(Happy Veterans Day! I salute my dad and all other veterans out there. I know there are several in the card blogging community. Bless you and thank you. You are appreciated. And speaking of appreciation, it's time for Cardboard Appreciation):
For Cardboard Appreciation Vote-Off #8, I expected this card to win:
And it did win. It enters the list of finalists in the great Cardboard Appreciation Smorgasbord of Trading Card Wonderfulness.
But so does this card:
Here are the vote totals:
Rod Carew, 1975 Topps: 11 votes
Hal McRae, 1982 Fleer: 11 votes
Grady Hall, 1991 Line Drive: 7 votes
Ozzie Guillen, 1997 Stadium Club: 6 votes
Johnny Cueto, 2008 Stadium Club autograph: 0 votes
So, that means with the two additions I am going to end up with 10 Cardboard Appreciation Vote-off finalists as originally planned. So I'll be going back to that original plan for the finalists and pair them up two-by-two until I end up with a Final Five.
But before I do that, I must have Vote-Off #9. And I am bunching a few extra cards into this final vote-off.
Also, some of the card choices may seem kind of lame. That's because with some of the cards, the story behind the card is better than the card. So you might have to click on the links to get the full background.
Here are the candidates. Poll is up on the sidebar:
For Cardboard Appreciation Vote-Off #8, I expected this card to win:
And it did win. It enters the list of finalists in the great Cardboard Appreciation Smorgasbord of Trading Card Wonderfulness.
But so does this card:
This card managed to tie Carew in the poll. It was a hard-fought battle throughout. Off-center McRae would not be denied. And the two cards ended deadlocked.
Here are the vote totals:
Rod Carew, 1975 Topps: 11 votes
Hal McRae, 1982 Fleer: 11 votes
Grady Hall, 1991 Line Drive: 7 votes
Ozzie Guillen, 1997 Stadium Club: 6 votes
Johnny Cueto, 2008 Stadium Club autograph: 0 votes
So, that means with the two additions I am going to end up with 10 Cardboard Appreciation Vote-off finalists as originally planned. So I'll be going back to that original plan for the finalists and pair them up two-by-two until I end up with a Final Five.
But before I do that, I must have Vote-Off #9. And I am bunching a few extra cards into this final vote-off.
Also, some of the card choices may seem kind of lame. That's because with some of the cards, the story behind the card is better than the card. So you might have to click on the links to get the full background.
Here are the candidates. Poll is up on the sidebar:
Barry Larkin, 1988 Topps: I may be the only one, but I think '88 Topps was a classy design, one of the best of the '80s. And Larkin was among my favorite cards in the set.
Prince Fielder, 2009 O-Pee-Chee: This card sums up how much I love baseball. I seek out games that feature the Pirates playing the Brewers. The more obscure the game, the better.
J.R. Richard, 1980 Kellogg's: How do you make a box of cereal cool? You're looking at the answer.
Benny Distefano, 1985 Topps: The last left-handed catcher to play in the major leagues. Lefties are a bit discriminated against in baseball, unless you can throw smoke -- and as a lefty, I'm mildly outraged.
John Pawlowski, 1988 Donruss: Who knew that the kid in the grade ahead of me would end up on a baseball card?
Hideo Nomo, 1996 Upper Deck V.J. Lovero insert set: I featured a bunch of Nomo cards on this post, so I picked the one I liked the best.
OK, this is your chance to round out the CA vote-off finalists! Which card will be the last to join the list? Do you care? You don't have to! Just vote. It'll get me off your back.
Andre Ethier, 2009 O-Pee-Chee black border: A quick-and-easy way to dress up a humdrum card: Slap a black border around it.
OK, this is your chance to round out the CA vote-off finalists! Which card will be the last to join the list? Do you care? You don't have to! Just vote. It'll get me off your back.
Comments
John P. gets my vote. Schoolmates rock. So if you ever put a card of Erik Pappas, it will get my vote.