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Michael's Dodger Buffet

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Yesterday we began to look at some of the highlights from a trade package that I recently received from Michael of Nomo's Sushi Platter. Today we move from mini-collection gems to Dodgers, Dodgers, and more Dodgers.

1993 Ted Williams Card Company Ron Cey LAD #10


Michael sent cards from three card-collecting eras. The Penguin was the anomaly as a player, coming from my childhood collecting era. But the card itself comes from the "junk wax" or "overproduction" era, which represented one grouping of cards in the package. The amazing thing about it, though, is that I needed something like 90% of the cards that he sent from this era, which would be hard to accomplish even had he some idea of what I already had.

1991 Leaf Gold Rookies Henry Rodriguez LAD #BC8
1996 Upper Deck SP Karim Garcia Premier Prospects LAD #15


Here are a couple of powerful outfielders who made their name away from Chavez Ravine. Henry Rodriguez was briefly the biggest bopper in Montreal, before the emergence of Vladimir Guerrero. Unlike Reggie Jackson, he didn't have a candy bar named after him. But fans adopted the Oh Henry! bar as a tribute to Rodriguez, throwing them on the field when he would homer. Rodriguez was also the Cubs' primary cleanup hitter in 1998, providing the protection for Sammy Sosa's drugs to work their "magic" on the record books. Garcia's career turned out to be less impressive. I remember him best for jumping into the Red Sox bullpen at Fenway to fight with a groundskeeper during the 2003 ALCS.

1996 Topps Stadium Club Chad Fonville LAD #31
1996 Pacific Brett Butler LAD #112


I couldn't tell you exactly why, but I always kinda liked Chad Fonville. He was a speedy little utility infielder type. I love this card for a number of other reasons. The elemental background, featuring the infield dirt and the green ivy of Wrigley Field, is fantastic. Also, with Hal McRae's son Brian barreling down on Fonville as he tries to turn two, it kinda reminds me of that oft-played video of Hal McRae trying to kill a young Willie Randolph of the Yankees with a take-out slide. Brett Butler, of course, was a class act (despite his time with the Giants) and one of the top players for the Dodgers in the 1990s, a decade in which they did no better than a couple of division series appearances in which they were swept. Also, I have very few Pacific cards from any year, so these are always welcome.

1996 Upper Deck Nomo Highlights Hideo Nomo LAD #2
1994 Score Mike Piazza LAD #476


Now we step into superstar territory. Nomomania was the highlight of 90s Dodger baseball for me. I've been eying this particular five-card insert set for a long time, so I'm very thankful to Michael for starting me down the path toward adding them to my collection. And then there's Piazza. Only the fact that I lived in New York for the majority of his time with the Mets helps to mitigate against the pain of the Dodgers letting him go. I usually can't stand catchers who are all-offense with little defense. So Piazza had to be a pretty special player for me to be the fan of his that I became.

2000 Donruss Gary Sheffield LAD #40
2002 Donruss Chan Ho Park LAD #91


Now we move into the next collecting era, a black hole for me (and many other collectors) that extends from about 1997-2007. During this period, I kept buying the Topps base sets (some retroactively), but that's about it. My collection is only now coming to include some of the many things that I missed at the time. Among these, turn-of-the-century Donruss issues have become a surprise favorite of mine. Except for a few odd sets, here and there, I was never much of a Donruss fan during my first collecting period. But these things are pretty sweet, particularly the backs (which I didn't scan for some reason). Nothing was worse than Donruss card backs in the 1980s. It's been many years since I've felt compelled to turn one of those things over. These, on the other hand, are the equal to anything Upper Deck has put out. I'm really looking forward to slowly accumulating cards from these sets, and these Dodgers from Michael are highly appreciated.

2003 Fleer Platinum Dave Roberts LAD #107
1999 SkyBox E-X Century Todd Hundley LAD #74


Despite what "Red Sox Nation" may think, Dave Roberts' entire career didn't consist of a single pinch-running appearance. Though I was actually surprised when I took a look at his career stats to find that he was only a Dodger for two and a half years. I had also forgotten that the Dodgers not only acquired Todd Hundley, but brought him back after he'd left to play for the Cubs. Not the brightest moment for the LA front office. Then again, the franchise wasn't exactly firing on all cylinders at this time. Sweet card, though. A first for me. I dig the way the name plate casts a shadow through the translucent plastic on the scan.

2000 Topps Gold Label Class 2 Kevin Brown LAD #12
2003 Fleer Showcase Hideo Nomo LAD #6


The surly Mr. Brown here is my first sample of Topps Gold Label. Nice cards. The turn of the century seems to have been awash in high-end multiple parallel sets. When I start to think that Topps has gotten a little too cute about that these days, I can remember that it's apparently nothing new. Although I dropped out a bit before this time, I hear that the never-ending chase aspect of collecting in this period drove some people away. Unlike with Hundley, the return of Hideo Nomo after a few vagabond years was more than welcome.

2008 Upper Deck Masterpieces James Loney LAD #44
2008 Upper Deck Spectrum Takashi Saito LAD #50


Now we arrive at the third and final collecting era that Michael treated me to: the "Resurgence Era," as I just now decided to call it. By this I mean from about the time I began to be exited about cards again up to the present. It's a little weird to think of James Loney and Takashi Saito as representative of my team's past. Time moves by way too quickly, and there's nothing like baseball to remind you of that fact. I was happy for Loney's success in Tampa Bay. I always really liked him, and considered him every bit the equal of Ethier and Kemp as the Dodgers began to return to their winning ways.

2007 Topps Co-Signers Andre Ethier LAD #32


Speaking of Ethier, I'll end this post with one of the more puzzling cards I've seen. I can understand a negative getting reversed, or Topps simply getting a Photoshopped uniform number wrong. But what the heck is going on here!? Maybe Ethier wore 61 in spring training? But there he is on the back of the card, in the same picture, wearing his familiar #16. Don't get it. Just plain weird. Any ideas, anyone?

I only showed a few cards here from the "Resurgence Era" because I want to save the rest for my final post about Michael's generous trade package. There's an excellent chance that I saved the best for last, though frankly it's all the best to me. Thanks again, Michael!

A Fine Dining Experience

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I'm a fast-food kinda guy. My digestive system can no longer handle a steady diet of hot dogs and double cheeseburgers, like in the old days. But I'm still not much of a fancy eater. Chicken sandwiches, pasta, tacos, Chinese take-out... tasty, quick and easy is my style.

That corresponds nicely with the Dodger Buffet I showed last time from the trade package sent to me by Michael at Nomo's Sushi Platter.

I do like to splurge on occasion, though. Treat my stomach to something a little better. When that time comes, my favorite go-to food is... Sushi!

This third, and final, look at what Michael sent me represents the fine dining portion of the package. Mini-collection hits were the coffee and bagel to get me going. The Dodger buffet was a satisfying lunch. This is Thanksgiving dinner. (Yes, there's actually a very good chance that my family will be dining out on sushi that night.)

2013 Topps Chasing History Holofoil Gold Hanley Ramirez LAD #CH-46


These are sure perdy, with all their gold and glimmer. And Hanley's stock surged in my estimation this season. Nice to see him mature away from Miami. I really hope he can find a way to stay on the field more in 2014.

By the way... is it just me? I can't help wondering, where was the indignation over Hanley being drilled in the ribs in his first at bat of the NLCS. If Zack Greinke had delivered a crippling blow to Yadier Molina in his first AB, you can be sure there would have been no end to the whining and whaling from St. Louis fans about dirty pool. I'm not saying it was intentional, or that I reacted as though it were. I'm just really surprised that the baseball world as a whole seemed to shrug its shoulders about it, in a way that wouldn't have been the case if the bruised ribs had been Yadi's.

2013 Topps Chasing History Matt Kemp LAD #CH-22
2010 Topps Finest Matt Kemp LAD #12


Oh sure, just silver and no holo-glimmer? Come on, Michael, what kind of junk are you trying to pass off on me? Kidding aside, the main course consisted of some gourmet Kemp. The above is now my only Topps Finest card newer than the late 1990s. I've haven't ever seen a pack of these things since then, and I probably couldn't afford to buy 'em if I did.

2010 Upper Deck UD Game Jersey Matt Kemp LAD #UDGJ-MK


Ho hum. A relic card of one of the game's superstars, thrown into the package like it's no big whoop. Nice.

2013 Panini USA Baseball Champions Legends Certified Die-Cuts Red Ty Griffin USA #3 (143/299)
2013 Panini USA Baseball Champions Highlights Nomar Garciaparra USA #11


There was a good pack's worth of USA Baseball, which also included Ken Griffey, Frank Thomas and Ozzie Smith. These things are sweet. And Nomar was a Dodger. You can't claim him anymore, "Red Sox Nation." You cast him out. We'll take him, if only for winning the famous four-homer-ninth game for us.

Tons and tons of great stuff from Michael already. But here's what really blew me away...

2013 Topps Tribute WBC Yovani Gallardo Mexico #81


2013 Topps Tribute WBC Joe Mauer USA #20


2013 Topps Tribute WBC Jose Reyes Dominican Republic #30


Holy crap. Next to the Dodgers, international baseball is really what turns me on. I dig any WBC-related cards. These things are simply too high-end for me to have acquired through anything short of charity. The scans don't do them justice. They're beautiful.

I don't know how else to express my gratitude to Michael than to say thank you. Thank you very much. And I hope whatever I'm able to dig up to send you (this weekend, I promise!) brings you at least some of the enjoyment that you were able to deliver my way.

Fun and Philanthropy: A Win-Win Situation

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I'm not proud to say that I am generally one of those people who is full of well-wishes and good intentions, but who rarely puts forth the time and effort to do much good beyond my own family. Fortunately for all of us, there are people like Chris of View from the Skybox who don't just think happy thoughts, they take action.

When Chris contacted me about his plan to host a charity group break, with the proceeds going to ChildFund International's Typhoon Haiyan relief efforts, I jumped on board. My wife and five children were all born in the Philippines, and they have many friends and family members who still live there. Fortunately, as far as we have been able to determine, all are safe and healthy. Of course, far too many weren't so lucky.


Chris somehow managed to whip up an incredible opportunity for the motley lot of us card bloggers to help with the relief effort, and to enjoy the benefits of some fabulous little cardboard at the same time. The price is more than reasonable, and the return can't help but be great in one way or another. The break includes several boxes of great stuff released over the past five years (including this year's online exclusive Topps Mini!). As of this posting, every team (other than my Dodgers, of course) is still available. Act fast! I urge anyone who's interested to hop on over to View from the Skybox for further details, and to sign up to join in the fun and philanthropy.

