I made one of my six-times-a-year visits to Walmart on Sunday.
I'd like it to be less than that, but I've documented the pitfalls of living in a semi-populated area many times. I tell myself at least it's not as often as 10 years ago when I was making once-a-week trips to find cards.
But speaking of that, I was there to get a couple household items, a combination of which you can only find there, or by ordering online and waiting two weeks for them to arrive in the mail. I naturally ambled over to the card kiosk section to take the edge off. It's really a candy-and-such kiosk but do I see any of that other stuff? No.
It's funny how Walmart has suddenly become the place to go for cards now. Target has been a disaster since mid-2020. But Walmart, which had been a card desert for at least five years, has rebounded a bit. There, I found blasters of Allen & Ginter, Heritage, Stadium Club, Bowman Platinum and various Panini things that didn't register.
I felt lucky. And then I realized that very little there would make me happy. I'm not collecting any of it. I've opened all the 2022 Heritage I care to open. A&G is always fun, but I'm done with that. Buying Platinum would just make me sad, even if there's Dodgers in there I need.
But I succumbed. Stadium Club it was. I still need a couple of Dodgers from that set. I haven't opened any of it yet. The pictures are always nice. These are all rationalizations. Welcome to 2010, night owl! You're a sucker again. And at five-dollars-a-box more!
But enough of beating myself up. We all know these cards are useful to more than my collection. It's trade bait. It's blog material. It's substance-abuse free (well, except for the Canseco card I'm about to show).
Let's get to it.
82 - Ted Williams, Red Sox
PZ-15 - Freddie Freeman, Dodgers, Power Zone insert
146 - Rodolfo Castro, Pirates
160 - Jose Altuve, Astros
248- Ivan Castillo, Royals
All right, we see why I'm not buying cards once a week anymore and also why I'm glad I bought this. Glad I bought it because DODGER INSERT. Not buying once-a-week because 2 rookie cards in a 5-card pack is modern-card nonsense. I may be a sucker but at least I'm not a rookie-card sucker.
(P.S.: My dad would really like that Williams card).
229 - Teoscar Hernandez, Blue Jays
T-20 - Ken Griffey Jr., Mariners, Triumvirate insert
153 - Chas McCormick, Astros
128 - Tony Gwynn, Padres
36 - Drew Ellis, Diamondbacks
I rarely pull those Triumvirate things and Junior to boot, so yay. Rookie card count: 3.
PACK 3
74 - Jose Berrios, Blue Jays/Rod Carew
100 - Wander Franco, Rays, red foil parallel
23 - Nolan Ryan, Rangers, chrome parallel
119 - Jo Adell, Angels
23 - Nolan Ryan, Rangers
The Ryan chrome card is a nice pull (doggie!). As for the Franco, I think I've pulled his card in every blaster I've opened in the last year. Rookie card count: 4.
20 - Ernie Banks, Cubs
TOF-3 - Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Blue Jays, Team of the Future insert
167 - Spencer Torkelson, Tigers
264 - Randy Johnson, Mariners
234 - Tyler Gilbert, Diamondbacks
I AM THE HOT ROOKIE KING! ... That Team of the Future insert is ugly. Rookie card count: 6.
PACK 5
114 - Jose Canseco, Athletics
127 - Anthony Rizzo, Yankees, black and white parallel
207 - Luis Gil, Yankees
126 - Cedric Mullins, Orioles
276 - Cody Bellinger, Dodgers
I used to really like the black-and-white Stadium Club cards, which I think were called "orange parallels" back then. Now they're very blah. Rookie card count: 7.
PACK 6
109 - Eli Morgan, Guardians
134 - Casey Mize, Tigers, red foil parallel
17 - Nick Castellanos, Phillies
270 - Aaron Ashby, Brewers
100 - Wander Franco, Rays
THREE ROOKE CARDS. And another Franco. Rookie card count: 10.
PACK 7
107 - Jeremy Pena, Astros
67 - Jim Abbott, Angels, black foil parallel
10 - Robbie Ray, Mariners
286 - Bo Bichette, Blue Jays
262 - Kyle Schwarber, Phillies
HOT ROOOOOKIES. Rookie card count: 11.
232 - Giancarlo Stanton, Yankees
66 - Colton Welker, Rockies, red foil parallel
161 - Aaron Judge, Yankees
73 - Xander Bogaerts, Red Sox
194 - Lorenzo Cain, Brewers
The Judge card is probably my favorite look out of the box. I must be a sucker for MLB stunts, too. Rookie card count: 12.
So, that's the whole box. For the rundown we've got:
Rookie cards: 12.
Regular veteran players (which make up the vast majority of baseball rosters): 22.
Inserts/parallels: 9.
Cards needed to complete the set if I was completing the set: 34.
Percentage of the set that I received: 11.3%
Price per card: Around 62 cents.
Yup, I'm back in the sucker club. I can't even get interested in most of the images anymore..
See you in a few months, Walmart.
(P.S.: There was also a Master photo insert thingy in the box, but I'm saving that to send to someone. Shh, it's a surprise).
Comments
I've seen several SC posts now and the Judge still reigns supreme. First time I've seen a Gwynn though. Could that be a brand new photo of Mr. Padre?
So I will leave those boxes to the investors and speculators and wait for Topps 2023 to come out next month.
And like you said, now that Ginter's basically over, my retail hunting is done. These SClubs are decent, but I know I'd be years trying to finish the inserts, so I'm skiddish about jumping in again.
Not sure what you meant about needing 34 cards to finish the set if you only got 11%...
And isn't the orangy one called sepia? I could be wrong about that...
Re: the Rizzo card. I'm confused now. According to Beckett, the black-and-white parallels are hobby-only. But there is no "sepia" parallel listed and after the list, it shows a Mookie Betts card that clearly looks like the Rizzo. So, shruggy shrug. https://www.beckett.com/news/2022-topps-stadium-club-baseball-cards/
On another note, I would love to hear your thoughts on Stadium Club’s first set in 1991 and its long-term impact on card collecting and manufacturing.
Don't know if you saw Johnny's response to your comment on my blog, but he wants you to send him your Laughlin want list.