Black is beautiful.
For a long time, only the Raiders knew this. They were the only sports team that featured black as a primary uniform color. But eventually other teams, like the Pirates, Penguins and Giants, began to display black more prominently. Then expansion teams like the Rockies, Marlins, Jaguars and Panthers, made black part of their color scheme from the very start.
Soon, established teams like the Reds, Mets, Blue Jays and Royals adopted black for the first time in their history, and there was no going back. Black was here to stay.
So it was with sports cards. 1971 Topps was a breakthrough. 1986 Topps less so, but still very noticeable. But no one dared to use black prominently on the BACK until 1992 Pinnacle.
As someone who enjoys night cards, gravitates toward the night hours and night time events, this was one of the coolest happenings in all of cards. This was Pinnacle's debut, and it made an impact right away.
I loved the backs. They featured a colorful display on a pitch-black background. I'm a sucker for that.
Even though "white-on-black" type is a no-no in printing for a lot of mediums because it often can be unreadable (re: the first incarnation of "Night Owl Cards"), it wasn't a problem with these cards, at least for me. The elements on the card are arranged well. I like the prominent team logo, and the mug shot is always a plus, and centered well.
The bio write-up is very straightforward. Some of them are downright negative, stressing how much a player's team stinks or all of the injuries a player went through. And I'm not happy about a single line of stats. But that was the thing to do in the early 1990s. Thanks, Upper Deck.
Also, I never quite understood what that tire-tread thing was at the bottom of the card. I'm guessing it was an anti-counterfeit device, inspired by UD's hologram.
The standard color on the back of the card, besides black (yes, I know, "black is not a color; it's the absence of color" -- whatever) is green. It doesn't exactly go with any team unless the player is with the Oakland A's, and then it works quite well.
Today, black is everywhere on cards. Front, back, sideways. But it was something different in '92.
Best of the set:
It's difficult to pick a "best of set" as the backs are pretty repetitious, right down to the bio. (You can see what I mean about the bios being discouraging by reading the start of Hershiser's).
I went with Hershiser because he was my favorite player at the time. When in doubt, go with blatant homerism.
(Previous card back countdown selections):
49. 1993 Score
47. 2000 Upper Deck
44. 1995 Topps
43. 1997 Fleer
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