A couple of milestones -- one mine, one not -- regarding the total number of cards for a particular player, conspired last night to create this post.
Right around the time The Lost Collector announced on his blog that he had reached 1,000 Tino Martinez cards for his collection, I crossed 200 Corey Seager cards when I recorded the above 2020 Topps variation card sent to me by the Starting Nine.
Now, there are obvious differences between those two milestones, aside from the difference of 800 cards.
First, Martinez's career is over. He played for 16 seasons, primarily during the card glut of the 1990s, and for whatever reason they're still making cards of him. Seager is still playing and this is the beginning of just his sixth season.
Second, I am not a player collector. I don't actively seek out Seager cards like AJ does Martinez cards. Seager cards come to me because I collect Dodger cards, but there is no other mission.
So, what does that say? Maybe it's this: if I've accumulated 200 cards of Corey Seager through his first five years without even trying, will 1,000 cards of a particular player soon be meaningless? Will 2,000 or 5,000 be the new 1,000?
Card companies have been issuing multiple versions of cards of individual players for more than 30 years now, and the quantities each year grew through the '90s, exploded in the late '90s and now that there are variations, parallels and online cards, it's almost immeasurable.
Cards of individual players are multiplying like rabbits and I think it's now at a rate that is more frenetic than ever.
Here is one tiny example of where we were and where we are.
Here are six cards in my collection of Mookie Betts as a Dodger. They are the first six that I own of Betts listed as a Dodger, as he joined the team in the offseason (OK, one is a sticker back, but don't start with the semantics).
There are many other Betts cards of him as a Dodger that I don't own. So six cards of Betts at this stage may not seem like all that much ...
... unless you were collecting when I was a kid.
This is Jerry Reuss' first Dodger card, from 1980 Topps.
Now, I know that Reuss was not a superstar like Betts is, but I've picked him for a reason. He was definitely an All-Star, a big name for a team who rarely acquired big names (the Dodgers made big names, they didn't trade for them), and he was a notable acquisition when L.A. traded for him at the beginning of the 1979 season.
At the beginning of the 1979 season.
And his first cards as a Dodger arrived in 1980.
In fact, to total as many as six cards of Reuss as a Dodger, I waited until 1982 -- three years after Reuss arrived in L.A.
One of those cards in the bottom row, either the '82 Donruss, Fleer or Topps, was my sixth Reuss Dodger card, equaling the total number of Betts cards I now have. (Reuss had mini stickers in '81 and '82 so, again, if you want to be all-semanticy, I added my sixth Reuss a little earlier).
This is well-trod territory on this blog, I've written many times how rare it was to receive multiple cards of the same player in the same year -- how mind-blowing it was when it started happening in the early 1980s -- and still how interesting it was as I was collecting well into the junk wax era in the late '80s and early '90s.
But I still think that the sheer number of cards that are available for individual players has been increasing at a stepped-up rate in the last five years.
Perhaps that can be blamed on the run on Aaron Judge and Cody Bellinger cards in 2017. Because I have 166 cards of Bellinger, someone who has been appearing on Dodger cards for all of three-plus years.
I seem to accumulate cards of the younger players on the Dodgers -- Seager, Bellinger, Buehler -- at a much more frequent rate than other players.
For example, this card was the 748th Clayton Kershaw card in my collection. That's a lot. But the rate of accumulation doesn't seem to be as frequent as it's been for the younger Dodgers (I'm nearing 100 cards of Buehler, who started showing up in Topps in 2018).
I'm not running any numbers on this so I can't be sure how accurate it is to know that there are more cards being created for individual players than ever before. I just know what I see.
I think I'm a good test case, because I don't player-collect. I'm not trying to get all the High Tek parallels of this guy or all the Prizm refractor colors of that guy. I don't do that.
I just let the cards come to me and make my evaluations.
This isn't a post about whether more cards of players each year is good or bad. I have my opinions and I think you know them. At my age, and with my experience, I think it would be weird if I thought any other way.
I'm just saying that "good gosh, players today have a LOT of cards."
And also:
"What are we going to do with all these rabbits?"
Comments
It’s kind of strange with the 6 card thing. I remember as a high schooler in the ‘90’s, I aimed to have 6 cards of players, and when I got there, I kind of considered it an accomplishment. Nowadays, if it’s the right guy, you could almost get the 6 cards in the Topps Update set. If only the last 4-5 decades could take the best things and do a mash up of all of it in sets that future generations will collect. I don’t like the way things are going.
Funny that Peter mentioned Ohtani. I just pulled my first card of his today.
Some of those 21 Jerry Reuss cards/stickers are collecting options by today's obsessive player-collector standards. O-Pee-Chee gray backs and counting a divided-up '81 scratchoff as one "card" and an intact scratchoff as another -- not only did we not know about them, but they would not be things we would collect back then.
Thanks for using Jerry Reuss as a comparo. As well as the aforementioned Flickr page (which is outstanding, by the way!) he also shares one of his photos every Saturday on the Baseball In The '80s Facebook page.
Can't imaging trying to get even all the basics to one of today's big names. Posted about it in 2018 here: https://thecollectivemind.blogspot.com/2018/03/dont-know-how-they-do-it.html
Those Ohtani numbers are insane...