February is filled with somewhat sketchy holidays. I'll start with Groundhog Day, which is about good for rewatching a movie. Valentine's Day is often derided as a "Hallmark Holiday." The weeklong "Winter Break" mostly recognized by schools, morphed from single days recognizing presidents into a 5-day celebration of ... um ... winter, I guess? Then there's the Super Bowl, which is fine for the food. The teams are usually gross. The best holiday in February, by far, is when Topps Series One is discovered on store shelves, a.k.a. "the first cards of the season." On that day I see something I don't see the rest of the year: card shelves fully stocked with current baseball product at the local big-box. I'm referring to Target because Walmart is in a current state of baseball card indifference (I did find a 2025 Topps Holiday tin hiding in the back of a shelf at Walmart a couple weeks ago). So it was yesterday when I was out cele...
Greetings, my lovely readers. There is one thing I love to do most when collecting cards. I think you know what that is. I love to complete sets. It's not easy to do and it's getting more difficult. But that's OK, I've completed plenty in my time. Even if I never completed another, I'd always have the dozens and dozens perfectly finished sets to view at my leisure. Still, I press on. Just yesterday I completed one. It was pretty easy. I finished 1989 Score. It took not even a couple of months once I received a pile of them from Bru . And then the final handful showed up this week. First, these three cards from Detroit Tigers Cards and Stuff . Ol' Boobie Maine happened to open a box of '89 Score at the same time I was trying to complete it! I guess that's not all that coincidental. Even 37 years later there's probably someone opening a box of the stuff almost every day. The Brian Harper was the gremlin in the set that s...