I have a hard time passing up Minor League baseball cards. About a month ago Topps put out one of their two products which feature players from their Minor League uniforms. Obviously there are Durham Bulls cards, but I can also find cards of the other players I see at Minor League games, as well as a few younger players who previously appeared at USA Baseball.
Heritage Minors has the same borrowed 1968 Topps design as the Major League version of the Heritage set. I like the commonly held opinion that this set design looks like a burlap sack. I still have a few favorite base cards. Really, it's just a pair of Durham Bulls cards and a player with a connection to the Cardinals.
First up the two Durham Bulls.
Adames is widely considered the Rays best prospect. The middle infield is crowded in Tampa, but young cheap talent always wins out there, so Adames is going to get a chance in the Majors sooner than later. He was originally signed by the Tigers, but the Rays picked him up in the David Price trade. Topps has only started putting him in their Minor League products the last two years, even though he was been a highly regarded prospect for a several years now.
Honeywell is the other Durham Bulls card I am going to give a little love. First, I like the alternate jersey on the card. The Bulls have now been a Rays affiliate for 20 years. This season they wore a Rays inspired Bulls jersey several times. Kind of a cool mash-up of the two uniforms.
I am intrigued by Honeywell. He's another top Rays prospect, probably their best Minor League pitcher for the moment. He throws a screwball. I am kind of skeptical about how that will work out in the long term. Is it just me, or has there been a serious lack of screwball pitchers since Fernando Valenzuela?
My last base card is Padres infield prospect Fernando Tatis Jr. If you weren't sure about his relationship to the Cardinals, long time baseball writer Jon Heyman had a gem of a tweet about this in the middle of the summer.
Just in case you had any lingering doubts. He's only 18 and in A Ball, but the numbers have been impressive for such a young player. Last year he hit 21 home runs, 26 doubles, stole 29 bases, and had an on base percentage near .400.
I also pulled out a base card variation. You know Topps always has to make these things and make them nearly impossible to find. This one is actually pretty clear.....
that the first name is missing from the front of the card. Zack Collins is a pretty well thought of catching prospect for the White Sox, plus one time he dropped a ball on a tag play that let NC State get into the ACC Baseball Championship Game.
A few other things that come in boxes of baseball cards. Two jersey cards.
Alex Verdugo is kind of a meh card. I really like Christin Stewart though. He hits for powers and draws a lot of walks. Like the brown jersey swatch from the Futures Game last year.
Moving along.
I like these disc inserts which are based on a 1968 Topps test issue. The set is half mascots and half players. Just something different. My favorite mascot, Wool E. Bull, did not make the cut for this insert set, but does make an appearance elsewhere.
Last two cards for today.
P.J. Conlon is a Mets prospect. Not a huge fan. Bobby Dalbec was drafted by the Red Sox out of the University of Arizona. I saw him play with USA Baseball a few years back. The power is impressive, I think he can be an everyday Major League player.
Outside of a few A's prospects and a handful of big names, I don't really know much about prospects. With that being said... I still enjoy opening these kinds of products, then tucking them away and digging them out a few years down the road to see who became household names.
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