Friday, January 7, 2022

The Retail Card Aisles of Northern Michigan - Part 2

On the previous post, I shared a few of the cards that I picked up while visiting my in-laws in northern Michigan. The card aisles of the two large box stores in town, Meijer and Wal-Mart, both had more packs of cards than I have seen living outside of Raleigh during the past year and a half to two years.  

A quick refresher. 

 

The Meijer card aisle is on the left, Wally World on the right.  

For this post, I am just breaking the cards into brand rather than by location purchased.

First up is another pack of the Panini Chronicles cards. Again, I am still confused as to whether or not these cards all come from a single set or they are different sets packaged together. I don't care enough about Panini to research the answer and I fear it's a rip off of the 1998 Donruss Collections product.  

If you don't know that one, the card manufacturer Pinnacle re-released all of their Donruss and Leaf products at the end of that year, but they put some foil finish on the cards. In my opinion......



I have three highlights from this pack of cards. 



On the left is Akil Baddoo. I saw him with the Tigers this summer and enjoyed his style of play. I am looking forward to picking up some more of his cards this year. More Akil later in the post. 

In the middle is Clayton Kershaw. This is the same style card as AJ Puk and Gregory Polanco cards from the previous post. Again, the card has a nice finish on the surface and the thick card stock is always a plus. The Pete Alonso is another acetate card, but it's different from the three in the previous post. Are the acetate cards supposed to have variations like the Topps Tek cards?  I love acetate baseball cards, but the line pattern on this one is boring.  

Next up is a few cards from Topps Archives. I have really become torn on this product in recent years. Topps has gone completely overboard with reusing former designs in current products. At some point they are going to completely ruin the Topps Heritage product. However, for the moment I still really enjoy the autographs and a few of the inserts in this product. Topps does come up with some nice cards here.  


Topps did a really good job of picking out photos for the 1970s players. Not a Nolan Ryan fan, but good job putting him in an Angels uniform. Dick Allen and Mike Schmidt have great 1970s hair. The uniforms in the picture are an added bonus. The red version of the White Sox uniforms is underrated. I felt like the 1970s players had the best looking cards in this year's set.  

Next up is a pair of Movie Poster inserts. These are really neat.  


Most of the cards are team themed, like the A's card on the left. However, I do really like the Black Aces poster card.  The black and white photo with the red background really pops. The term "Black Aces" was coined by long-time Indians and Twins pitcher, Mudcat Grant. There are players who fit Grant's description left off of the card. One of those players was Grant himself.  Give credit where credit is due.  This would be a better card if Grant had been included.

Just my two cents.  

I did not land many Cardinals cards in my packs of Archives. My only two options were Lou Brock and Paul DeJong. I am sorry, but Paul DeJong is a no at the moment.  



Lou is an easy choice.  

My favorite Durham Bulls card....


I am going with this Evan Longoria insert, but let's talk about this card for a minute. This is card is the direction that Topps should take the Archives set.  This is a modernized version of a 1989 Topps Big card. They were a kid-friendly oddball set released that ran for several years. 

This is the original design.  



Topps always uses past oddball designs for insert sets in Archives. They should just make them the base set design for the entire product. Small change, but it would help to preserve the former flagship brand designs for future Topps Heritage sets. Again, just my opinion.  

Onto the last group of cards. These are out of the Update Series. I got two of these box toppers.  



I like the Satchel Paige card.  Big Papi.  Meh.  


I also ended up with two more Akil Baddoo rookie cards. Did I mention I hate when Topps overuses former designs?  I am going to ignore that for the 1986 Topps card on the left. That is a good looking baseball card.  

I also picked up a pair of Luis Patino rookie cards. He has been my go-to Durham Bulls player of sorts during the past year. However, the card on the right is a little ridiculous.  


Topps made Rookie Debut cards for a handful of players in the 2021 Update set. Read the small print there and you can see that Luis Patino actually made his Major League Debut in August of 2020. He was traded to the Rays in December of 2020, started the year in the Minors, and was called up by the Rays. I get the card on the left since Patino was both traded and called up to the Majors in the past year. I do not understand why he is getting a Debut card from a previous season.  

Favorite Cardinals cards.  


Ignore the previous comments about Topps reusing old designs here too.  The Molina has a Chrome finish, Arenado and Carlson are the regular card stock. I love the 1992 Topps cards. 

Favorite former Durham Bulls players in this set....


I am going with Blake Snell and Jake Cronenworth.  Easy choice.  

That's it for the card aisle. 

10 comments:

  1. I don't really feel this strongly, but... I wish Topps never made another card using an old design. There are waaaaaay too many of them. At the least, they should only make Heritage. No other throwbacks. I know, never gonna happen. And the kids won't get off my lawn, either. I'm so old.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree, they make too much money rehashing old designs. Considering that a healthy amount of the pandemic baseball card craze was driven by nostalgia, they have financial reason to continue. No, they won't get off your lawn, and I am feeling that same sort of pain.

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  2. Oh, I've run it into the ground about my annoyance with the lack of creativity of Topps and them doing nothing but recycling designs. Check my latest post at The Collective Mind.
    Brilliant idea about using the inserts as the base set for Archives. There are lots of untapped and obscure designs they could use and leave the regular ones just for Heritage like you said.

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    Replies
    1. I agree with your post and the post linked within the post. I am really hoping that Fanatics will push the powers-that-be at Topps to branch out in terms of creativity, but I am anticipating that they will end up doing the usual corporate, "what is going to maximize our profit". I feel a healthy dose of the status quo coming on.

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  3. Mudcat getting left off that card seems like a pretty big faux pas. I guess it's just Topps doing Topps-type things though.

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    Replies
    1. Their quality control and research is pretty disappointing at times. Just a hunch, but I am guessing that Mudcat Grant is not as popular as the other players on the card. While he's an obvious choice, he's not a name that moves the needle.

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  4. I agree I was surprised that muscat wasn’t on the black aces card. Great to see full shelves of cards!

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    Replies
    1. Highly disappointing. When I pulled the card, I just started shaking my head. It is great to see shelves with cards. Now, if I could only find a retail store like this within driving distance of my house.

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  5. A. I like the movie poster inserts... which is a surprise to me... since I haven't said that too often about Topps inserts the past five years or so.

    B. Agree that Grant should have been included.

    C. I love the Topps Big cards from the late 80's/early 90's.

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