With everything that's going on this week, I considered postponing the latest edition of the countdown until next week. Trade deadlines, bloggers taking off for the National Sports Card Convention, who's paying attention?
But then I thought, this is Night Owl Cards here! The National doesn't stop because of what NOC has to say, the trade deadline isn't moved to make way for Night Owl, that's their problem. It's time to make them pay! You skip one day of Night Owl Cards, you lose. Thank you to the faithful readers who know that there's nothing better than reading random thoughts about baseball cards.
So, here we are in the Top 20. From this point out, you are guaranteed that these are sets that I like. Even if I spend part of that set's segment criticizing some element, I still like the set. Nothing's perfect, even the set at No. 1.
So be comfortable in the fact that these are enjoyable sets, and if you've never appreciated them yourself, maybe there's something here that will help you to enjoy them.
20. 1980 Topps
We're getting into sets to which I have deep ties. 1980 Topps is one of them.
1980 Topps marks my beginning as a "serious collector," it was the first set that I actually attempted to complete. I didn't complete it that year (I didn't complete until decades later), because I was still a young teenager with very little money. But the process and the set left quite the impression.
Thinking back to that time, I approached this set with a great deal of hope. It was the start of a new decade, the first time I understood the concept of a brand new decade. I was looking forward to the future of baseball cards. And when I took a look at 1980 Topps, I was pleased, because it looked a lot better than 1979 Topps.
Topps went back to the pennant flags, a tried-and-true practice that had worked in previous sets like 1965 and 1974 Topps. The flags are quite a bit more active than in previous versions, as well, which complements the action photos in this set.
And, unlike 1979 Topps, this set is filled with color. And it doesn't detract too much from the photo.
1980 Topps begins with this bad-ass card, one of the best first cards of any Topps set. You don't know how pleased I was to see the highlights/record breaker subset returning to the front of the set after 1977 and 1979.
The 1980 set is known for one of the best-looking rookie cards ever made, the Rickey Henderson rookie. And it's got one of the best-looking card backs as well.
I've mentioned before how thrilled I was to see blue backs. I wasn't around in 1965, so this was very exciting, and to this day, I appreciate the 1980 card backs more than most.
So, you know what's coming, what don't I like about the 1980 set?
Well, other than the grudge I hold against it for not being able to complete it in 1980, I have just one minor complaint.
There is way too much yellow in this set.
Yellow borders, yellow small flags, yellow big flags, yellow letters, yellow, yellow, yellow. Eight of the nine cards on this sheet feature yellow. And it's like that for most pages in the set.
I'm just not a fan of yellow in most places, and that includes card sets. You know my feelings about 1991 Fleer.
Yellow is good for attracting the eye and that's why fast food operators and advertisers use it, but it decreases the appeal of cards, for me. If 1980 Topps had used a few more blue borders -- to go with the blue backs -- I would have rated this set higher.
19. 1984 Topps
If you asked me a few decades ago, or even as recently as five years ago, what I thought of 1984 Topps, I would have told you it was a lazy rehash of 1983 Topps, an attempt to capitalize on the popularity of the set that preceded it.
I've come around since then.
Sure, 1984 Topps looks a lot like 1983 Topps. But pretend for a moment that 1983 Topps didn't exist. Or that 1984 Topps came before 1983 Topps. I did that, and I saw a new way to look at this set.
To me, this set is one of those sets that is "of its time," like 1959 Topps. If you remember the mid-1980s, it was filled with bright colors, from The Cosby Show to Miami Vice to the Go-Gos to Coca-Cola advertisements. Everything was bright, vibrant, bold colors. That's 1984 Topps.
1984 Topps is full of action, just like the previous year's set. The bright colors underline the action. Then, there are the vertical team names and the cut-out mug shots with the colorful background. This gives the set a comic-book feel, which makes me appreciate the set even more.
If I bump up the contrast on Joe Beckwith's card here, he looks more like what you would see in a comic book. Or at least that's what it looks like to me.
In the past, I thought that so many elements -- 1984 Topps has a LOT of elements -- detracted from the main photo. The player in the main photo looks cramped. But while that may be the case in some pictures, I think Topps did a great job of finding pictures, or cropping them in such a way, that makes them stand out.
To me, this is a great pop culture set. I enjoy it more and more and am now wondering why I've ranked it so low.
So let's see a reason why it's at 19.
These blasted things.
This is one of the worst examples of set filler from the 1980s. There are 18 of these cards, many with the same repeated mug shots. I hated them the instant I saw them.
The backs, while featuring a nice team logo, aren't the friendliest, either.
Here's a better logo example, on the manager cards. These are wonderful.
And for those who still aren't convinced, or just know this set as the one with a Don Mattingly rookie card, I invite you to take another look at it. It's not just a knock-off of the 1983 set. It's a 1980s comic hero swooping in to the strains of James Ingram's "Yah Mo Be There". You might be surprised.