UPDATE: My wife, Cathy, bought in for her Yankees, too!

Playing With My Dodgers: Ramon Martinez

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It would be an understatement to say that I was spoiled by my first decade as a baseball fan and a Dodger fan. In the 1980s (ages 10-19 for yours truly) the Dodgers never went more than two years without making the playoffs, and they won two world championships. As the calendar turned to the 90s, I had no idea how lucky I'd been, or just how long I would have to wait for another championship (until 2014, it turns out).

At the dawn of my second decade as a Dodger "tenth man," I had every reason to believe that success was a given for my team. Pitching had been the cornerstone of that success, behind veterans like Jerry Reuss and Burt Hooton, a young Bob Welch, and the arrival of Fernando Valenzuela followed by Orel Hershiser. By 1990, the vets had retired, Welch had moved on to the run-support utopia of Oakland, and Tommy Lasorda had managed to keep running Fernando and the Bulldog out there until their arms had all but fallen off. But the Dodger farm system kept churning out aces, and lanky Dominican righthander Ramon Martinez was next in line.

Ramon lived up to the billing early, finishing second in the NL Cy Young voting at the age of 22 in 1990, going 20-6 in his first full season in the Dodger rotation. In June he became the only Dodger not named Koufax to strike out 18 batters in a game, and he would pitch a scoreless inning in his only All-Star Game appearance. But all of the early innings would predictably take their toll on his arm, and despite several more solid seasons, he would never again achieve the heights of 1990.

Today, of course, Ramon is probably best known as the brother of the great Pedro Martinez. But for a few years, Dodger fans knew Pedro as the great ace Ramon's little brother. Los hermanos would reunite for a couple of seasons in Boston. After an unsuccessful attempt to keep his career going in Pittsburgh, Ramon would retire in 2001 at the age of just 33, with a lifetime 135-88 record and over 1,400 strikeouts.

1996 Topps Stadium Club Ramon Martinez LAD #140


This card shows Ramon in all of his lanky glory, coming right at the batter. The card's design gives the illusion that Martinez just let loose with the Stadium Club logo. A great addition to the PWMD set. This is one of the many gems sent to me in a recent trade package from Michael of Nomo's Sushi Platter. I'm happy to say that I just managed to finally get a package in the mail to him. Thanks again, Michael. Hope I managed to send you at least half of the fun you sent my way.

Early Bird's Night Owl Haul: Pack #15

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What's this? Find out here.

More soft-cornered '77 Topps delicacies from the seemingly endless reservoir of the Night Owl's kiddie cards. Let's play...

1977 Topps Willie Crawford SFG #652


Here we see a Friggin' Giants uniform drawn onto longtime Dodger Willie Crawford. What a sad state of affairs.

1977 Topps Ken Singleton BAL #445


Appreciated in his time, Ken Singleton would be absolutely glorified today by the Sabermetrically inclined. Switch hitter, power, and lots and lots of walks.

Blah, blah, blah. I'm not really into words today, so let's go with pictures.

1977 Topps Bob Grich CAL #521


Rather than airbrush a new cap onto Bobby... I'm sorry, Bob Grich, Topps chose to let his Mauer-grade hair do the talking for him.  Did they make the right choice?


Yup. Don't get me (and Photoshop) started on the mustache...

1977 Topps Steve Renko CHC #586
1977 Topps Randy Moffitt SFG #464
1977 Topps Bill Greif MON #112


Ah hah! Now I know why Bill Greif looks aggrieved. He went overboard with the eyebrow shaving. Eschewing the fine baseball tradition of sporting a unibrow (see: Wally Moon), Greif went to town with his disposable Bic. Of course, he should have stopped after the first pass. But it was just a little longer on the right... one more pass... longer on the left... one more pass... you get the idea. Maybe he should have just left well enough alone...


Then again, maybe not.

1977 Topps Al Oliver PIT #130


How long did it take for Al Oliver to finally settle on one of those bats in the background...?


Apparently, sixteen years later, he still hasn't made up his mind. More bats for Al, please!

1977 Topps Leading Firemen: Bill Campbell/Rawly Eastwick #8
1977 Topps Elliott Maddox NYY #332
1977 Topps Eric Soderholm CHW #273


I'm not gonna mess with this one. How can you improve on a dark blue track suit for a baseball uniform? Topps already did the work for me.

Speaking of work, here's the cartoon from the back of Al Oliver's card, featuring one of only ten players to win as many as three MVP Awards.


That's all I've got...

Radical Rewards for a Raw Rookie

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My rookie year as a baseball card blogger has been... inconsistent, to say the least. I'll blather about myself and my "season" as the year nears completion. (Or maybe I won't. Inconsistent, remember?) Right now I want to face the music and come clean publicly about my biggest rookie gaff to date.

2009 O-Pee-Chee Black Dodger Stadium Team Checklist LAD #512


The great cards that I'm going to be showing in this post (and in another to follow) come from Marcus, Padres fan and the proprietor of two fantastic blogs: All the Way to the Backstop, and Yellow Cardboard, which glories in Fleer's 1991 canary-colored effort. He sent these my way a little over a month ago, at about the same time that I received the package from Michael, of Nomo's Sushi Platter, which I showed off last week.

Being the raw rookie that I am, it took me about three weeks to sift through my woefully unsorted collection to find enough remotely useful cards to send to each of them. But I finally managed to accomplish that feat, and get to the post office to complete the task. I had flat-rate envelopes addressed and ready to go, but the postal worker informed me that it would be less expensive to simply address the bubble mailers and send them that way. So she took the packages for just a moment to put on the postage and handed them back to me to address. Naturally, I kept a close eye on the packages so I wouldn't mix them up.

Naturally.

A couple of days later, I got an email from Michael informing me that he'd received the cards... the cards for Marcus. So I had to let Marcus know that he was getting the wrong cards as well, and ask each to forward the packages to their proper destinations, something that was beyond this rookie blogger's meager capabilities. Both of them were incredibly understanding and helped me to feel a little less useless. Hopefully, they'll both enjoy the cards that I sent, when they finally arrive at the proper location.

One thing I know for sure: I certainly dug what came my way...

2013 Topps Update Yasiel Puig LAD #US250
2013 Topps Opening Day Matt Kemp LAD #100


This is the first Puig that anyone has ever sent my way. Back in June, it would have been impossible to imagine a person doing such a thing. It seemed like every other listing on ebay was for an exorbitantly-priced piece of Puig cardboard. People were seeking them out like water in a desert and hoarding them like gold... in... a silver mine... or something? A few months later, here's a Puig sitting nonchalantly in the middle of a trade package from Marcus, like... bread in a bakery...

(Now I'm just using my rookie status as an excuse for incoherent writing.)

Marcus didn't stop there with this year's greatest hits.

2013 Topps WBC Adrian Gonzalez Mexico #WBC-7
2013 Panini Pinnacle Zack Greinke LAD #128


A-Gon, a Dodger on a WBC card. A double Playing With My Cards whammy. Then there's this great piece of Zack on black from Panini's resurrection of the Pinnacle brand.

2013 Topps Heritage All-Star Vets: Matt Kemp/Clayton Kershaw LAD #81
2013 Topps Heritage Then and Now: Sandy Koufax/Clayton Kershaw LAD #TN-KK



It didn't stop there. Almost as surprising as receiving a Puig was receiving multiple Kershaws, including one with Koufax. Being Dodger collector #764 in the blog world, I understandably don't usually get the kream of the krop, so it was nice to feel just a hint of Night Owlism for a moment.

2009 Upper Deck Clayton Kershaw Team Checklist LAD #984
2011 Topps 60 Years of Topps Mike Piazza LAD #60YOT-43


Clayton is about to get a well-deserved multi-gazillion-dollar-lifetime-and-a-half contract, and then lead the the Dodgers to back-to-back-to-back-to-back-etc. championships. (Or something approaching such Bluegasmic heights.) Mike Piazza wasn't given that chance. Sweet insert. You can't go wrong sending inserts to this budget-minded collector.

2002 Upper Deck Sweet Spot Adrian Beltre LAD #64
1994 Score Rookie/Traded Gold Rush Chan Ho Park LAD #RT136


I love both of these cards. You see grass green being used as a design element sometimes, but blue sky is pretty rare. I think it works great here. In fact, I may be showing this prematurely. I'm not sure that it hasn't replaced my intended Beltre card for the PWMD set. Dig the Chan Ho, too. It looks like a weird green in the scan, but it's shiny gold, like those Topps all-star stickers from the early '80s. It may not be as high tech as an atomic megasuperfractor, but it's pretty sweet, nonetheless.

1992 Classic Best Billy Ashley San Antonio Missions #243
1992 Topps Gold Winner Chris Gwynn LAD #604


Billy Ashley makes for a really interesting player collection. You'll find that about 90% of his cards are of the minor league or "future star" variety. Not only did stardom prove elusive, but so did competence. In retrospect, being a designated hitter at the AA level probably should have been a warning sign. Meanwhile, it's good to see that Chris Gwynn's sweat-producing effort paid off with a victory and a gold star.

Marcus didn't limit his benevolence to Dodger goodies, but I'll save the more Random half of the package for the next post. I'll wrap up part one with these beauties...

1984 Topps Milton Bradley Championship Baseball Steve Sax LAD
1984 Topps Milton Bradley Championship Baseball Pedro Guerrero LAD


...which lead me to yet another confession. (Jeeze, having a blog is like ongoing psychotherapy.) I already had these. Three of them, in fact, along with all of the other cards in the set. That's because... shame... I busted into the Championship Baseball games on the shelf of my local Kay-Bee toy store when I was a kid to extricate the cards. The temptation was simply too much to handle. It's not the kind of thing that I did much of as a kid. Not my finest moment. I am suitably ashamed. (But I'm still glad to have the cards...)

If I'd known more generous-hearted people like Marcus to look up to as a role model when I was a kid, perhaps I would have avoided this criminal moment (along with my Sutton-snatching incident of 1980). But better late than never. Thanks again, Marcus.

Random All the Way (Oh What Fun!)

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Yesterday we looked at the Dodger-intensive portion of a recent trade package that I received from Marcus of All the Way to the Backstop. But he didn't stop at citizens of Chavez Ravine. Marcus also knows of my love for the Random, and he managed to indulge my cravings for the unpredictable with aplomb.

