induction speech, Rickey Henderson thanked Trebelhorn:
"In 1976, my first year in the minors league, my coach, Tom Trebelhorn, helped me develop my skill in base running and taught me to play the game hard. I had not perfected how to take a lead or how to slide. Tom asked me to come to practice early every day and work on my sliding and base running skill. I guess, Tom, that hard work paid off for me, and I am very grateful."
**********Contest Plug!**********
Do you think you know who will lose to the Buffalo Bills in the Super Bowl? Then go ahead to Collector's Crack and enter his 12th Annual Almost The Easiest Super Bowl Contest On The Web contest. Win free cards by guessing the teams, plus a couple of tie-breakers.
Monday, January 10, 2022
Random Thoughts And Musings To Start The New Year
Just typing out loud here...
*Now that MLB and the Players Association have enjoyed a well deserved Christmas break, perhaps they'll finally get around to figuring out their new deal. Pitchers and catchers report in less than a month, guys, so get your asses to the table and work something out!
*Fanatics is buying Topps, which is good in the sense that the Topps name will live on, maintaining the one thinning strand of nostalgia that ties all of us collectors together. However, I'm convinced that the decision makers at Fanatics are just going to let Topps continue to do their thing, meaning more rehashed designs of the past, more focus on rookies, and little to no innovation.
*I was going to make a joke about the Topps 140th Anniversary design gimmick that they put in Archives, but the more I thought about it the more I wondered if the industry will survive another 70 years. MLB/Topps have done a horrible job making card collecting a worthwhile pursuit for younger kids and planting the seed for them returning to the hobby when disposable income is more available. Who's going to want to buy cards once all of us 60's/70's/80's heck even 90's kids start to fade away? Who's going to come back to the hobby with a fondness for 2022 Topps because it was the first set they collected as a kid?
*I'll have my yearly Hall Of Fame post later this month, but for now I enjoy following along and reading how and why different voters have made their decisions. As a Red Sox fan I'm obviously watching David Ortiz's numbers closely (Prediction: He barely squeaks in with mere percentage points above 75%). One thing that been irking me though are lazy voters who dismiss Ortiz simply because he was a DH. The designated hitter has been a part of baseball for 50 years now, longer than most of these voters have been in the industry. To suggest that he's not a real baseball player because he didn't wield a glove is laughable.
*It doesn't change my overall opinion on Bobby Abreu's Hall of Fame case, but an article showing that he was statistically better than Ichiro does move the needle a little. Obviously, this article doesn't factor in any of Ichiro's awards, achievements, records, or even the fact he didn't start his MLB career until age 27, but it's still an interesting comparison.
1990 Fleer #4 Jim Corsi |
*Former MLB reliever Jim Corsi passed away earlier this month. I honestly forgot he pitched for the Red Sox, associating him more with his time in Oakland. What struck me the most about his passing was that he gave an interview that was released days before. He talked about his cancer, and made a very important plea:
As a cancer survivor myself, this hit home. I was stubborn and thought my pain would go away on its own. It didn't and I'm glad I went to the doctor when I did. The lesson is clear: Don't be stupid, don't wait on stuff like this.
Friday, January 7, 2022
2021 Year In Review
2021 Highlights
- The blog hit the big 0-4 this year, which just amazes me. I'd honestly didn't think I'd last this long.
- Part of the reason I didn't think I'd last is because I thought I'd run out of things to post. I started up my Repack Haiku series to force myself to have at least one thing a week. This year I posted my 200th haiku (which also happened to introduce a guest blogger submission!)...that's a lot of poetry!
- After the success of my first April Fools Day prank, I upped the ante and followed up with a blogging community scavenger hunt! It went quite well I must say, thanks to the participation of 31 of my fellow bloggers!
- The Time Travel Trading Project has just exploded in scope! There's close to 400 cards in the stack now, all thanks to a whopping 59 trades! That's almost 5 trades every month!
- Among those trades was one that netted me the oldest card I've ever held in hand - a 1890 Sweet Caporal Actors & Actresses card of young silent film actress Frankie Raymond!
-
Many of those trades came through the
TCDB. I only made half as many trades this year as I did last year, but between the TCDB and the Time Travel Trading Project, I made over 70 trades this year - easily a new high for me!
-
My
Golden Sox Project only saw one addition to it this year, giving me 9 out of 31 gold parallels of the 2018 Boston Red Sox from the 2018 Topps base and update sets. I'll have to work on that this year!
