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Your weekly reminder that Topps doesn't care

 
I realized only a couple of days ago that Topps had released its Archives brand.
 
I don't know how anybody keeps track. Archives' arrival has come a week, maybe two, after Allen & Ginter arrived. And that came shortly after Topps Holiday debuted, which seemed to be released practically on top of Topps Update.
 
All of this showed up after months of virtually no new releases at all -- or none that your average plebe collector (that's me!) would notice.
 
This does not seem very consumer-friendly. I can't focus on four new products bunched up near the holidays when my money is tied up in finding gifts for others. But I'm sure Topps/Fanatics doesn't care. This release schedule is probably the best way to "maximize profits," which seems to be the only objective in business these days.
 
So, no, I haven't had any time to buy any Archives. Nor any Allen & Ginter. I decided to pass on Holiday and I took care of Update with one purchase of the Dodgers team set. This means I needed the interwebs to show me this:
 

As Charlie Brown would say on "A Charlie Brown Christmas": I can't stand it.
 
Here is Carl Yastrzemski's 2025 Archives card spelled incorrectly ... twice. Y-A-S-T-Z-R-E-S-M-K-I is not his name.
 
We just went over this with Archives last year (well, earlier this year) when the 2024 set spelled poor Carl's name the same way.
 
 

I don't even know how they came up with that combination of letters. It takes all the concentration I can muster to spell it like that -- incorrectly. But apparently the folks working on Archives think that's the way it's spelled because here it is, spelled the exact same incorrect way for the second straight year.
 
It's baffling that somebody couldn't be bothered to double-check the name by doing a simple online search. It's clear the folks there aren't that familiar with the player, wouldn't you just do it to be on the safe side? He's got 11 letters in his last name!
 
But it's even more baffling because I just posted about Topps' troubles with the name back in February. And there was that snafu with his grandson's name in 2022. Not only that, I wrote a whole article in a national magazine about name misspellings on cards. And the Yastrzemski problem led off the entire article!
 

Get The Name Right, Topps!
 
Look, here's part of the article with both the Mike Yastrzemski and Carl Yastrzemski errors pictured. The misspellings are different on each card.🤦:
 

No, I don't expect a blog post or a magazine article to effect an industry the way they once did. I'm entirely sure no one at Topps read either of these things. And that's part of the problem.
 
Topps cares so little about the things that traditional collectors care about that it can't be bothered to get details right -- even details about a Hall of Fame player that the company once had zero difficulty spelling for the entire length of his career. In my article up there, I cite a quote from Mike Yastrzemski when Topps spelled his name wrong in 2022. Mike said: "I thought it was really funny actually." I wonder if it's still funny the second and then the third time.
 
Topps -- I mean, Fanatics -- does care about some things. It cares about breakers and flippers. It cares about what they think and what they want and how much money they have. There is no room for anything else, apparently, not the collectors who have put 40, 50, 60 years into this hobby and mostly with Topps.
 
Maybe I'm wrong about that. But how can I think anything else? As someone who has spelled Yastrzemski's name phonetically in my head (Yast-r-zemski) since I was a youngster to write it out correctly, that's all I can conclude. Misspelling a player's name over and over is sloppy, which is an indicator of not caring, at least where I'm from.
 
And really that's why I haven't bought any Archives. Or Allen & Ginter. Or Holiday. Or Update.
 
Because Topps/Fanatics doesn't care about me.

Comments

Dennis said…
At this point Topps/Fanatics is basically Mona-Lisa Saperstein--being awful and then holding out their hand and repeating "Money, pleeeeeease!"
In case you didn't know. Chrome Update is out too
Doc Samson said…
I’m getting flashbacks to 1981 Fleer. That set had so many errors, it was like a term paper where every other word was a typo.
Chris said…
I loathe Fanatics. They ruin everything.

It's understandable to make that error once. Maybe. Even though Yaz is a legend of the sport. But if I, a run-of-the-mill collector can come up with a simple way of remembering how to spell it correctly*, then a billion-dollar corporation can.

*whenever I have to spell it, I just sound it out to myself "Yas-tr-zem-ski" like i'm in grammar school. Works every time.
jacobmrley said…
You gotta figure that Yaz's name should be in the spell check dictionary because unless you are Polish and worked at a card store in Boston (like some people I know), spelling Yastrzemski correctly is a real challenge. I also show off by spelling Albuquerque correctly all the time too, though Breaking Bad made that less cool over the years.
Excellent post. By the time you get your cards, even second hand, Topps/Fanatics has their money. They don't care, and that is a shame. But not buying the product only denies you a product that you ultimately do want (at least some of). Which is why I'd just rather pay a smidgen more to get it from eBay or Sportlots rather than buying direct from the company. But I collect like two players, so buying their product (packs etc) isn't relevant. But I'll be honest with you, Topps in 1975 and 1987 didn't care either. But they were more careful.
The smki at the end is especially heinous, but any misspelling is inexcusable.
Michael D said…
Spelling error of an all-time great has to be on purpose right? It's pretty bad in my opinion.
Crocodile said…
But tell us how you really feel :)
night owl said…
Not worth writing if I don't.
Jeremya1um said…
Maybe get some scalper/flipper to post about it on their Tik-Tok. Maybe that would get them to listen.
Maybe you could refer to them as ‘Tops’ until things change.
Nick Vossbrink said…
Yeah they don't care about us. But they care even less about the product.
John Bateman said…
Unfortunately in this world if the same lie keeps getting told over and over again, it eventually becomes the truth
Don said…
In my opinion they have cared for awhile. They got the layout wrong for the league leaders in 2012 Heritage. Followed that up with blindly copying the leaders layout the next year (one of the original leaders has a tie in 63 so there were 4 photos. That got carried forward to 2013). Players released in spring training showing up in series 2 or update. It is like whoever is working on the sets don't care enough to check their work, or just blindly follow.
Don said…
Heck they could have short printed the mvp cards in last year's heritage set (2 cards with the same number). But they screwd that up by not even putting them in year order.
Teddy Ballgame said…
I grew up in the Boston area as a diehard Red Sox fan. I was five years old in 1967 - the Impossible Dream year. I learned to spell “Yastrzemski” before I learned to spell my own name.
Fuji said…
A. Maybe it has to do with it being the holiday season, but releasing four products back to back to back to back is silly (my humble opinion). Personally I think Topps would be better off spreading things out and give collectors time to build these sets, before dropping another product. But honestly it doesn't matter, because my plan is to continue cutting back on opening new packs/boxes outside of flagship (only if I really like the design).

B. I didn't catch their Archives mistake last year, but the fact that Topps has misspelled it two years in a row is just sad. The fact that nobody over there is reading (or at least skimming) Beckett is even sadder. It's not the reason I'm cutting back on buying new products, but it sure doesn't help.
carlsonjok said…
I think you hit on it in your penultimate paragraph. They must have some millennial editor that didn't grow up with "Hooked on Phonics." And after that butchered spelling, the dang well better stay off my lawn.
Matt said…
Your article was the first thing I thought of when I saw the Yaz card. I learned how to spell Yastrzemski in grade school, surely Topps can figure it out!