18. 1952 Topps
Back in the spring, when counting down all of Topps' flagship sets was all the rage (sorry, no trends being set here ... again), the 1952 Topps set was voted the best set over at Cardboard Connection. This was one of those mass vote-off rankings where readers did the selecting.
It once again proves my point. The masses don't know what they're doing.
Sure, 1952 Topps set the template for the modern baseball card. It gave us stats on the back and the approximate number of cards in a set and a bunch of other things. Yes, if it weren't for 1952 Topps, the other sets that I love might not be around.
But that gets 1952 Topps as far as No. 18. It's not getting to No. 1 on that. Because it's not good enough.
I'm one of those bloggers -- and I know I have company on this -- that believes '52 Topps is overrated. Topps has beaten the design into the ground for 20 years now through various tributes and reissues. I look at the set and the design and I'm numb to it, like a song I've heard 25 times a day on the radio. All of the pioneering that '52 Topps did means nothing because of Topps' subsequent overkill.
It actually took someone else's blog for me to rediscover some more respect for '52 Topps. Adventures in 1952 has been documenting the quest for a complete '52 set a card at a time. Thanks to that blog, I've seen several '52 Topps cards for the first time.
And I've liked what I've seen. I like the bright backgrounds. I like portrait shots, although the colorized black-and-white photos sometimes aren't the greatest. The design in general is pretty ugly, and the set has a very old, dated feel. No matter how much praise it gets, it's not timeless, like some other sets from that period.
There are you historic stats on the back (sorry for the small number of scans with this set, but thanks to a bunch of '52 Topps being dumped into the river, they're not easy to buy).
While I wouldn't mind collecting this set, there are too many other sets -- many of them made by Topps -- that look better and are simply more pleasing to collect.
Being first means a lot, but it doesn't mean you strong-arm your way to the top. Others came second, but did it better.
17. 1974 Topps
Some sets are more difficult to rank than others.
I know for a fact that many collectors, those who never collected a card in the '70s, would rank this set much lower. There isn't much about it that appeals to a younger collector. The design is tried-and-true, the photos are what I'd characterize as "in transition," there are many too many glorified head shots.
But when I see certain cards from this set ...
... I melt.
This Aurelio Rodriguez card (the original "A-Rod") is one of the first cards that I ever saw. It came from those first packs that we received from my mother back in 1974. I can't remember if I had this card or my brother had it, but it is legendary in my mind, and I cannot separate it from an analysis of the set, which is supposed to be objective.
This set means too much to me.
I actually think there are enough classic cards in this set to satisfy an objective ranker:
And I think the design really helps certain teams in this set, like the Reds and the Yankees, and especially the Oakland A's:
They have phenomenal cards in '74 Topps, as they should, since they were the two-time World Series champs at the time. And don't you know that 8-year-old night owl knew exactly how cool these cards looked.
The Swingin' A's were everywhere at that time, and so was Hank Aaron. To recognize Aaron's imminent surpassing of Babe Ruth for the all-time home run record, Topps did something it had never done, and issued a Hank Aaron retrospective to kick-off the set.
That automatically makes the set memorable, although I've always been miffed that Aaron didn't receive a card that looked like everyone else's in the set, too.
Also, how scary was it stating for a fact that Aaron would be the home run king before he became the home run king?
Speaking of the backs, 1974 Topps has some of the best cartoons ever.
And 1974 Topps gave us the first separate Traded Set:
True, there are ...
... far too many ...
... examples ...
... of airbrushing in '74 Topps.
But, I can't help it. I look at a card of Al Bumbry or Claude Osteen or Garry Maddox and I'm transported to the very first time I saw baseball cards up close, in my hands, and all of them were 1974 Topps cards.
That's enough to get this set to No. 17.
Up next: Sets #16-13
Comments
As an A's fan growing up in Oakland it was extra special to pull those great cards from packs and take them to school the next day. Also, I love the easy to read backs, the cartoons and I concur with your comment regarding the Topps prediction, and odd language used for the prediction. However, this is one of my all-time favorite cards.
The 1984 cards marked my return to.the hobby after a 5 year hiatus from collecting. I've always liked the design and for some reason they handle differently than other sets. Anyway, it's good to see these 2 sets in your top 20.
I'm totally on board with the 1984 set being ranked highly as well. It's one of those sets that is fun to look at, is well designed generally, has a lot going on -- yet is still a clean front design. But, as you showed with those "all-time leaders" cards, Topps had started with its photo recycling by that point already.
Why'd you have to get "Yah mo be there" stuck in my head, Greg? Why? This is going to be all night...
I did not realize that Hank didn't have a regular card and now, 41 years later, I am kinda miffed about it too! One of my favorite cards from '74 is Juan Marichal. As a rule, I do not like the Giants but the photo and the cropping seems near perfect.
I actually think those "active career leaders" are a decent idea and a nice way to get more superstar cards into the set...they just ruined it by using the same photos over and over.
I agree with your ranking of the 1984 set in the 15-20 range. It's a solid design.