I made it to the monthly show across town today. It was the first time I was able to get there since January, having missed the last two because of poorly-timed weather. This is good because the big Syracuse show is in a week and I'm probably not going to be there due to the lack of a vehicle. The monthly show is definitely not the Syracuse show. I was reminded again by the ever-pervasive fantasy card tables that you can ignore at the Syracuse show because there is so much regular card show goodness. Today's show featured two tables that got my money. There were probably four tables total that offered the cards that interest me -- i.e. sports cards not encased in plastic. But all things considered in the hobby (*waves hands at everything*), I'll take it. This show will not be long for my world if one particular dealer decides it's not worth it (two of his seller buddies who used to accompany him at the monthly show have ditched it for Syrac...
More than five years ago, I wrote a post titled " The Kings of the '70s " in which I determined which players had their own Topps cards for every year of the 1970s -- 1970 through 1979. I've wanted to do the same for the 1980s ever since I wrote that post. I realized doing the '70s post that while I adore that decade as the one in which I discovered baseball and I have great fondness for the players from that time, I don't know many of those players' earlier history. For instance, I never knew Woodie Fryman as a Tiger. He was an Expo! Lou Piniella was a Royal? No way, he was a nasty Yankee! Diving into all the players with a Topps card for every year of the '80s would truly cover all the players I knew -- from the start of their career til the end of the 1980s. Guys who started mid-1970s -- think Keith Hernandez -- were there through the entire '80s. Like when compiling the '70s list, I was surprised by the number of players who receiv...