Marus sent me some fat heads. Not Fatheads. Fat heads...

1992 Topps Stadium Club Tony Gwynn SDP #825
1993 Upper Deck Kirby Puckett Community Heroes MIN #34


...of Hall of Fame players and loveable guys on a couple of sweet cards. Cranially concentrated cardboard.

Next, Marus hit me with some aesthetically pleasing Chromified samples from 2012 Topps.

2012 Topps Chrome Tommy Hanson ATL #33
2012 Topps Chrome Desmond Jennings TBR #43



I digs me some pitchers, and Marcus throws two angles of the sidewinder Todd Frohwirth my way.

1993 Donruss Todd Frohwirth BAL #513
1993 Fleer Ultra Todd Frohwirth BAL #494


Better than submariners, though, are knuckleballers. And Marus fed me a steady diet of butterfly whisperers, including a handful of Tom Candiotti cards in Dodger Blue, among other greats, including the always-welcome Rough Tough Charlie Hough (a '91 Fleer calling card for Marcus' side-gig, Yellow Cardboard).

1991 Fleer Charlie Hough TEX #288
1996 Fleer Ultra Tom Candiotti LAD #493
1994 Pinnacle Tim Wakefield PIT #448



The Wakefield was just one of a handful of '94 Pinnacle gems in the package.

1994 Pinnacle Alex Diaz MIL #416
1994 Pinnacle Pat Meares MIN #304



Although I don't see a ball in the glove of Alex Diaz, I'm going to give him the benefit of the doubt and assume he's making a fine play. At the opposite end of that spectrum, we have Pat Meares...

Marcus didn't ignore my mini-collecting habit, contributing three Getting a Grip gems.

1994 Pinnacle Jon Ratliff CHC #437
2012 Topps Archives Brad Peacock OAK #192
1996 Score LaTroy Hawkins MIN #224



Ratliff displaces Ben Howard as the most extreme closeup in the collection. And you've gotta dig LaTroy Hawkins...

1996 Score LaTroy Hawkins MIN #224
1994 Score Rookie/Traded Darren Oliver TEX #RT113


...as well as Darren Oliver, junk wax rookie pitchers who were both active in 2013! Hawkins is particularly amazing, being a right-hander (lefties are more adept at reaching baseball senior citizenship). Not only that, but LaTroy became the Mets closer last year, and signed to play in his 20th big-league season with Colorado in 2014.

I'm actually a huge fan of this '94 Score Rookie/Traded set. It's one of those card designs that I think I should hate, but actually love. And Marcus sure didn't skimp on quality with these things...

1994 Score Rookie/Traded Bo Jackson CAL #RT3
1994 Score Rookie/Traded Manny Ramirez CLE #RT72


Bo knows the MLB 125th Anniversary patch and a pretty sweet Angels logo from before they went Disney. Although he's not doing anything odd, one has to assume Manny is still being Manny.

These two posts show just the tip of the snowcone. Marcus sent a package chock-full o' Random nuggets. And he ties a bow on the Random by coming full circle with the invocation of a sense of place. I started out in the last post by showing you the beautiful Dodger Stadium card that he sent me. That represented my childhood in sunny Southern California. I'll close with a card representing my time as a young adult in New York.

2012 Topps Heritage News Flashbacks Penn Station #NF-PS


Marcus tells me that he was actually born in Oregon, the place where I now find myself raising kids and enjoying my midlife crisis. It's a small, Random, cardboard-filled world. Thanks for bringing a little more of what it has to offer my way, Marcus. And if I have the pleasure of another trade opportunity with you, I promise to do you the courtesy of sending your cards to your address. Gotta prove this rookie can make adjustments...

Late-Inning Rally

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I don't know how you people do it. By "you people," I mean the card bloggers out there who manage to post regularly, day after day, week after week, month after month, etc. The Dodgers make the playoffs... and I don't blog for a week. I need to dig up cards to send in return for a trade... and I don't blog for a week. I need to do laundry... and I don't blog for a week.

Well, it's not that bad. But almost. This latest dry spell in blogging comes courtesy of the ongoing, never-ending, multi-decade sorting project. So I'm still Playing With My Cards. I just don't have the kind of attention span that makes multitasking a possibility.

I am happy to say, however, that the sorting project has reached the letter L (sorting by player's last names). That means that I've arrived in the "sweet spot," between the places where I stalled in my last two attempts at sorting over the course of the past two decades, once from the beginning of the alphabet, and once working my way backward from Z. That means that I'm looking at cards that I haven't seen since I was a teenager. Believe me, that was a long time ago. I'm really looking forward to getting this job done because it will allow me to make trades far more easily, knowing what I need, what I have, and where to find it. (I'm a dreamer.)

I'm not gonna abandon things here, though. I may be flaky, but you're stuck with me (if I'm on your blogroll, that is). Since I've been blogging so little lately, I'm gonna give you a comeback rally post, with a little bit of everything from my stable of recurring features. Let's play...

BLOG SHARE


About the only thing I managed to blog about in November was the great cards I received in a couple of trades with Michael from Nomo's Sushi Platter and Marcus of All the Way to the Backstop. I spent most of the rest of the month digging through my half-sorted collection to find cards to send in return. November also saw the arrival of my second package as a member of Club PWE from 2x3 Heroes...

2012 Topps Heritage Don Mattingly MG LAD #154
1996 Fleer/SkyBox Metal Universe Carlos Perez MON #193


As Jeff has noted, there are more Dodger fans in the blog world than there are cockroaches on this planet, so he makes good use of my "secondary" teams. He did manage to hit me with the Dodgers manager in addition to Eddie Murray with the Mets and some cool Expos cards including a Score Gold Rush Cliff Floyd, and this psychedelic Carlos Perez. Thanks Jeff! Random cards in the mail are always a welcome treat.

TBALL PRODUCTIONS


These are the virtual Dodgers cards that I (begin to) make every year. I showed the Kershaw card before the final Dodger game of the year, the card about that game in my depression, and the NLDS cards shortly thereafter to accentuate the positive. I also noted how unlikely it was that I would finish the set, and to date that prediction has proven accurate. I'm stalled at 22% completion.

2013 TBall Virtual Elian Herrera LAD #37
2013 TBall Virtual Drew Butera LAD #31


Here we have the two position players who played the least for the Dodgers in 2013 (four games each). This post is the perfect place for them because I don't have to say much about them. First things to come to mind: Butera's father Sal looked better with a mustache than without (drawing on my '80s collecting experience); Herrera is (unfortunately) the only Dodger I have in green parallel form from 2012 Panini Prizm. Moving on...

FEEDING THE HABIT


Still a weekend tradition, adding yet more cards to the unsorted side of the room.

1970 Kellogg's Joe Morgan HOU #72
1971 Topps Joe Morgan HOU #264


I'm just now wrapping up the assimilation into my collection of the cards that I bought on vacation this summer, when I first started this blog. These Morgans were among my favorite pickups from the card shop I visited. Both truly fabulous in their own way.

Then there's the pack-busting portion of my Card Night tradition. I managed to open a pack of 2009 Upper Deck in which I found four different Manny Ramirez cards... in one pack. That was kinda crazy. I've also managed to get a few nice "hits" lately.

2013 Topps Jose Fernandez AS SP MIA #589B


I probably wouldn't have even realized that this was a short print variation of Fernandez unless, in the very same pack of Topps Update, I also got his regular all-star card. But the best pack of cards that I've opened recently was from Panini Cooperstown. Six cards: Tony Perez, Harry Heilman, and...

2013 Panini Cooperstown Colgan's Chips Ernie Banks CHC
2013 Panini Cooperstown Duke Snider BRO #58


Cool. But also...

2013 Panini Cooperstown Blue Crystal Bob Gibson STL #84 (129/499)
2013 Panini Cooperstown Signatures Goose Gossage SDP #HOF-GOS (97/150)


Holy crap. Two hits in one six-card pack. Sweet! Guess that's why they're so friggin' expensive. Definitely worth the money this time, though. (Interesting that they chose to list San Diego as Goose's team, despite the fact that he's better known as a Yankee... and he's wearing a Yankee uniform in the photo. Odd.)

MINI-COLLECTING


I've been slowly looking through this Bowman set, a recent purchase, on Card Nights...

2000 Bowman Draft Picks & Prospects Ryan Vogelsong SFG #63
2000 Bowman Draft Picks & Prospects Mark Buehrle CHW #69


And so far it's been loaded with Getting a Grip cards, including these fine examples. It's kinda cool to have a card of Vogelsong (or Volkswagen, as Jack McKeon calls him) from his first, pre-Japan, stint with the Friggin' Giants. Buehrle is one of those less-than-Hall-of-Fame-worthy aces that I dig so much. It's a shame he ever left Chicago.

PLAYING WITH MY DODGERS


I recently fulfilled a long-held desire by getting my hands on the 2008 Topps Dodgers Premium Team Set. I really wish Topps had kept making these things. If they were to do so for all 30 MLB clubs, that would make for a monster master set worth chasing. I'd dig that more than all of this parallel stuff. Don't get me wrong, I like seeing the same card in 37 different hues, with various degrees of shininess, refraction and sparkles. But I prefer cards of fringe players and coaches.

2008 Topps Dodgers Premium Team Set Mike Easler CO LAD #51
2008 Topps Dodgers Premium Team Set Bob Schaefer CO LAD #15


Where else was I going to find cards of Mike Easler and Bob Schaefer as Dodgers coaches for the PWMD set? I don't have much to say about them (which is why they're in this catch-all post). So I'll talk about the set some more. It gets a bit tedious with some overly-obscure season highlights and team leader cards among its 55-card checklist. But they're certainly worth the good stuff, including a Dodger Stadium card, which is always welcome. (No Vin Scully, though...) I've already thrown a couple of cards from the set (Beimel and Kuroda) into the Getting a Grip collection. And there will be more PWMD gems in the future.


Finally, a couple of notes from the blog world. Although it's probably counterproductive to my chances of winning, I feel compelled to point out that Topher from Crackin' Wax (with its sweet new logo) is celebrating his blog's fifth year by giving away lots and lots o' cards. Thanks Topher. Good luck to all of you (and to me, too!).

I also want to remind you all of Chris' great Typhoon Haiyan Relief Super Mixer Baseball Group Break, over at View from the Skybox, which is surprisingly taking a while to fill up. My wife and I joined immediately. It's not only a good cause, but it seems to me to be a pretty sweet break, especially if you're interested in getting your hands on this year's Topps mini cards from your favorite team.

