(Good news everyone. According to the always useful holidayinsights.com website, today, May 11th, is "Eat What You Want Day." If that isn't a day to appreciate, I don't know what is. Time for Cardboard Appreciation. This is the 30th in a series):
I'm tired, and a long work week lies ahead, so I'll keep this short.
When card companies began placing high school and college players in their flagship sets in the late 1980s, I was instantly disgusted. I paid good money for cards of major league players. What did I want with a picture of a high school kid?
Little did I know that this was the beginning of a whole new segment of card collecting, producing a card of a top prospect as early as possible to take advantage of the growing legions of collectors who wanted players' "rookie cards." I had only begun to hear about rookie cards in the early 1980s, and had made sure to hang on to a few key ones, like the '75 George Brett and the '80 Rickey Henderson.
But a high school kid? That didn't interest me in the least.
Still, for some reason, I have always liked this card. Yes, Steve Avery is wearing his John F. Kennedy High School uniform. There is no doubting that. But a smile and a carefree toss of a baseball can melt a cynical heart. It made me forget that I was supposed to dislike this card.
It still makes me forget. To this day, it's about the only card of a high school kid that I can appreciate.
I'm tired, and a long work week lies ahead, so I'll keep this short.
When card companies began placing high school and college players in their flagship sets in the late 1980s, I was instantly disgusted. I paid good money for cards of major league players. What did I want with a picture of a high school kid?
Little did I know that this was the beginning of a whole new segment of card collecting, producing a card of a top prospect as early as possible to take advantage of the growing legions of collectors who wanted players' "rookie cards." I had only begun to hear about rookie cards in the early 1980s, and had made sure to hang on to a few key ones, like the '75 George Brett and the '80 Rickey Henderson.
But a high school kid? That didn't interest me in the least.
Still, for some reason, I have always liked this card. Yes, Steve Avery is wearing his John F. Kennedy High School uniform. There is no doubting that. But a smile and a carefree toss of a baseball can melt a cynical heart. It made me forget that I was supposed to dislike this card.
It still makes me forget. To this day, it's about the only card of a high school kid that I can appreciate.
Comments
But for the most part I agree with you. College pictures I can accept. High school? Maybe, but only if he's a nationally recognized prospect and drafted in the first round, I don't want to see some seventeen year old kid who was drafted as the 357th overall pick though.
I will stop buying cards the day I get a picture of sperm labled as the 2046 Washington Nationals.