Wednesday, December 30, 2020

cardpocalypse 7 day trading card challenge, day 7: what fresh hell is this?

so i finally made it to day 7 of the cardpocalypse 7 day trading card challenge. you remember that challenge? the one that everyone else finished months ago? i have not constrained myself to a strict interpretation of the timeline for the challenge, obviously. days in a biblical sense, perhaps. anyway, the day 7 topic was a favorite hobby trend that emerged this year - i am just getting this post in under the wire!

it's been over 9 months since i, like many others, began working at home, which was quite a change considering that i had been working out of a project office out of town three to four days a week for the prior fourteen months or so. i went from being home hardly at all to being home all of the time.  being home during this time has allowed me to spend more time with my collection as has been evidenced here through a higher and more consistent volume of posts. lucky you. so, my favorite hobby trend that has emerged this year is that i am still alive and collecting! 

actually, it's not, as there are a number of things that have been happening that i enjoy.  such as the free (and almost free) giveaways that popped up all over the place.  i am also happy about the renewed interest in the hobby, as i've been able to unload some junk wax michael jordan, sammy sosa, and mark mcgwire cards as a result, so that's been nice. it's also been great to see the returning bloggers, new bloggers, and even though it is not a trend, the veteran bloggers that make up this online community.  all of those trends have been written about extensively elsewhere, so i will write a bit about the topps turn back the clock cards that gave me a baseball fix during the first three months of the wfh situation when there were no games being played.

i thought it was dumb when a couple of websites started touting simulated games when it became clear that the baseball season would be postponed. i mean, i enjoyed playing seasons on tony larussa baseball as much as everyone else, but i didn't see the point in trying to get people excited about simulations. i did get excited, however, when topps brought us the online "turn back the clock" cards to fill the void of their regular "now" releases.  i have been a fan of the topps turn back the clock concept since i first saw the 1977 maury wills card 
in the late 1970's (it is strange that it has taken me a long time to pick up a spare copy to add to my dodger stadium binder, which i did earlier this year). this year, topps used the concept to remind us of events from seasons past, and so i looked forward to each day's release to see what events a topps now set might have recognized in previous seasons throughout baseball history. i even picked up the april 15 card
as it featured jackie robinson. sometimes, i tried to guess what the card subject might be for a given day, but i was always wrong. in fact, i was hugely disappointed when they did not choose shawn green's 4-homer game as their subject for may 23. they went for an albert pujols 5-hit game instead of the game that set the mlb record for total bases by one player in a single game. still, the series has produced a number of cool cards that i would like to add to my collection, but so far i only have the jackie above.

i also purchased three of the topps 2020 project cards:

mike trout (blake jamieson)
sandy koufax (tyson beck)
jackie robinson (efdot)
those first two were sort of novelty purchases at what might have been the peak of the project 2020 hype. the trout has one of the highest print runs of the whole checklist.  the jackie came out shortly after the trout and koufax, and i really liked the design. i wasn't the only one, as night owl did a good writeup of it.

now, i'm ready for 2020 to be over but i am curious if topps will bring the turn back the clock set back next year. i am much less interested in a potential project 2021, however.

4 comments:

  1. My dad was just talking to me today about how hot the hobby is. I guess it's actually been featured on some of his stock market shows. Kudos to you for dumping those Jordans, Sosas, and McGwires. I probably should have done that when they were on fire.

    Project 2021? Oh no...

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    1. i've seen a couple of articles about the hobby pop up on some news sites as well. i still have too many sosa and mcgwire cards that didn't sell, so i was a little bit late to the party.

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  2. "Now is the time to invest in sport cards" articles have been all over the place for most of the year now, and it's starting to get real old, real fast. I'm just thankful that I have no want to read any of them, therefor I'm not adding to the revenue of these various sites by clicking on them.

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    1. I did read one of the articles and it was pretty worthless to someone who collects for fun.

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