Okay, that's all for now. See you in a week or so...

Playing With My Dodgers: Larry Bowa

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Larry Bowa is my kind of guy. A baseball lifer, passionate and knowledgeable, and just plain fun to watch work, whether as a player, manager, coach or commentator. I was pretty young when he retired as a player, but I have vague memories of the 1980 playoffs and World Series, and I saw him a fair number of times playing for the Cubs on Superstation WGN toward the end of his career.

He never played for the Dodgers, of course, but is a more-than-welcome addition to the Dodger family, having come from the Yankees to serve under Joe Torre in LA from 2008-2010. He certainly hadn't lost any of his fire. I remember him getting worked up on more than one occasion. I've enjoyed watching him on MLB Network for the past few years, but I'm glad to see him back in uniform, by the side of Phillies manager Ryne Sandberg (who was the seeming "throw-in" player acquired by the Cubs with Bowa for Ivan DeJesus in 1982).

2008 Topps Dodgers Premium Team Set Larry Bowa CO LAD #34


Yesterday I inducted two of the other cards from this set featuring members of the Los Angeles coaching staff into the PWMD pantheon. (Posts on back-to-back days? Shocking.) But this one is by far my favorite, and one of the main reasons that I went out of my way to track down the Premium Team Set.

Just Commons: Just Canadians

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Here we're gonna take a look at the O-Pee-Chee portion of my second Just Commons purchase (I've since made a third). My first buy from that site was split between O-Pee-Chees and Kershaws. For my second buy I took one more swipe at the Canadian gems and filled the other half of the order with future Playing With My Dodgers inductees.

1979 O-Pee-Chee Luis Tiant NYY #299


This card is a triple threat. I take a strange delight in cards of players who move between arch rivals. (Which really just means Dodgers-Giants and Yankees-Red Sox, as far as I'm concerned. Cardinals-Cubs is a bit too friendly to be interesting in this way.) The fact that Tiant is pictured in a Sox uni while being labeled as a Yank on the same card is its first virtue. The second is that Luis Tiant rocks (and twists, and turns, and gyrates with the best of 'em). The third is the Random factor, in this case the fact that, on a card with a caption that says "signed as a free agent," he's signing a ball. Random synchronicity.

1989 O-Pee-Chee 1988 World Series Game 4 (Tim Belcher) #177
1989 O-Pee-Chee 1988 World Series Game 5 (Mickey Hatcher) #254


O-Pee-Chee one-upped Topps by producing World Series cards in their 1989 set. Being a Dodger fan, I am immensely grateful to our north-o'-the-border card-producing neighbors for this. I've long had the Game 2 (Hershiser) card. Unfortunately, Just Commons didn't have the Game 1 card (Gibson, of course), so I still need that one. They had Game 3 (McGwire), but I wasn't about to go out of my way to get the only Dodger loss of the series before I have the Gibson card. That would be wrong.

1979 O-Pee-Chee Derrel Thomas LAD #359
1992 O-Pee-Chee Kip Gross LAD #372


Unfortunately, Just Commons doesn't have any 1980 O-Pee-Chees on offer, but I guess I wouldn't be complaining if they didn't have the '79s and just started with '81. So I hereby retract my mild complaint. Derrel Thomas was for me a prototype, as he was the first player I became aware of who would play just about any position on the field. I thought that was so cool as a ten year old. Kip Gross didn't make a huge impression as a Dodger (40 innings over two seasons). In fact, I really wish he'd been traded to the Angels instead. How cool would this card be, with this picture, if instead it read "Now with Angels"?

1992 O-Pee-Chee Eddie Murray NM #780
1991 O-Pee-Chee Kirk Gibson KCR #490


I was hoping to get the "Now with Dodgers" versions of these guys, but no dice. Since I couldn't get 'em coming, I got 'em going.

1987 O-Pee-Chee Vida Blue OAK #260
1987 O-Pee-Chee Reggie Jackson OAK #300


I couldn't pass up these fabulous swingin' A's cards, trying to recapture the magic of their '70s dynasty, right before the start of their '80s almost-dynasty (that the Dodgers helped to keep down). I also got the Ron Cey card (coming from the Cubs). Geeze, were they trying to be the Wheeze Kids, Part II? At least Eckersley worked out for them. (Except in the bottom of the ninth of game one of the '88 World Series! Whoo hoo! Worth mentioning at every possible opportunity.)

1986 O-Pee-Chee Joaquin Andujar OAK #150
1984 O-Pee-Chee Joe Morgan OAK #210


I actually got excited about OPC A's cards in general, mainly because I like the color green as a design element on cards. And these two have the added bonus of the festive holiday color combination. How cool would it be to decorate a tree with hundreds of such cards? Might have to make that happen some day...

The thing all of these cards have in common, of course, is that they diverge in some way from their Topps counterparts from the same set. It's unfortunate that Just Commons doesn't have any from 1977, because that set is the benchmark for variations. I was able to track these down easily by perusing GCRL's Oh My O-Pee-Chee blog, which is defunct, having exhausted its subject matter, but which serves as an excellent resource. Next to 1977, the 1992 set probably has the most desirable variations, including a good number of cards that didn't exist in the Topps set. For example...

1992 O-Pee-Chee Gary Carter Tribute MON #387
1992 O-Pee-Chee Gary Carter Tribute NYM #389


1992 O-Pee-Chee Gary Carter Tribute SFG #402
1992 O-Pee-Chee Gary Carter Tribute MON #45


I had picked up the Dodgers tribute card in my first Just Commons order, but had passed these up in protest of the card featuring Carter as a Friggin' Giant. But I relented with this second purchase. It had been kinda churlish to ignore three other great cards for that reason. And having four of the five wasn't going to work for my OCD, so they're all here now. In reality, I'm really kinda glad, thanks to a deep, dark secret that I've been keeping (and occasionally alluding to on these pages). Maybe someday I will have the courage to confess it. But not today.

1992 O-Pee-Chee Al Leiter TOR #394
1992 O-Pee-Chee Moises Alou MON #401


These two players didn't receive cards in the 1992 Topps base set because their playing time was limited (in the case of Alou, eliminated) due to injury the previous season. Just the kind of O-Pee-Chee oddball that excites a connoisseur of the Random, like myself.

1992 O-Pee-Chee Carl Willis MIN #393


Finally, I couldn't pass up this glorious Getting a Grip sample, also a card not featured in the Topps set. The omission of Willis is harder to explain, given his 2.63 ERA in 89 relief innings for the World Champion Twins in 1991. Willis also earns points in my book for being a longtime pitching coach.

There are a few O-Pee-Chee gems that I still have to track down, but thanks to Just Commons, that list has been shortened considerably.

Fan Appreciation Day

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There are times when Fan Appreciation Day is more meaningful than at other times. When a team is a perennial contender, like the Dodgers were for all of my childhood, it's hardly necessary to thank fans for following their exploits. But when a team has hit on hard times, as the Dodgers did (and, in terms of championships, still has) beginning at about the time I became an adult, fans who stick by their team deserve a little thanks.

The turn of the present century was a particularly dark time for the Dodger franchise, being the FOX ownership years. This was when tradition was thrown out of the window. The opportunity to promote AAA manager Mike Scioscia as the rightful heir to the Alston-Lasorda tradition was the thing that bothered me most. But there were plenty of reasons to divert my attention elsewhere.

I recently made a cheap eBay purchase that enabled me to partake in a bit of that team's attempts to placate its fans: these cool oddball cards that they gave out on Fan Appreciation Day from 1997-2001, and 2003. They came, perforated for removal, on 8.5 x 11 sheets that included promotional schedules and other assorted advertisements for the next season. I play with my cards, as you know, so remove them I did. They're actually pretty cool from a baseball card standpoint, if you can set aside the disappointment in the team elicited by the players portrayed.

Lets take a look at each year's three-card set, what makes the players disappointing, and what makes the cards worth having.

1997


1997 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Hideo Nomo LAD
1997 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Chan Ho Park LAD



This was the only one among the sets here in which different designs were used for each card. Fittingly, the Nomo card is the best of the bunch, as he's probably the player here with the least amount a of disappointment attached to their Dodger days. The arrival of The Tornado from Japan was probably the most exciting thing to happen to the franchise in the 1990s. After a couple of phenomenal seasons, however, hitters managed to get used to his unusual delivery, and Nomo battled wildness during an itinerant stretch of his career in the middle of this time period.

Chan Ho Park gets a pretty nifty-looking card, too, which prominently features beautiful Dodger Stadium. He shows up again later, and we'll discuss the nature of his disappointment then.

1997 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Mike Piazza LAD


The disappointment surrounding Mike Piazza, of course, is that the Dodgers didn't manage to hold on to him. His card here isn't terrible, but it's the weakest of the batch. The card backs are pretty cool. Unlike the front, they feature a unified design, each with neat little iconographic player drawings. I can't say that I managed to catch any of Mike's television appearances mentioned here, but it's not hard to imagine his Baywatch meeting with Pam Anderson and her unnatural endowments (though it's a little disturbing to do so).

1998


1998 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Raul Mondesi LAD
1998 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Gary Sheffield LAD



Here begin the unified card designs. This one is clean and unobtrusive, highlighting various stages of action. Super action: Mondesi sliding into a base (getting back to first on a pickoff attempt, I believe). Mild action (probably not the right term for Sheffield's violently-wagging bat): this card is great for helping to recall his unique batter's box ritual. Non-action: Karros blowing a bubble and waiting for the Bill Russell/Glenn Hoffman era to come to an end.

1998 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Eric Karros LAD


Disappointment: Mondesi had some pop in his bat, running speed, and a rifle arm out in right field. But he had no plate discipline and wasn't much of a "chemistry" guy. Sheffield was an awesome hitter, but at this stage of his career there was still no "team" in Sheffield. Karros, of course, is still the franchise home run leader, but he always suffered by comparison to Steve Garvey, which in Sabermetric retrospect, ain't so hot. At least he was better than Greg Brock.

We get to enjoy a visit to the office of "Dr. Baseball" on the backs of these cards, on which he examines our knowledge of each player.

