Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Card Show Potpourri



I hit the hotel card show on Saturday. Having nothing in the works in terms of set building gave me the chance to just schmooze with some dealers and pick through my friend Darryl's cheap vintage boxes and cherry-pick a few things I thought were nice. I went home with about twenty vintage cards. Here are a few of them. And note that my scanner likes to cut off borders and I'm too lazy to re-scan anything at the moment.

Do I collect Dick Allen? Mmmmmmmaybe. I have plenty of his cards, that's for sure. I bought the '64 because I'd given mine away to a friend who was lamenting losing his childhood Phillies collection. I put together the 1964 Topps Phils team set for him. It was really neat to see how much he enjoyed the cards from his favorite Phils club ever.

This '76 is an upgrade to the one in my set.


'75 Luis Tiant. I have this in my '75 set of course but it's also gonna have a spot in my 'cards I like just because' binder.


Not my favorite Gale Sayers card but it helps fill out his page.


Darryl had lots of '69 Topps football in really nice shape. This set is very condition-sensitive and I could use a bunch of upgrades. I don't yet have a list of cards in my set that could be improved upon but here are three I bought for the simple reason that they were nice enough to buy on spec.




Vintage Giants cards remind me of my father.


I think I already had this Elvin Hayes card. He does UH basketball radio color commentary and walks right by us every game. I still haven't asked him to sign anything. I haven't seen anyone else ask either, so I'll wait.


Artis Gilmore came thru Houston when he played for Jacksonville U. He was part of a 7 foot-ish tandem post with a guy named Pembrook Burrows. Both schools were sort of wild, outlaw programs at the time and the games were a blast. Jacksonville made the NCAA final in 1970. Burrows went on to become a Florida highway patrolman and Gilmore had a long pro career and is in the hoops hall.


Darryl pulled out a huge box of 80s/90s cards that were part of a buy he made a few months back. He had promised me some Eddie Murray cards because of a friendly argument we had over Murray's Hall of Fame credentials. I had the mainstream cards of Eddie with the Orioles but few, if any, of him in other teams' gear. Darryl said I could just take anything I wanted.


The box had all the routine Topps, Fleer, Donruss cards and some oddballs as well. I ended up pulling one of each different card even knowing I had many of them already. I'll post a sampling of them.

I wish Upper Deck was still in the card making game. If they were I might still be in the pack buying game.

Back in 1988 I bought a box of those Topps-issued schoolkid folders that were replicas of this Topps card. There were 15 or twenty in the box. Over time, I gave them away to kids at my school I still have two.


1990 Fleer. Junk wax at it's finest.


'92 Topps something or other. Topps Kids?  I don't remember this.

I normally ignore stuff like this but it's actually sort of fun. The back is cute.



Stickers posing as cards. Why?


Another nice Upper Deck Eddie. At this point in his career, Eddie had decided that appearing to have some fun out there wouldn't kill him.


'93 Fleer. I don't even know if this is the regular issue for that year or not. By '93 I was out of the card hobby and close to being out of the fan business as well. I was hanging on by my fingertips and a year or so later the strike/lockout/stoppage came along and stomped on those fingers.


That's it for tonight. This show was the first one I've attended without a want list in hand. TriStar is coming up so I better get to work on something.


5 comments:

  1. Nice 1969 football cards! The Brodie card is from the 2nd series, as it has white borders on 3 sides.

    The first series cards didn't have these borders, and are often mistakenly referred to as "borderless". If you look closely, the border is the same color as the background, as the players' photos are cropped near the edges.

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    1. It's a fun set for sure. It was one of those spontaneous decisions to put it together. I was offered a fair sized lot and just bought it not thinking about how hard the thing might or might not be to complete. I'm working on upgrading some of those 1st Series cards with nicked sides.

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  2. Elvin Hayes! My favorite NBA player for the 5 days I was an NBA card collector in the late '70s.

    It is very weird seeing '69 Football in near mint shape.

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  3. Wow. Those 69T FB cards are in fantastic condition and were a sweet find. Also love the Allen rookie card. Hope he eventually makes it into Cooperstown.

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  4. Not too shabby for not having an active project. I went to a show on Sunday and had a semi-similar situation... One dealer had vintage hockey and I didn't have my wantlists because nobody around here ever has vintage hockey... until this guy. I need to get some online checklists set up for "emergencies" like that, but I think I did OK.

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