Favorite card memory?
Axtell
Posts: 10,037 ✭✭
Would love to get everyone's favorite card memory(s).
I'd say mine involve my younger days...my mom would take me to card shows when I was much younger, and we'd walk around the shows (local ones) and there wouldn't be a ton of tables...and I remember seeing that 71 munson...and always wanted one. Finally we find one that is reasonably priced....had whited corners, but I finally had my very own! I also have fond memories of many times before school when the 1984 fleer cards came out, stopping at the little mini mart on the way to school and us busting rack packs together...great, great times.
I'd say mine involve my younger days...my mom would take me to card shows when I was much younger, and we'd walk around the shows (local ones) and there wouldn't be a ton of tables...and I remember seeing that 71 munson...and always wanted one. Finally we find one that is reasonably priced....had whited corners, but I finally had my very own! I also have fond memories of many times before school when the 1984 fleer cards came out, stopping at the little mini mart on the way to school and us busting rack packs together...great, great times.
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I remember that for Christmas in 1988, I got 5 baseball cards in one box for my main present. They were a 1968 Ryan, a 1969 Ryan, and one each of the Mattingly rookies. I was as happy as..... well a kid on Christmas morning. I couldn't have told you a thing about centering, edges, or surface. I knew that the Ryans were a little beat up, but who cares - they were mine. I also got 2 wax boxes of 89 Score that my dad had somehow found at a gas station- it blew my mind. Without a doubt my best Christmas ever, and probably why I spend as much on cards as I do on rent now.
Great thread - hopefully this one will get a ton of posts. Nice to know where everybody is coming from, and what makes this hobby great in the first place. It's funny how we only now care about centering, etc., instead of having that card. Having a slab of a card is completely different from having that card 10-20-30 years ago. I remember getting a factory set of 88 Topps that same Christmas that same year and hand collating it into order. Good times.
WOW
$295 rent? I own a home, but where I live an average rental goes for about $1,200 per month. I WISH my mortgage was $295.
Carlton Fisk: baseball-reference.com
His longevity definitely helped quite a bit. Unfortunately ole Thurman didn't get a chance for longevity.
Bob
61 Topps (100%) 7.96
62 Parkhurst (100%) 8.70
63 Topps (100%) 7.96
63 York WB's (50%) 8.52
68 Topps (39%) 8.54
69 Topps (3%) 9.00
69 OPC (83%) 8.21
71 Topps (100%) 9.21 #1 A.T.F.
72 Topps (100%) 9.39
73 Topps (13%) 9.35
74 OPC WHA (95%) 8.57
75 Topps (50%) 9.23
77 OPC WHA (86%) 8.62 #1 A.T.F.
88 Topps (5%) 10.00
great so far
Truth is, I'm just getting back in the hobby. I didn't collect in high school and college because I was "too cool" for cards. But I have a seven year old who has rekindled my desire for cards so my favorite memory now is each time we crack a box together. Sounds cheesy maybe, but that's what it's all about. Maybe I'd lose some of my sentimentality if I pull a true 1 of 1 out of my heritage boxes!!
Oh, and that dealer who gave me the good deal on the Ryan card? He's still in business, but not very educated about PSA or the internet. He sold me a 1989 upper deck Ken Griffey Jr. rookie for $35. I sent it to PSA, it came back a 10, I sold it on eBay for $525. I feel like we're even.
There were probably 10 "dealers" there most of the time and lot's of other people just sitting around other tables buying, sellnig, and trading. There were no plastic pages, no screwdown holders, no card grading companies, none of the modern "luxuries" we have today. Just lot's and lot's of vintage cards, lined up in neatly in various sized shoe-type boxes. The real old and expensive items were neatly piled up in glasstop display cases, no holders. Some of the prices I distinctly remember paying for cards were - 1959 Topps commons - .14 each. T206 common players - .65 each. 1961 Fleer Babe Ruth - $1.
Those were the days! No worries about grades, no one looking at cards with magnifiers, no fraudulant activity going on for the most part.
Cataloging all those pesky, unlisted 1963 Topps football color variations Updated 2/13/05
your friend
Mike
I agree about Torre. He had awesome stats as a player including a .297 BA. He will no doubt get in as a Manager but he should have been there already.
Nothng like dusty cardboard and thirty year-old gum to relive nostalgia...................
loth
Dad is a UPS man and he delivered to a card shop everyday on his route.
That X-mas i got some of the hard to find 89 UD HI series cards. Nolan Ryan throwing the football, Jim Abbott motion card, and of course the glorious Todd Zeile XRC. I also can't forget the Justice Leaf RC.
Ben
First off, I wholehardedly agree that Thurman Munson belongs in the HOF. While the HOF seems to have
degenerated a few times, with the current emphasis on lifetime stats that must meet a lofty status, we all
need to ask, what really does hall of fame mean? Munson achieved a lot in his few years and he was the
one his teammates looked up to; true, you can't put a number on that, but boy did he have the killer-
instinct that drove him and his teammates to several pennants and WS crowns. He reminds me of Jackie
Robinson, Nellie Fox, Ty Cobb, and Roger Maris. None of them were jolly. They all just came to beat
you and ram the bat up your ---. There's something in those kinds of competitors, in all of sports, that
we often love (if they play for our team), or love to hate but deap-down admire (if they play for someone
else. I truly feel Roger Maris belongs in the HOF. No, the lifetime stats are NOT there, but what he achieved
in those few years are among MLB's great memories. I must confess that I started collecting in 1961, and
loved both Maris and Mantle, so my feelings are probably heavily affected from my own background. The
HOF is over-rated, or too messed up, in my own mind. Perhaps for us all the HOFs are too closely tied to
who we collect. Munson, Maris, and Mantle are in "my own Hall of Fame", if you catch my drift, and in the
end that's what counts. This wasn't supposed to go so long. I'm sorry. Let me try another time for the
favorite card memory. I've been very blessed with a few, and sold some that I dearly wish I had back--
not really for the money, though in 2 cases that come to mind, they're both now so expensive that I have
to give up on the idea of getting them again. We probably can all commiserate. Take care guys. Indiana Jones
He did a double-take when I presented it to him to sign. He didn't say anything - I don't think he knew much English back then - but clearly he had never seen his then one-and-only hockey card before! He took a moment to admire it front and back before signing it and returning it to me.
He'd put out, say, Frank Howard and I'd put out Tommie Agee. Which player has the highest number of runs scored in a season? Loser was out. Next cards. Who has the most seasons of 20 or more doubles? Loser was out, and so on. Last card standing won. We had a set order for the elimination questions, but that order has been lost to old age.
We would kill entire days with these games, and by the end of the season we wouldn't even have to look on the backs of the cards for the answers anymore since we had them all memorized. And we had to use silly rules, because if we picked the best players my brother always one because he had Mantle, Mays and Clemente and I didn't (we started playing in 1974).
Some of the best times of my life.