1999


1999 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Kevin Brown LAD #2
1999 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Eric Karros LAD #3



These are a little reminiscent of 1954 Bowman, I guess. Certainly of that era, in general. The big team logo is nice. I always dig green on cards. And the background concept is nice, in theory. A little less so in practice. Brown and Beltre look good. The Farmer John ad on Beltre's card is especially evocative of Dodger Baseball (you can't help but hear Vin Scully's voice extolling the virtues of the Dodger Dog). But what the heck is Karros doing in Forbes Field in Pittsburgh?

1999 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Adrian Beltre LAD #1


Disappointment: Kevin Brown was much like Sheffield, massively talented but unpleasant, and unable to help bring a pennant to Chavez Ravine. The disappointment surrounding Beltre is that the Dodgers managed to sign him too young, forcing the commissioner's office to declare him a free agent just as he was hitting his prime after a breakout season in 2004. Also disappointing are these card backs. Ugly, and with a truly lame attempt at old-school baseball lingo.

2000


2000 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Shawn Green LAD
2000 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Gary Sheffield LAD


These are some really nice, colorful cards, blending the retro vibe with modern sensibilities. Gotta dig 'em. Unfortunately, unlike the previous sets, their aren't quite the standard 2.5 x 3.5 cards size, being about an sixteenth of an inch smaller in each direction. But close enough.

Shawn Green is the newbie here. He wasn't exactly disappointing. In fact, he took the field just about every day of his five years with the Dodgers and did his job, driving in runs from the middle of the order. His Dodger highlight was a four-homer game in 2002. But the Dodgers didn't manage to win while he was there, and he didn't exactly have a "Hollywood" personality, so his stint in Blue was largely forgettable (at least to me, from the east coast at the time), despite his success on the field.

2000 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Eric Karros LAD


For the backs we get a team photo puzzle. I scanned all three and was going to put then together to show here, but the photo extended into the gaps between cards on the perforated sheet, so it made for an awkward full picture with some missing Dodger faces. You'll just have to settle for this glimpse of the enormous, hypertensive, unfortunately-named Mike Fetters looming large among this third of the group.

2001


2001 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Gary Sheffield LAD #3
2001 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Paul Lo Duca LAD #1


Not the best design, but not horrible. Interesting colors and textures. And the backs do a nice job of carrying the design themes over. Unfortunately, while the previous year's cards were a little smaller than standard size, for 2001, it got worse. They're slightly bigger than the standard, making them difficult to store with other cards stacked in boxes without damaging the edges. In fact, I'm not sure what to do: leave them as they are and take the inevitable damage over time, trim the extra sixteenth of an inch off of them, or store them separately with the other too-large cards, such as 1989 Bowman, '80s-'90s Topps Big cards, and 50's Topps and Bowman issues. (I decided to trim them, and they look fine. Hope I didn't give any condition-sensitive people out there heartburn.)

2001 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Chan Ho Park LAD #2


Disappointment: My first-ever visit to Candlestick Park (talk about disappointments... what a dump!) encapsulated what was disappointing about Chan Ho Park. On April 17, 1996, making the third start of his career, he struck out six batters in two innings... but also walked five and was removed in the third inning without recording an out. (The Dodgers went on to beat the Friggin' Giants, 11-2, I'm happy to say.) Park never quite tamed his control enough to achieve the stardom predicted for him, though he did end up having a long and largely-productive career, especially if you ignore the two grands slams he gave up to Fernando Tatis... in one inning!

2003


2003 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Paul Lo Duca LAD
2003 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Eric Gagne LAD


Not sure why they didn't do this in 2002. The team managed to break the 90-win barrier for the first time during this period (although they still finished third in the division), so maybe they didn't think the fans needed baseball card consolation prizes in '02. But they were back down to 85 wins in '03, which is fortunate at least for the excuse to bribe fans with more cool cards. And these are some of the best-looking of the bunch. Back to standard size, with cool black borders. And I especially love the custom pennants for each player. I wonder if they sold pennants with the same design at the stadium. The backs are nice, too, featuring another action photo in an uncluttered black-dominated design.

Disappointment: Two of the biggest. I never really jumped on the Gagne bandwagon, from the standpoint of becoming a huge fan of the player, though I was certainly awed by his "accomplishments" at the time. So his fall didn't hurt all that much. Lo Duca, on the other hand, was the biggest disappointment of the steroid era to me, personally, as he was my favorite player for a time. These two cards make me sad, which is a shame because they're pretty fabulous-looking cards.

2003 Dodgers Fan Appreciation Day Hideo Nomo LAD


Fortunately, it all comes full circle, with "The Warrior." (I don't remember that nickname capturing the imagination like "The Tornado" did). After being largely ineffective for five teams over the course of the past four years, Nomo returned to the Dodgers in 2002 and put up back-to-back 16-win seasons before losing his effectiveness for good.

It was difficult to appreciate these Dodgers teams, but with a little distance to ease the pain and apathy, these cards help to lessen the disappointment a little, and I appreciate that. Mission accomplished, Dodgers.

Happy Birthday Steve Garvey!

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What brings me out of my latest, greatest, no-blogging funk? The chance to win a contest, of course!

There's no sugarcoating it. I want every card in existence, and the only way that's gonna happen is if 99.99999999% of them come to me free of charge somehow. (It's not gonna happen.) Thanks to Jim of Garvey Cey Russell Lopes (GCRL), I have a chance to reduce the number of cards I need from a gazillion-and-one to just a gazillion. It wouldn't be just any card, either, but a magical 1952 Topps specimen!

Though my motives may be crass, I am also more than happy to wake up long enough to celebrate my Dodgers. And, at least when I was a kid, there was no player that represented my team more than Steve Garvey. In fact, in the formative years of my fandom, Garvey was to me the prototypical baseball player. The way he wore his uniform, the way he stood in the batter's box, and the way he took his stance on defense were, in my mind, simply the way it was supposed to be done. Anything else was a variation on the theme of ballplayer/Garvey, Garvey/ballplayer.

1977 O-Pee-Chee Steve Garvey LAD #255


The Topps version of Garvey's 1977 card was the prototypical baseball card of my youth. The prototype of the prototype. It even got one of the very few posts on a blog of mine that lasted a few weeks in September of 2011. (See, this blog is actually an improvement!) So when I saw this O-Pee-Chee variation, sans all-star designation, I had to have it. This is what it looks like when a cartoon character, designed to be the "perfect" ballplayer, stands ready to play first base.

Happy Birthday, Steve Garvey.

Here's hoping this post results in one less card in the world for me to still need.

And thanks for the contest, Jim.

Catherine Ann Peterson (1926-2014)

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As I explained when I launched this blog, its name came from my Grandmother’s insistence on calling my serious collecting passion, “playing with my cards.” I chafed at the characterization as a kid. I embraced it as an adult. The one thing that remained constant throughout my first 24 years as a collector was my Grandma’s support for my habit. She bought me baseball cards from the very beginning of my addiction to the hobby (though she mostly encouraged me to work to earn my own money to feed the habit). And she enjoyed buying me cards so much on our walks (with me pushing her in her wheelchair) over the past few years that I had to often refuse so that she wouldn't spend too much of her money on me.

After battling and defying doctors’ expectations for years, she passed away earlier this month. I have never known a kinder, more generous soul than my Grandma. I will miss her.


The time seems right to shift my priorities a bit. I don’t plan to slow down as a collector at all. In fact, I want to devote more time to my getting my collection in order. I do plan to make this blog less of a priority, however. I’m not going to abandon it. I still plan to write occasional posts, particularly regarding my interactions with my new friends in the blog world. But, like I said, most of my time is going to be devoted to sorting these little pieces of cardboard in order to be in a better position to do some trading. Knowing what I have and what I need turns out to be an important aspect of being a good trade partner.

I also certainly plan to continue to be an active blog follower, so I won’t be disappearing completely. You’re stuck with me. You just won’t have to deal with a bunch of lame posts about my Dodgers, at least for a while. Thanks for all of the support that many of you have given me and this blog (as well as Top of the Topps) in its fitful first year. I hope that with time it will evolve into something even better. But, for now, it’s time to rest and reflect.

-Ethan

Celebrate Good Times (With Cards!)

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Although I'm on a self-imposed blogging hiatus, of sorts, I don't plan to slack when it comes to giving generous bloggers their due for contributing to my portion of our shared habit. Fittingly, December was a nice month for that kind of generosity.

Topher celebrated the fifth birthday of his blog, Crackin' Wax (and Bustin' Packs), by giving away cards. I was one of the lucky PWE winners, receiving some fab Dodgers.

2012 Topps Red Andre Ethier LAD #303
1989 Upper Deck Orel Hershiser CYA LAD #661


I had originally thought that I was a big fan of Wal-Mart blue-bordered Dodgers cards. Well, I am, but I've come to learn that I actually prefer the red-bordered Target versions better. They still match the team's secondary color, and the contrast of the red sets off the Dodger Blue better than the powder blue on the Wal-Mart versions. So I was pretty happy to see this Ethier pop out o' the envelope from Topher. And I'm always jazzed for a Bulldog sighting. This '89 UD sample could serve as Exhibit A in the farcical event that Orel is ever accused of using PEDs. I also got a couple of other 2012 Topps Dodgers: Nathan Eovaldi and some guy named Clayton Kershaw. But for pure aesthetics, this was the winner of the bunch...

1989 Upper Deck Alejandro Pena LAD #137


Any card that shows that much of Dodger Stadium rocks. The color of the grass, the red clay of the mound, the '76 logo and the auxiliary scoreboard are incredibly evocative to me of that era (and my teens). Plus, because I didn't appreciate the Upper Deck upstarts at the time (being a crusty old Topps traditionalist by the time I got my first driver's licence), '89 Upper Deck is not among the junk wax sets that I have a gazillion of lying around. If I had to guess, I'd say that I'm only about 75% of the way toward set completion.

Thanks for cards worthy of celebrating your blogging milestone, Topher.

T.J., The Junior Junkie, had another reason to celebrate. November 21 was Griffey's 44th birthday. Which, of course, meant free cards for lucky bloggers like me, who will recognize the sweet floating-head note below. This one was fun because I got to pick the cards from a really nice selection offered up by T.J. I may have been beaten to the punch for the '96 Pinnacle Jeter that would have been my first choice. But even though I picked behind a good bunch of people, I miraculously managed to land my second and third choices!

2005 Topps All-Time Fan Favorites Steve Carlton PHI #109
1997 Upper Deck UD3 Eddie Murray Homerun Heroes BAL #20



The Murray is particularly sweet because the Orioles uniform is no exercise in post-career nostalgia. Steady Eddie actually played for Baltimore again for the second half of the 1996 season. T.J. even threw in the (apparently unclaimed) '90 Fleer David Justice. Thanks for celebrating The Kid's big day with generosity, T.J.

