I think I wandered into a video store selling cards and picked up a copy of the Ryan for $0.50 - when I was just starting to collect as an adolescent.
1987 Topps - I felt like the commons from this set was perpetual repack fodder, where I have no lingering nostaglia for it as a whole.For at least for a small period of time in the early 1990s however, the McGwire, Will Clark and Jose Canseco were still worth $2-$4 - as the most accessible early MLB cards for those junk wax era stars.
Maybe at a random stop mall show one time as a kid - I may have bought a few packs of the O-Pee-Chee version and ended up pulling a Barry Bonds rookie.
1990 Leaf - I remember a childhood friend coming over and showing me his trade box, where I was triggered by this card, a Ron Gant and Kevin Mitchell.Admittedly, this was a set I did not get a chance to heavily collect - where the Frank Thomas and David Justice rookies ended up being out of sight, out of mind, I remember coveting a Carlos Baerga rookie since it was a $10 card of rising star second baseman.
1992 Fleer Ultra - I felt like after a boring and drab inaugural Fleer Ultra release the previous year, Fleer came correct with a jazzy, UV coated, foil stamped masterpiece.Maybe I could not get enough thumbing through the stars that were teased in the base set as well as various insert sets - where I thought cards from this set would somehow be valuable for a long time.
1991 Fleer Ultra Update - it was not until this late season boxed set was released did I warm up to 1991 Fleer Ultra, with key rookies of the day like Jeff Bagwell, Mike Mussina and Ivan Rodriguez.1990 Fleer - this was a basic set I had access to and there was a certain quaintness that appealed to me; maybe it was the effect where the image is coming through the card.1991 Upper Deck - I remember blowing gift money to buy a box for $36 from a Thrifty's Drug Store, where the trading cards were locked up in a display case by one of the cashier counters.Maybe this had some crossover appeal where there was a Michael Jordan baseball card inserted in packs - while the High Number version featured a Jeff Bagwell rookie.
1991 Bowman - I probably didn't care for the junk wax era Bowman sets, but I guess the 1991 set had rookie cards of Chipper Jones, Ivan Rodriguez, Jim Thome, Kenny Lofton, etc.I end up giving the set credit for allowing me to discover my first card of an Angels prospect named Tim Salmon - when thumbing through the bulk cards a friend had a accumulated in a row within 3,200 count monster box at his house.
1990 Score - this was the first complete set I bought, probably from a Target and I used to thumb through the cards once in a while.1992 Upper Deck - I kind of feel like this was the first Upper Deck set from the early 1990s that was everywhere regular packs, boxes, jumbo packs, team set blisters probably put together and sold by a third party distributor, etc.At some point, I may have gotten tired of seeing the Ken Griffey Jr. multiple exposure card - where it was forever going to be a card worth $0.50.
I've come to appreciate the Bloodlines subset, featuring some of the more prominent Big League families of the day - I don't know if I'm misremembering things, but a neighborhood kid I used to play with used to pronounce 'bloodlines' as 'blood-lee-ness' and I used to get a chuckle out of that.
4 comments:
Good selections. I completely forget about Bowman when doing my rankings.
1992 Fleer Ultra was far and away my favorite of these. The Upper Deck sets were good too, especially 1993.
A. Glad you joined in on the BBA. It's been fun seeing different bloggers responses.
B. Oh man... reading about your Ryan purchase from the video store TOTALLY took me back in time. My local video rental place didn't sell singles, but they did sell packs of cards. Can't believe I forgot that.
C. I'm pretty sure I had my 1990 Leaf Baerga rookie card in a screwdown at one point.
D. I was obsessed with 1992 Fleer Ultra. I spent a lot of money opening packs of that stuff while working at my LCS. But I eventually built the base and insert sets for both series. It's also the reason I took a break from the hobby. I was spending more money on packs than I was earning.
E. Did your Thrifty's just lock up the Upper Deck boxes? I worked at my Thrifty's before eventually working at the LCS and we never locked up any boxes. That being said, it was 1989 and we didn't have any packs or boxes of Upper Deck. Just a bunch of the other brands... especially Bowman.
Fuji - I think it was all the trading cards in the store at the time that was locked up in a glass display case, where you obviously had to ask an employee for help if you wanted something.
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