- I completed 7 sets/inserts in 2021, the biggest two being the oldest set I ever completed and my first Canadian set! (1992 Manning 1919 Black Sox Reprints, 2020 Topps Boston Red Sox, 1990 Fleer - League Standouts, 1981 Topps, 1989 Fleer - For The Record, 1992 Donruss - Rod Carew Puzzle, 1992 O-Pee-Chee Premier)
2021 Diamond Jesters Blog Stats
Number of posts: 146 (After averaging 173 posts/year for the past 3 years, I've dipped to my lowest total since 2017 when I first started blogging. No cards on shelves means less things to talk about I guess. Here's hoping I'm back to my normal amount this year.)
Month with the most posts: 13 posts each month from March to July. For contrast, I did 18 posts in January 2020.
Top 5 viewed posts: As I mentioned above, my Time Travel Trading Project has gotten huge, and the views back this up! Also, it's good to see the spam-bots are back, as I had 44 posts with over 100 views.
- Time Travel Trading Update #49 (279 views)
-
Time Travel Trading Update #54 (262 views)
-
Time Travel Trading Update #55 (260 views)
- Breaking Good - Cardboard Collections (240 views)
- Time Travel Trading Update #52 (237 views)
Followers: 60 (After gaining 11 followers last year, I gained zero this year. I know it's not the ideal way to gauge my viewership, but I was kind of hoping for at least one or two more.)
My Collection
(Stats courtesy of the
Trading Card Database)
Thanks again, Oren! |
At least from a collecting standpoint, 2021 was a decent year. I'm looking forward to what 2022 might bring!
Wednesday, January 5, 2022
Monday, January 3, 2022
My Lucky Set
Friday, December 31, 2021
Celebrating Three Holidays In One
Happy New Year! Merry Christmas! Happy Halloween!
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
Repack Haiku #236 (Sammy Sosa)
Monday, December 27, 2021
Spring Cleaning Turns To Winter Hoarding, Box 2
8. 1979 Topps
#645 George Scott
I kind of wish I was an active baseball time during Boomer's time in Boston. I can't help but feel he would have been a favorite of mine. 1979 would be Scott's last year in baseball.
7. 2004 Topps All-Time Fan Favorites
#17 George Scott
6. 2020 Topps Allen & Ginter
#342 Mo Vaughn (SP)
Vaughn was one of my favorite sluggers in college. I'm glad to get something recent with him on it, especially since it's a short print!
5. 2018 Stadium Club
#11 Tzu-Wei Lin
4. 2018 Stadium Club
#180 Ted Williams
3. 2012 Topps
#631 Ryan Kalish
2. 2007 Topps
#630 Daisuke Matsuzaka (RC, VAR)
Thanks to this fun variation, I now know how the team name looks in Japanese!
1. 2003 Upper Deck Play Ball
#10 Pedro Martinez
My favorite has to be this great retro looking Pedro! Just an all-around aesthetically pleasing looking card.
Saturday, December 25, 2021
Merry Christmas!
Have a
It's the best time of the year!
I don't know if there will be
but have a
of
Merry Christmas to all of you out in blogger-land! May your stockings be filled with cardboard! (And yes, I did just repost this from last year - I'm not lazy, I just have a lot of presents to wrap!)
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
Monday, December 20, 2021
Time Travel Trading Update #60
The Time Travel Trade Stack:
#A17 Harrison Bryant (AU)
#313 Robinson Cano
2019 Topps Opening Day
#93 J.D. Martinez
#197 Felipe Vazquez
#185 Alex Ovechkin
#52 Richard Sherman (SN499)
#56 Randal Grichuck
#AJR-JJE Jerrel Jernigan (AU, MEM, SN75)
#BP51 Chase D'Arnaud
#BP56 Rolando Gomez
2010 Bowman Chrome
#13 Brian Roberts
#122 Hanley Ramirez
2010 Bowman Chrome - Prospects
#BCP178 Nathan Adcock
#BCP186 Jhan Marinez
#PP38 Brian Johnson
#341 Peyton Manning (AP)
#22 Jeff Pendergraph (MEM, SN499)
#BCW18 Tao Bu
#218 Jesse Harper (AU, RC, SN800)
#203 Bo Hart (ASR)
2004 Topps All-Time Fan Favorites
#52 Clete Boyer
2002 Fleer Greats Of The Game
#64 Frank Howard
2002 Upper Deck World Series Heroes