Speaking of generosity, Chris from View from the Skybox recently sent out a good number of PWEs, with one of the reasons being a desire to solicit more help for the Philippines in dealing with the aftermath of last November's horrific typhoon. To that end, Chris has put together the 2014 Typhoon Haiyan Relief Super Mixer Baseball Group Break. I'm really surprised at how slowly this is filling up. It's a great selection of cards, for a really good price, and for a very worthy cause. And there are some pretty big-name teams still up for grabs. If you haven't already, you really should go check it out!

Even though my wife, Cathy, and I were the first two to sign up back in November, Chris didn't leave me out of the PWE fun.

1995 The National Pastime Phil Rizzuto's Baseball Cartoon #61


Chris sent me a Jake Beckley card from this set the last time I'd received cards from him, and he knew how much I'd enjoyed its Randomness. So he ratcheted up the Randometer readings even further with this Random-rific sample.

2006 Fleer Top 40 Jeff Kent LAD #T40-40
1995 Upper Deck Collector's Choice Ismael Valdes LAD #223


Of course, the bulk of the PWE was a Dodger-fest. It was an interesting reminder that team collecting doesn't always mean collecting cards of people you like. Jeff Kent is a prime example of the kind of person I don't want to have anything to do with in "real life." Ismael Valdez (then known as Valdes) shows up in the Mitchell Report. I can't remember why Raul Mondesi comes up short on the respect-o-meter. I think he was accused of dogging it a bit during his career. And he struck out a lot. He's currently the mayor of his hometown in the Dominican Republic. Not sure if that's a good thing or not. One thing about which I am sure is that I love having these cards, whether I like the dudes all that much or not.

1996 Pinnacle Raul Mondesi Hardball Heroes LAD #283
1986 Fleer Star Stickers Fernando Valenzuela LAD #123


The other thing I'm sure about is that the Fernando sticker is my favorite of the bunch. I can't think of any reason not to be a Fernando fan. I had the good fortune to become afflicted with Fernandomania in my very first full (though strike-shortened) season as a fan, when I was 11 years old. As great as his rookie year was, though, this sticker portrays El Toro at his peak. Lean, experienced, and talented enough to win ballgames even with the likes of Pedro Guerrero back there pretending that he can play third base.

Thanks again, Chris! Can't wait for the big break. Should be a blast.

Other bloggers haven't been the only ones showing me their generosity of late, though. I've also been kind to myself! The way I show my self-generosity is by Feeding the Habit. I have to say that Panini really stepped up and got my attention this year. Prizm is a pretty average offering (though I love those Pulsar parallels). But I really like their Pinnacle and USA Baseball sets, and I love Hometown Heroes and this year's Cooperstown sets. In this lull between Topps offerings, it has been Panini who has delivered my favorite hits lately.

2013 Panini Cooperstown Matrix Satchel Paige Kansas City Monarchs #17 (267/325)
2013 Panini Prizm Rookie Autographs Redemption Card Shawn Tolleson LAD #10


The scan doesn't do it justice, but these orange "Matrix" parallels are sweet. As is any card of Ol' Satch. I particularly like this one because the dark orange of the card matches the color scheme of some of the old KC Monarchs' uniforms. So it's a nice bit of synchronicity.

So is pulling an autograph redemption card for... a Dodger! Okay, so it's only Shawn Tolleson, who's now in the Rangers organization, by the way. But it's a Dodger card. And since Tolleson's tenure with the club was short and uneventful, there's a good chance (if it doesn't somehow look really terrible) that it will end up being the card representing the pitcher in my PWMD set, despite the overindulgent shininess and lack of logo.

Thanks me! More importantly, thanks to Topher, T.J. and Chris for their generosity. And thanks to John, too. Stay tuned for the next exciting post to find out why John deserves thanks (not to mention who John is).

John's First Trade Packages Hit the Spot

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A few weeks ago I got an email from John of Johnny's Trading Spot (formerly known as "My First Blog"), asking if I'd like to do a little trading. Seemed innocent enough, so I said sure, why not?

A couple of days later an envelope arrived... then another... and a couple more... and yet another arrived last week  If I hadn't asked him to ease off the gas pedal a little bit, John assures me that a steady stream of similar envelopes, which are already packed up and ready to go, would have continued to flow in my direction. As much as I hated to slow him down, I'm a serious slow-poke when it comes to digging cards out of my semi-organized collection to send in return, and I get seriously neurotic about getting too far behind on my end of a trade bargain.

I managed to get one envelope out his way last week, and will be working to get others out as quickly as possible. Although I don't want to get too far behind, I also don't have the willpower to wait much longer to get at the rest of those cards he's got waiting for me. You're about to see why.

2001 Topps Archives 1960 Topps 1959 World Series Game #4: Hodges' Winning Homer #224


John's winning packages included this winning card, along with a sumptuous sum of similar Dodgers Topps Archives gems. And I love 'em. I will probably own the original of this card someday. Unlike some of the others ('52 Topps Hodges? Not gonna happen), this card is reasonably affordable. And it's special to me because one of the most important people in my life, my cousin Craig, was actually at that game. Until I come up with the real thing (and even after I do, for that matter), this is one happy-dance card that John managed to send my way.

But wait, there's more... to say the least...

2001 Topps Gallery Adrian Beltre LAD #88
2001 Donruss Classics Adrian Beltre LAD #56


I let John know that I was like 99% of the collectors out there, in need of stuff between the junk wax era and about 2007. Players like Adrian Beltre, who debuted right after the junk era ended, have about a gazillion cards out there that I don't have, and have never even seen. Thanks to John, I can check these two off of the list that would have existed if I knew they were out there.

1998 Score Paul Konerko LAD #234
1998 Score Rookie/Traded Hideo Nomo LAD #RT26


This year I've become a big retro-fan of 90s Score products, and these are no exception. Dig the colors and the dated (but interesting) card designs. More importantly, any card of The Tornado is welcome, as are Dodgers Konerko cards, despite the reminder of what might have been.

1986 Sportflics Dave Righetti/Fernando Valenzuela/Rick Sutcliffe Tri-Stars #72


Going father back, John takes me back to my childhood. This blog is no Baseball Card Breakdown, but I'm pretty happy with the way this card scanned. Fernando is barely intruded upon by Rick Sutcliffe (though he does impose a Cubs logo on Fernando's sleeve as well as giving him a third leg...).

1992 Action Packed All-Star Gallery Steve Garvey LAD #64
1981 Fleer Star Stickers Dusty Baker LAD #62


John sent me more heroes from the '81 Championship club. You never forget your first. I love those Action Packed cards. With all of the foil and refractors and sparkly parallels these days, something as old-school as embossed 3-D effects are a novel diversion. The Dusty sticker is sweet, too, coming from Fleer's first year back in the baseball card game.

2001 Upper Deck Decade 1970's Maury Wills LAD #63
1985 Topps Woolworth All-Time Record Holders Maury Wills LAD #39


We slip further back in time with Maurice Morning Wills. The groovy thing about these two cards is that Upper Deck is celebrating the 1970s with that set, yet uses a picture shot in the '60s. The Topps card honors the records Maury broke in the '60s... and shows a photo from the '70s. Let's see if we can do something about that...


Works for me...

Back to the trade package. Let's wrap up the Dodgers stuff with a few more from the Archives.

2001 Topps Archives 1952 Topps Roy Campanella BRO #88
2001 Topps Archives 1972 Topps Ron Cey LAD #67


John sent a good chunk of these things, and I couldn't be happier. After all, am I ever going to own a '52 Topps Campy? No. Probably not. And I know I'll never have a '72 Topps card featuring just Ron Cey. Mine also includes Ben Oglivie and (the first) Bernie Williams. For collectors like me, who sort by player, and keep multi-player cards separate, these solo versions from Topps Archives are really nice to have.

John isn't just concentrating on Dodgers, though. He also shows he's got an eye for my mini-collections. As usual, and as it should be, the Grips are the stars.

2001 Donruss Studio Bartolo Colon CLE #61
1998 Fleer Tradition Scott Eyre CHW #197
1998 Fleer Tradition Dan Serafini MIN #261



Chief Wahoo and I both approve of Bartolo's grip. You know Scott Eyre figured they'd be cropping out his untucked shirt. I'm glad they didn't. That's a top-notch addition to the collection. Dan Serafini also knows how to get that grip in your face. Nice stuff.

I'll be getting all of John's great mini-collection hits up on their appropriate pages later in the week, but we'll take a look at some more of the highlights here.

1998 Donruss Vladimir Guerrero MON #140
1991 Upper Deck Eddie Murray LAD #237


Mmmmmm... Doughnuts! John fed all four mini-collections, actually. That Vlad is great, not only for the doughnut, but also because I want any and all '98 Donruss cards, and simply because it's Vlad. And Steady Eddie's got a nice doughnut-eating grin going.

1998 Fleer Tradition Darren Bragg BOS #55
2003 Fleer Fall Classic Early Wynn CLE #14
2000 Fleer Ultra Mo Vaughn ANA #10



John's envelopes contained plenty of Turtlenecks, too, ranging from bench-warmers trying to keep warm themselves, to Hall-of-Famers like Early Wynn (who apparently didn't have quite so much neck to cover). Finally, there were a good number of Grandfathers from the 42 collection. Mo Vaughn makes for quite a sight in his Disney Angels uni against that bright purple backdrop, doesn't he?

The best part of John's attentions toward my mini-collecting habit, though, was the plethora of turn-o-the-century cards featuring the great Mariano Rivera.

1999 Topps Mariano Rivera World Series Highlight NYY #228
1999 Pacific Crown Collection Mariano Rivera NYY #196
2000 Fleer Skybox Mariano Rivera NYY #162
2001 Fleer Ultra Mariano Rivera NYY #90



The pictures on the flip sides of these include a couple of 42s and a grip. But even if they hadn't, I would have been thrilled to receive these. Mo is high on my list of all-time favorite non-Dodgers. Never hesitate to send along cards of Mo, Jeter, David Wright, Bob Gibson, David Eckstein... hell, who am I kidding, send 'em all. I'll even take your Barry Bonds cards. Come to think of it, I got a couple of those from John for my mini-collections, as well.

I'd better get digging for more Braves, asap...

