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No limit to this team roster

 
 
I've been updating my Dodgers binders again. It's lasted me all spring and through the summer.

Not a coincidence it coincides with baseball season because I like to update binders while I'm watching a game. It keeps me busy through commercials (if I'm watching network/cable TV) and calms me through irritating announcers (Karl Ravetch, Chip Caray). It especially helps while watching Dodgers games as I almost can't conceive of viewing a Dodger game now without something else to do -- thank you Dave Roberts pitching changes. It's kind of like my blanket during a horror movie.
 
I'm nearing the end of this update, closing in on this year's Dodgers cards, and I've known all along that the Topps flagship count for the Dodgers is pretty large this year.
 
How large? Well, seven years ago I wrote a post in which I totaled the size of the Dodgers team set for each year of Topps flagship since 1952.  It ranged from a low of 15 to a high of 37. The 2024 set is much closer to 37 than 15. There is no limit to Topps' team rosters.

So it's time to update that post with the years that have arrived since. I'm not going to repeat all the years I covered before, you can read the original post if you like. But I will give the average for each decade and a high and low number until we get to the 2010s.

1950s
Average: 25.13 players
High: 35 (1959)
Low: 16 (1954)

1960s
Average: 28.3
High: 37 (1960)
Low: 24 (1963, 1969)

1970s
Average: 26.3
High: 31 (1972)
Low: 23 (1973, 1977)

1980s
Average: 28.6
High: 32 (1982)
Low: 25 (1983)

1990s
Average: 24.3
High: 32 (1991)
Low: 15 (1996)

2000s
Average: 21.8
High: 26 (2003)
Low: 15 (2000)
 

2010s

2010: 21
2011: 18
2012: 20
2013: 22
2014: 25
2015: 22
2016: 28
2017: 28
2018: 32
2019: 24

Average: 24.0
High: 32 (2018)
Low: 18 (2011)


2020s

2020: 29
2021: 31
2022: 22
2023: 21
2024: 32

Average: 27.0
High: 32 (2024)
Low: 21 (2023)

Through the first half of the 2020s, the average number for Topps' Dodgers' team sets is the largest since the 1980s and the third-highest overall. The 2024 team set, with 32 cards, is tied for the fourth-highest ever.

However, the 2024 total is a bit inflated with a decent amount of fluff included.


These are all checklists cards, easily the most to show Dodgers since these kinds of checklist cards started appearing about a decade ago.

But even if I discount those cards, 2024 still produced 28 Dodgers cards, which is among the better totals since the 1990s. A few years that seem to match or exceed that 28 total includes stuff like individual league leader cards or, in the case of the 2021 set, World Series cards -- which I am not complaining about.

I don't know what the totals are for other teams. I'd like to see every team have around 26 cards since that's the roster limit for teams at any given time (except September). It could even go higher since teams are calling up and sending down/shelving players at rates that I have never seen in almost 50 years of following baseball.

But please no returning to the late 1990s, early 2000s when Topps led you to believe that a team got by with just 16 players.

Comments

Fuji said…
I was wondering if the numbers including subset cards and checklists... since 30+ player base cards seems like a Topps Total numbers. I think it'd be really interesting if Topps flagship tested out those waters and started producing 30 to 35 player base cards for each team. I'm guessing it'd annoy a lot of collectors who just want the big names. But as a team collector, I'd be excited.
BillK21093 said…
Seems odd that the 2024 Topps Factory Team sets are only 17 players, yet there are 32 Dodgers in Series 1&2, plus more to come in Update.
Cdn Codhead said…
Meanwhile we got a grand total of 20 Jays cards, only 16 of which are actual player cards for one of the top 5 supported teams in terms of fanbase in MLB.
Matt said…
31 Red Sox cards, including that Betts/Devers card and a team card. Looks like the Phillies lead all teams with 36 while the A's, Brewers, and Marlins only get 19.
Billy Kingsley said…
I'll say this until I'm blue in the face, but every player in the league on every team should get a card. It doesn't matter how many cards it takes. The size of the league should dictate the size of the set, and if it varies every year, so be it.
Nick Vossbrink said…
I'm solidly in the "everyone should get a card" camp but I've come around to believing that Topps should distribute the back end of the roster cards across multiple sets each year instead of repeating the same crop of stars and rookies.

For flagship? 26 cards per team definitely feels right. I'd do 27 for binderable reasons and a manageably-sized 810 card set.