#76 Don Larsen
#77 Lester Lockett
#68 Scott Rolen
#U238 Tim Salmon (ENC)
#448 Erik Pappas
1993 Leaf
#271 Jay Buhner
1993 Classic Draft Picks (basketball)
#33 Will Flemons
#67 Bennie Seltzer
#65 Ron Gant
1990 Fleer
#125 Jim Abbott
#626 Frank Viola
1990 Pro Set - Theme Art (football)
#10 Super Bowl X Pittsburgh Steelers / Dallas Cowboys
#NNO Jim Kelly
#495 Larry Parrish
#657 Mike Schmidt (HL)
#233 Eagles Team Leaders - Randall Cunningham (TL)
#10 Dwight Gooden
#5 Rose Special '75-'78
#229 1985 NFL Interception Leaders (Daniel/Lewis/Walls)
1984 Fleer
#33 Bucky Dent
#254 Jorge Bell (RC)
#275 Bob Watson
1982 O-Pee-Chee E.T. The Extraterrestrial (non-sport)
#15 Among Elliott's Toys
1982 Topps
#125 Danny Ainge
#409 Carney Lansford
#420 Tommy Lasorda (MGR)
#421 Charlie Leibrandt (RC)
#427 Leon Durham (RC)
#496 Mickey Rivers
#531 Jerry Koosman
#565 Ken Landreaux
1981 Topps
#98 Clint Hurdle
#121 Larry Harlow
#151 Claudell Washington
#182 Bob Grich
#194 Rod Scurry
#402 NL Championships
#414 John Pacella
#465 Bill Russell
#477 Luis Gomez
#494 Bob Walk
#569 Al Williams
#632 Alan Bannister
#18 Frank Lewis
#132 Eagles Team Leaders (CL, TL)
#226 Bears Team Leaders (CL, TL)
#129 Ray Williams (RC)
1978 Topps
#148 Andre Thorton
#373 Jim Willoughby
#385 Tito Fuentes
#424 Boston Red Sox (TC)
#482 Rick Miller
#339 Joe Ferguson
#78 Richard Washington (RC)
#535 Cesar Geronimo
#350 Bill Bergey (AP)
1976 Topps
#40 Dave Kingman
#67 Tommy Helms
#107 Alex Johnson
#158 Jack Billingham
#158 Jack Billingham
#227 Mike Lum
#248 Tom Hall
#638 Ken Sanders
#660 Larry Dierker
1974 Topps - Team Checklists
#NNO Montreal Expos
1974 Topps - Traded
#270T Ron Santo
#458T Jim Ray
#496T Tom Murphy
#4 John Milner
#21 Howard Twilley
#151 Ron Jessie (RC)
#154 Jim Braxton (RC)
#158 Tim Foley (RC)
#200 Claude Humphrey
#205 Willie Ellison
#229 Mike Phipps
#250 Chris Hanburger
#289 Floyd Little
#297 Mel Gray
#321 Ralph Neely
#354 Ken Burrough
#416 Jack Snow
1972 Topps
#197 Johnny Briggs
#225 World Series Game 3 - Manny Sanguillen
#231 Casey Cox
#239 Tom Timmermann
1971 Topps
#16 Ken Singleton (RC)
#63 AL 1970 RBI Leaders (Howard/Conigliaro/Powell)
#71 AL 1970 Strikeout Leaders (McDowell/Lolich/Johnson)
#80 Bill Melton
#105 Tony Conigliaro
#123 2nd Series Checklist #133-263 (CL, VAR)
#146 Ralph Houk (MGR)
#195 AL Playoffs Game 1 - Powell Muscles Twins!
1970 Brooke Bond North American Wildlife In Danger (non-sport)
#32 Polar Bear
1970 Topps
#3 Darrell Chaney
1962 Topps
#83 Bob Bruce
#96 Billy O'Dell
#98 2nd Series Checklist 89-176 (CL, VAR)
#111 Jack Meyer
#28 Jim Ray Smith
#473 Bill Renna (UER)
#474 Roman Semproch (RC)
1958 Topps Zorro (non-sport)
#83 Rude Awakening
1957 Topps
#68 Ray Crone
#45 Hank Sauer
#9 Don Stonesifer
#29 Bucko Kilroy
1955 Topps All-American (football)
#46 Arnie Lassman
#222 Bill Wilson (RC)
1954 Bowman
#73 Don Mueller
1954 Bowman Power For Peace (non-sport)
#91 USS Coral Sea (CVB43)
1953 Topps
#2 Black-throated Green Warbler
1937-38 Diamond Matchbooks Tan 6 (hockey)
#NNO Glenn Brydson
#10 California Jay
1933 Church & Dwight Useful Birds of America Fifth Series (J9-1) (non-sport)
#5 Indigo Bunting
1922 Church & Dwight Useful Birds Of America Third Series (J7) (non-sport)
#7 Prothonotary Warbler
1915 Church & Dwight Useful Birds Of America First Series(J5) (non-sport)
#1 Quail
The Time Travel Trading Project is simple in concept. I started out with a random pack of 2018 Topps Series 1 baseball cards. My aim was to trade every card in that pack for something older. Each card I receive in turn is then made available for trade, with the goal to get the oldest card I can get.
Number of trades completed: 133 (1 pending!)
Unique trading partners: 54
Number of cards mailed out: 510
Year of oldest card mailed out: 1910-11
Number of cards received: 813
Year of oldest card received: 1890