2001 Topps Archives 1959 Duke Snider In Action LAD #218


I know more thrills await me from the prolific trading spot. I can't wait! Thanks for these, John. Hope you find something to like in what I send your way.

Tandem Random Fandom: Prologue

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I recently received my second trade package from Nick. It had a little bit of everything, and all of it to love. As he said in his note: "We Randomites have to stick together."

You want Random, Nick? Let's play...

I used to watch classic television shows on Nick at Nite. One of those shows was Mr. Ed, about a talking horse. I once saw an episode of Mr. Ed that featured Don Drysdale.

Nick sent along a copy of this Drysdale card in his trade package.

1990 Topps Glossy All-Stars Don Drysdale Team Captain LAD #11


Saturday Night Live was also one of the shows that used to appear on Nick at Nite.

Speaking of night, Nick's Dime Boxes was one of the first blogs that I began to follow regularly before this half-assed attempt of my own. The other was Night Owl Cards.

Bill Murray got his start on Saturday Night Live. But not the SNL. His first television gig was on ABC's Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell.

Last Saturday night was a Card Night for me, and that's when I joyously opened Nick's trade package.

Howard Cosell once said, "Sports is human life in microcosm."

Nick's trade package is my baseball card collection in microcosm.

Bill Murray costarred in the 1998 film, Rushmore, which was Jason Schwartzman's film debut. Schwartzman played a college student.

Nick is a college student.

Mount Rushmore depicts the likenesses of four U.S. Presidents.

Nick really enjoys collecting cards of U.S. Presidents. (Send him some.)

The "Mount Rushmore" of my first childhood Dodgers teams consisted of their record-setting infield.

Nick sent me some great cards of those four players, among the gaggle of other fantastic cards. And I will now use that quartet to help introduce the contents of the trade package.

¡Viva la Random!

2003 Topps All-Time Fan Favorites Steve Garvey LAD #133
2003 Upper Deck Prospect Premieres Andre Ethier OAK #9


Talk about symmetry. These two cards arrived on this planet in the same year, although they depict players from very different Dodger eras. In some ways, I think Ethier is the best match for Garvey among Dodgers to come after him. They both have that clean-cut look that seems to draw in the female fans. And, especially in 2009, Ethier seemed to always get the big game-breaking hit, the way Garvey used to. As for the cards, they are two of the finest samples from Nick's "Bat Barrels" mini-collection. As I told him last year when I received my first trade package from him, I think it's cool to get cards from him that fit his collections. It's his calling card, and it gives a trade package a personal touch.

2004 Topps All-Time Fan Favorites Dave Lopes LAD #136
2003 Topps All-Time Fan Favorites Johnny Podres LAD #111


I love these All-Time Fan Favorites cards. And Davey Lopes certainly qualifies for me. He's my favorite of the infield quartet. I was thrilled when he returned to LA a couple of years ago as a coach. As with all of the players on the 1981 squad, I'll always have a special place for Lopes in my collection for being one of the players to finally lead the Dodgers to a championship over the Yankees after coming up short in '77-'78. If I'd been alive at the time, I would have felt the same way about Johnny Podres, who beat the Yanks in game seven of the '55 Series to finally give Brooklyn its first and only championship.

2013 Panini Hometown Heroes Ron Cey LAD #63
2013 Bowman Platinum Prospects Corey Seager LAD #BPP41


The Penguin, Ron Cey, shows up in one of my favorite sets from 2013. I wasn't aware of that until this card showed up in Nick's trade package. Though he was probably underrated at the time, in retrospect a solid argument could be made that Cey contributed the most out of the infield quartet to the Dodgers' success. He was certainly a stable presence for many years at the hot corner, something that the franchise has otherwise not enjoyed (Adrian Beltre, aside). Perhaps Corey Seager will someday add his name to the short list of long-time star Dodger third basemen. He's playing shortstop now, but he's a big guy with some pop in his bat, so a move is certainly possible. You just never know with prospects.

1971 Topps Bill Russell LAD #226
1971 Topps Manny Mota LAD #112


Take Bill Russell, here, for example. A 20-year-old outfielder when this picture was taken (1969, as indicated by the MLB 100th Anniversary patch), Russell would go on to become an all-star shortstop, the longest-tenured member of the Dodgers' record-breaking infield, and the man who would succeed Tommy Lasorda to become just the third manager in LA Dodger history. All of that from the least-celebrated of the quartet. Although he didn't begin his career with the Dodgers, Manny Mota also became a Dodger lifer. A National League All-Star for the Dodgers in 1973, Mota would settle into the role of pinch hitter, eventually setting a record in 1979 with his 146th career pinch hit. He would be named the club's hitting coach for the following season, and he remains an instructor with the Dodgers to this day.

Mota would have eight more pinch hit at bats for the Dodgers after becoming a coach, hitting .375.

This reminds me of another famous coach with the initials M.M., Minnie Minoso, who became the oldest man to collect a big-league hit at the age of 50 in 1976.

And that reminds me of the oldest player in major league history, Satchel Paige, who tossed three scoreless innings for the 1965 Kansas City Athletics at the age of 59.

Which reminds me of the big fish from my first trade package from Nick. It was a Satchel Paige card that I had bought on eBay for my Grips collection, only to be told that it had been listed in error so I wouldn't be getting it... until it popped out of Nick's package the very next day.

We'll be seeing Ol' Satch again as we continue to look at what Nick hath wrought. But I have a feeling there's a new big fish in town. You might even say a white whale. Stay tuned,

¡Viva la Random!

Tandem Random Fandom: Part I

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Last time I teased a trade package from Nick, the master of the Dime Boxes. We share an infatuation with the Random. I usually pack in about 873% more words in each post than anyone in their right mind is interested in reading. In the spirit of the Random, let's throw a changeup. For the Dodgers portion of this trade post, I'll observe keyboard silence until the end of the pretty pictures. Keep in mind, this is just a sampling of the Blue Crew stew sent by Nick...

2001 Topps Jackie Robinson Memorable Moments BRO #783
1994 Ted Williams Card Co. Gil Hodges Swingin' for the Fences BRO #148


1970 Topps Manny Mota LAD #157
1973 Topps Don Sutton LAD #10


1980 Topps Johnny Oates LAD #228
1981 Topps Rick Monday LAD #726


2003 Upper Deck Sweet Spot Classics Steve Garvey LAD #81
1981 Topps Drake's Big Hitters Steve Garvey LAD #11


1991 Leaf Studio Orel Hershiser LAD #183
1989 Fleer For the Record Kirk Gibson LAD #4


1991 Topps Stadium Club Ramon Martinez LAD #516
1992 Leaf Eric Davis LAD #430


2007 Upper Deck Masterpieces Mike Piazza LAD #40
2000 Upper Deck SP Top Prospects David Ross LAD #57


2009 Topps Heritage Jim Thome LAD #650


2012 Topps Chrome Matt Kemp LAD #120
2010 Topps 206 Matt Kemp LAD #89


...

Kershaws!

2009 Upper Deck Season Biography Clayton Kershaw LAD #SB-49
2009 Upper Deck O-Pee-Chee Clayton Kershaw LAD #141
2013 Bowman Clayton Kershaw LAD #91



Well, I almost made it through the pictures without intruding with words. Anyway, words can't really do justice to Nick's generosity. That said, I'll have plenty to say (as usual) next time, when I wrap up this look at his trade package. Not that it's obvious from what I've shown so far, but I've definitely saved the best for last...

Tandem Random Fandom: Part II

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In this final look at the contents of an eagerly anticipated trade package from Nick of Dime Boxes fame, we see the many ways in which the best blogger in the biz managed to exceed all expectations.

I don't often throw out hints in the comments section of posts suggesting a new home (mine) for a card shown by a blogger. Considering the success stories recently outlined by the Night Owl, I should probably make an effort to get over that misguided attempt at politeness. And, in fact, I did. This was the result:

2012 Topps Update Matt Harvey NYM #US23


It was the first card I saw when I opened the package, and it was accompanied by a note labeling it as a last-minute addition to be enjoyed. Your wish is my command, Nick. I enjoyed, enjoy, and will enjoy. Speaking of which...

2013 Topps Adam Greenberg MIA #253
1995 Topps Traded Jim Abbott CHW #75T


I can't help but enjoy the very first hits from my "Playground Necessities" want list! I don't have a lot of Topps flagship base set needs from about the dawn of the Reagan era, but these were a couple of them. Thanks to Nick, I can now say they "were" needs, rather than "are." The beauty of this pair is that we're looking at a couple of the best feel-good stories in baseball. In fact, the Greenberg card was Nick's favorite of 2013 for that reason. I was happy to be able to hook Nick up with a couple of versions of my own personal favorite (stay tuned for an upcoming post) in my return package.

2001 Upper Deck Origins of the Game Satchel Paige Kansas City Monarchs #56


The highlight for me of Nick's last trade package was another Satchel Paige card. Two trade packages, two cards of Ol' Satch. I'd say Nick's started himself a tradition here. Can't wait until the only options left are vintage... (Just kidding, Nick.) (Not really.)

1998 Fleer Tradition Orel Hershiser CLE #243


Nick also enjoys collecting cards of my favorite player of all time (until Kershaw brings a championship to LA, that is). Nick's enjoyment comes from the Bulldog's less-intimidating side. Hershiser was my first player collection because of his magical '88 season, in which he became a baseball hero to me. Nick collects what he calls "Nerdy Hershisers," the many cards in which the Bulldog looks more like a librarian. It's all good. Incidentally, I have a couple of mini-collections that I haven't told anyone about, mainly because I have a hard enough time keeping up with this blogging thing, as it is. But this cards makes its way into one of those.

2006 Upper Deck Future Stars World Future Stars Nan Wang China #WBC-2
2009 Topps WBC Stars Fu-Te Ni Chinese Taipei #BCS9


Nick also knows that I like WBC cards. I have the 2006 Upper Deck and 2009 Topps WBC box sets. But I have very few cards from the various insert sets that have been produced after each of the three tournaments. Nick sent me four that I can check off the list, including one of my favorite baseball names of recent years: Fu-Te Ni. I love that 2009 Topps subset, with the giant colorful logo. I'm not sure I have any of the others, since I bought the factory set in '09 (hint, hint).

2010 Topps Chrome Prince Fielder MIL #1


The primary way in which our tastes in cards overlaps is that both Nick and I enjoy cards that are a little out of the ordinary, for one reason or another. One form that can take is great photography, featuring shots that you don't see on lot of cards. This Prince Fielder knocking down the bowling pins homerun celebration from 2010 Topps certainly qualifies. And it looks great in the Chrome version because the gold color matches really well with the Brewers' barley-sprig beer-brewin' color scheme.

