Tuesday, March 12, 2019

49 isn't 50

in hindsight, topps missed the boat by issuing the first heritage set in 2001 using the 1952 design.  there is a synchronicity lost by not matching up the design with its 50-year anniversary.  as a result, we have the 1970 card design issued in 2019. that hasn't stopped topps from stamping the buybacks included in the heritage releases as "50th anniversary" cards, even though it is really only the 49th anniversary.  it is the 50th year that you could purchase a card printed in 1970, but anniversaries, by definition, don't begin accruing until one year has passed.

anyway, the 1970 set means a lot to me. when i transitioned from a set to team collector in 1980, i set 1970 as the starting point for my dodger collection.  it was my birth year, and even though i at some point ventured in to the 50's and 60's with cards of the boys in blue, the 1970 topps set was the first "vintage" set that i completed. it also features the first card of any member of the famed dodger infield, and that was the card i was most looking forward to obtaining this year.
it is a little bit strange to see that stamp on a bill russell card, and to see that design replicated with current players featured.  it makes me feel old, even though the 50th anniversary of my birth isn't until 2020. by the way, bill russell buybacks will now be a thing until 2036 when the 1987 topps design rolls around in heritage. i hope i'm here for it.

3 comments:

  1. Actually it is there are 50 different baseball seasons between 1970 and 2019. You need to count the zero. 2019-1970 + 1 = 50.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 50 including 1970 which is not the point of calling something an anniversary. 2019 is the 49th anniversary of 1970.

      Delete
  2. This is the first of the "new" buybacks that I've seen, for some reason I thought Topps might use a different stamp design, but I guess they didn't feel the need to design a new one. It's also kind of interesting that apparently Heritage is going to be the only brand with buybacks anymore, I wonder if that'll drive up the prices on all of the ones that have already been made?

    ReplyDelete