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Card numbers for commons: 412

  Touching on another blog series that I haven't tackled for a bit. It's been just over a year since I wrote a "Card Numbers for Commons" post. I definitely should do these more often. The posts aren't time-consuming and I always find them interesting.   This is the series where I look for the five best cards in my collection with a certain card number and then review five other cards that I don't have, with that same number, that I wouldn't mind having. The series title is based on that Topps practice from my younger days in which it would attach a card number ending in a "0" or a "5" to star players and then all the other numbers would be devoted toward the so-called commons.   Today's number is 412. No reason. It was just the first number that popped in my head when I knew I was going to write one of these. "412" is often associated with Pittsburgh as it's the main area code for the city. That's why Bob Bailey i...
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Fork in the buyback road

   Here is the other 1975 Topps-focused post I wanted to get to before the 50th anniversary year is over.   I've reached sort of a milestone in the 1975 Topps buyback chase. It's been exactly 10 years since I first decided to collect these and see how far I could get. I admit I've gotten farther than I thought I would, particularly when I was first starting the mission. But my approach has always been to keep pressing on. As long as I kept finding new ones -- and I can still afford them -- I'd continue.   I just went over 82 percent of the set in buyback form with the addition of three cards. One is the Bob Forsch here.       These are the other two. I now have 542 of the 660 cards in the set in buyback form.   These three cards would be considered "commons" by most collectors, but they mean much more than that. All three have puzzled me for years. I couldn't figure out why they were so elusive. None are particularly notable. I'd reason that I cou...

Looking for new sources

  I placed what likely will be my final comc order Saturday. I'll write about why I'm feeling that way when the order arrives but I think everyone reading this who has dealt with that site recently knows that it's not what it once was.   I'm going to have to widen my horizons yet again when it comes to purchasing cards. It seems like the reliable old ways -- comc, card shows, retail shelves -- aren't as fool-proof as they once were, and I'm going to need to look for more alternatives.   Fortunately I'm well-connected and my love for the hobby is well-known. Cards can come from any direction as this post will show.   These cards arrived from Alan through the BlueSky giveaway thread. They are TCMA reprints of the 1936 Goudey set (R322). My excitement in getting these -- other than that I love everything TCMA -- is that they're from 1972, which is the first year TCMA began issuing sets. These are the oldest TCMA cards that I own! Heck, they might as well b...

A history of 1975 Topps tributes continued

  I have a couple of 1975 Topps-centric posts to publish before the 50th anniversary year of my favorite set -- and my first year of buying cards -- is through.   This is the first of those posts. Ten years ago I wrote " A history of 1975 Topps tributes ," in which I documented all of the '75 Topps themed cards that I had known up to that point. It was pretty thorough, but it's 10 years old now and there have been so many more tributes since.   In that post I asked readers for other examples and said I'd add them to the post. But I didn't do that. I even forgot the post existed.   The only reason I'm updating it now is reader Dave kept commenting on it with other 1975 examples. He provided several in 2022. Perhaps I noticed that then, but I forgot about it again. Then, at the start of this month, he offered up another example. That got me to finally address this and provide an update.   So let's start with some of Dave's examples. One of them, the ...

Update: there is no update

  This is the first card I received from 2025 Topps Update. It's a foil parallel of the Miguel Rojas card. I grabbed it in a giveaway on Bluesky. We have to have our World Series heroes in our collection.   I haven't bothered to go looking for Update, I'm pretty much done with that dance. If I'm not thrilled with the design then there's no reason to collect a set with a bunch of filler. I'll just take my team set, thank you. And that arrived today.   Not the most exciting 14 cards, I saw that coming when I reviewed the checklist. There's both good and bad in that.       THE GOOD   Update went wild on relievers this year. I've seen a few mentions of that from other team collectors when they received their team sets. I know the set design make it difficult to read but that's Evan Phillips, Jack Dreyer, Anthony Banda, Blake Treinen, Alex Vesia and Roki Sasaki (not a reliever except in the postseason). No Tanner Scott though, which is kind of funny. ...

Gaming the system

  About three weeks ago, Johnny's Trading Spot held a giveaway for his readers, randomizing off 350-plus cards from one of his many, many, many finds.   Most of the cards were of the magazine variety from Baseball Cards Magazine and the like from the late 1980s and early 1990s. I'm very familiar with those, having come across them back in the day and also through adding the Dodgers to my collection.   They are pretty cool though nothing I look to collect (except the ones modeled on the 1975 Topps design). When Johnny displayed what was up for the giveaway, my eyes instead gravitated toward a nine-pocket page that contained a certain oddball from the 1960s.   I didn't think more of it, the chances of getting that page wasn't great, there were 30 different pages offered up!    Well, lo and behold, I ended up landing page #18, the majority of which were 1968 Game cards.     I don't know how but I gamed the system!   Outside of the one Dodger in...