1991 Leaf Studio Black & Decker (Bud Black/Steve Decker) SFG #260
1999 Just Minors John Elway Oneonta Yankees #81


The other way in which the Power of the Random makes itself felt in the card world is with unusual content. Fleer went with "Black & Blue" back in '84, when the current Padres manager was a teammate of Vida Blue. The Donruss/Leaf people went in another direction when opportunity would again strike. Meanwhile, the Elway card is timely since I recently learned that the Super bowl is coming up (which, to me, just means baseball season is getting close!). Apparently the Broncos are going to be in the Super Bowl. Considering that John Elway is the most recent player that I know to play for the Broncos, there's some nice synchronicity there. Here's hoping that this is already one of the 1,366 (and counting) unique John Elway cards in the collection of John of Johnny's Trading Spot, 'cuz I dig this one too much to let it go.

1993 Topps Willie Wilson OAK #318
1981 Topps Bruce Bochte SEA #723


Mmmmmmm... Doughnuts! Nick knows mini-collections. He hooked me up with some nice Doughnuts, but he also knows that Getting a Grip is what really gets the endorphins flowing for me...

1992 Pinnacle Greg Maddux Grips CHC #608



A quick look at the Getting a Grip collection page shows that the only card I still needed from Pinnacle's awesome Grips subset was that of newly-minted Hall-of-Famer Greg Maddux. Thanks to Nick, this beauty is a need no more. I'll be updating the mini-collections pages with Nick's contributions, as well as those from Johnny's Trading Spot, in the next few days. But let's take a look at a few more of Nick's Grips gifts before wrapping this up.

2013 Topps Allen & Ginter Matt Cain SFG #241
2003 Donruss Team Heroes Juan Pena OAK #368


Battle of the Bay Area Grips. Juan Pena pitched for twelve seasons in the minor leagues (including right here in Southern Oregon) and in Mexico, but he never made it to the Big Show. Matt Cain is a three-time All-Star with a perfect game on his resume. The life-long Giant has a 5-10 career record against the Dodgers. Juan Pena wins. (It was never really a contest.)

2004 Upper Deck Legends Timeless Teams Phil Niekro NYY #239
2008 Upper Deck Kerry Wood CHC #445


These are the best kind of Grip cards, where the pitcher really gets in your face with that baseball. And there's nothing better than a knuckler gip, especially coming from a 46 year old who won 16 games in pinstripes in '85 on his way to the Hall of Fame. Cubs legend Kerry Wood really goes out of his way to get that grip front and center on this spectacular '08 UD sample. (Interesting that Mark Prior also gets a great Grip card in that set).

But, speaking of going out of their way, Nick also sent me this:

1961 Topps Hoyt Wilhelm BAL #545


Holy Friggin' Moly!

Talk about a grand finale!

As you probably already know, Wilhelm is the subject of Nick's longest-tenured player collection, and this card had been a white whale of his until recently. Thanks to the generosity of the card bloggin' world, he managed to find himself in possession of a second copy of this tough-to-land high-number gem from the '61 Topps set. And in an unbelievable display of his own generosity, he paid that good fortune forward to me. It's a beautiful thing for many reasons:

1) It's obviously a true highlight for the Getting a Grip collection.

2) It's the second vintage Hoyt that Nick has contributed to the Grips collection, the first being the honorary header card.

3) Not that Nick was aware, but I have a decent burgeoning '61 Topps collection. Oddly, I'm pretty sure that I have more '61s than cards from any other year in that decade. Needless to say, this is a fabulous addition.

4) Wilhelm played for the Dodgers. That always gets bonus points.

Not that Nick needs any bonus points. If I'd never received a card from him, his blog would still be a must-read favorite of mine. Having him for a like-minded trade partner has probably been the biggest benefit of joining (in my own half-assed way) the blog community. I look forward to many years of trades and friendship with my brother in Randomocity. Thanks again, Nick.

Gripdate

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I may not be much of a blogger, but I haven't been slacking as a collector. I made some solid progress on the sorting front before X-Mas (I'm into the prolific Ms now), I've kept feeding the habit, and I've kept on mini-collecting. I scanned a few of the better Getting a Grip cards during sorting to throw into the collection, along with the recent excellent trade package hits from Nick of Dime Boxes and John of Johnny's Trading Spot. The mini-collections pages are up to date now. But I'll share some of the better Grip samples from my sorting progress here. Lots o' cool pictures, and (for me) relatively few words. Let's play...

2009 Upper Deck O-Pee-Chee Roy Halliday #460
2004 Topps Ted Lilly TOR #617
2007 Topps Andy Pettitte NYY #32



Here we have three great pitchers who are big-league pitchers no more. At least that's what they say. It's the second time that Pettitte's said so.

1983 Renata Galasso T206 Reprints Barney Pelty SLB
1998 Upper Deck Collector's Choice Christy Mathewson First Class NYG #503



Into the wayback machine we go. We all know about Matty, but how about a little love for "The Yiddish Curver," Barney Pelty?

2001 Upper Deck Legends of New York Hoyt Wilhelm NYG #35
1991 Topps Archives Hoyt Wilhelm NYG #312



Hoyt Wilhelm and his Hall-of-Fame knuckleball grip is the undisputed king of the collection at this point. I really love those Legends of New York cards. That fuzzy logo is fun to touch. I'd love to grab the set at some point (despite the Giants cards), but I'm sure it's expensive.

1993 Topps Charlie Hough FLA #520
1994 Topps Charlie Hough FLA #625


Here's another master of the flutterball, Rough Tough Charlie Hough, like any good knuckler still pitching at a time when he could probably finagle a senior citizens discount on his post-game dinner.

1990 Mother's Cookies Ryan 5000K Nolan Ryan TEX #1
1995 Upper Deck Collector's Choice Reid Ryan Future Foundation TEX #45


Keeping the Grip in the family. Unfortunately, Reid was no "future foundation." In fact, after going 0-10 with a 9.34 ERA and 2.29 WHIP (ouch!) in A-ball in '95, he would have no future at all as a pitcher. But his future (the present) did find him filling the role of Houston Astros president.

2008 Topps Stadium Club Nick Adenhart LAA #103


Nick Adenhart, of course, had his future taken away from him by a drunk driver. This is (oddly, and unfortunately) my only card of his, so far. But it's a beaut.

1994 Topps Bryan Harvey FLA #20
1979 Topps Tom House SEA #31
2009 Topps Update Sean O'Sullivan LAA #UH23
2001 Topps Mike Hampton COL #708
2002 Topps Todd Jones COL #552



And there's just a mess of great Topps Grips over the past several years. Did Hampton really throw a pitch with that grip? That's Randy Tomlin's "Vulcan change" grip, isn't it?

1998 Fleer Ultra Ramon Martinez LAD #382
2011 Topps Allen & Ginter Mini Chad Billingsley LAD #124


Of course, we've gotta get some Dodgers in here. Ramon Martinez offers us a different angle for a grip card, while Chad Billingsley obliges by rubbing up the baseball.

1990 Topps Jack Morris DET #555
1995 Topps Darryl Kile COL #228


Speaking of Grips variations, here's non-Hall-of-Famer Jack Morris with a warm-up Grip, and another ill-fated hurler, Darryl Kile, Rubbing one up.

2004 Topps Kevin Milwood PHI #11
2008 Upper Deck Jake Westbrook CLE #122


A couple of rosin bags make an appearance with Millwood and Westbrook (sounds like a country music duo...). This doubles the rosin bags in the collection. They're proving more elusive than I'd expected.

1996 Upper Deck Collector's Choice J.R. Phillips SFG #714
1990 ProCards Tim Leiper London Tigers #1281


I've actually added a couple of new categories to Getting a Grip. This collection did not previously allow for non-pitchers to gain entry. But if you're going to pose with such an obvious pitcher's grip, there's just no keeping you out.

1985 Fleer Al Holland PHI #254
1992 Fleer Dennis Martinez Record Setters MON #683


Finally, we have a couple of great examples of what I'm calling Achievement Grips, pitchers proudly showing their balls (that could probably be worded better...) in recognition of some noteworthy performance.

There's new stuff in all four of the mini-collections, so check 'em out. Thanks for playing.

Playing With My Dodgers: Wilson Alvarez

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Has any pitcher's arrival in the big leagues been quite as odd as that of Wilson Alvarez? The Venezuelan native debuted for the Texas Rangers as a nineteen year old in 1989, the first player born in the 1970s to reach the majors. Given a July start in Texas against the Blue Jays, Alvarez failed to retire a batter. Junior Felix singled. Tony Fernandez homered. Kelly Gruber homered. George Bell walked. Fred McGriff walked. And Wilson Alvarez walked off the mound, not to return to the majors for two years.

When he did return, on August 11, 1991, he was pitching in Baltimore for the White Sox. This time he struck out the side in order in the first inning (Mike Devereaux, Juan Bell and Cal Ripken), and would go on to pitch a no-hitter.

Alvarez would have a fine career, going 102-92 with a an ERA+ of 112 in fourteen big league seasons. But that career would be interrupted by injury woes that would see him miss two entire seasons. After proving himself healthy with Tampa Bay in 2002, he would go on to sign three consecutive one-year free-agent contracts with the Dodgers from 2003-2005, serving as a dependable swing man. His velocity diminished, Alvarez reinvented himself as a control artist, posting the best walk rates of his career, by far, while in Dodger Blue.

1995 Topps Stadium Club Virtual Reality Wilson Alvarez CHW #68


The funny thing about Wilson Alvarez's time with the Dodgers is that I can find no baseball card, or mention of the existence of any card, featuring the lefty during his three-year tenure in Chavez Ravine. And I'm not just talking about major releases. He doesn't even show up in the Keebler Cookies sets given away at the stadium. It's as though, once he arrived in Southern California, he feared his soul would be stripped from his body if were to appear in uniform on a 2.5" x 3.5" piece of cardboard. Realistically, it was probably one of those licencing issues that sometimes plagues collectors. Either way, bad timing for Dodger fans. In the absence of a Dodgers card for Alvarez, this Getting a Grip beauty from Stadium Club serves as a fine alternative for the PWMD set. If there is a card out there somewhere featuring Alvarez in a Dodger uniform, please let me know.
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