Showing posts with label Jim Palmer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jim Palmer. Show all posts

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Mike Boddicker Has A Great Sense of Humor!

Last Fall, I called out Topps on their mistake for using a picture of Mike Boddicker on Jim Palmer's Greatest Seasons card in the Update Series.

As a followup to that post, I wanted to share a picture that Bill sent me of the card where Mike displayed a great sense of humor by signing the card using Jim Palmer's nickname "Cakes":



Its great to see Mike taking this mistake in stride and having fun autographing a card where he is identified as Jim Palmer with a playful nod to the mistake.

As for the origin of the nickname, it is a result of Palmer's routine of eating pancakes on the day he was scheduled to pitch:

 

The fantastic "When Topps Had (Base)Balls!" site created an awesome Nicknames of the 70's card for Jim "Cakes" Palmer:


I'd like to thank Bill for sending along the picture of the card showing Mike having some fun with Topps' mistake.

Friday, October 18, 2019

Topps Carelessness Creates Collecting Dilemma

In looking at the cards that just came out in the Topps Update series, I found that there is a new Jim Palmer card to add to my player collection - or so I thought.  When I took a look at the picture of the card, I realized it wasn't Jim Palmer on the card:


Instead of Jim Palmer, we get a picture of Mike Boddicker. 

Really Topps?  I appreciate you trying to find a new picture rather than recycling the same few shots over and over again, but this is ridiculous.  Is there no quality control process to check to make sure the pictures are of the correct players, especially for a series recognizing a player's greatest season?

This isn't some minor league prospect we are talking about.  Jim Palmer is a Hall of Famer, and appears in a number of Topps sets each year, so you should have an idea of what he looks like.  His # 22 is retired by the Orioles, and Boddicker's uniform clearly shows a 5.   How this got missed is beyond me.

So here is my dilemma - should I even bother with adding this card to my Palmer collection?  It obviously isn't him.  If this were the only card, I'd probably say yes, just as a curiosity.  However, as with almost every Topps card these days, there are the dreaded parallels.  I see there are gold and blue parallels already listed on ebay, and I'm sure there are black, green, red, and 150th variations as well.

Since I do try to pick up the parallels (the unfortunate curse of being a completist), I find myself not even wanting this card, because then I've essentially committed myself to gathering up the parallels to go with it.   I've got the 150th Anniversary Greatest Players card of Palmer (and all of the parallels except red), but if I then put this card in the Jim Palmer binder, it will seem odd that 1) IT ISN'T EVEN HIM! and 2) unlike the other cards where I have the parallels, this one will look odd by itself.

I find myself disliking the card because of the fact that Topps obviously doesn't give a flip about producing quality cards.  When you don't have any competition, why bother to try hard.


So I'd like to ask the player collectors out there - if one of the players you collect ended up with a card picturing someone else, would you still feel it needs to go in your collection?  And if you also chase the parallels, would you try to track those down as well?

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

1981 Fleer Baseball Stickers and All Star Game Set

The timing of today’s review couldn’t have worked out any better given the MLB All Star Game being played tonight in Yankee Stadium. We’ve reached 1981 with the review of the annual Fleer sticker releases, and the 1981 set just happens to have a set of cards highlighting the All Star Games from 1933 through 1980 on the backs of the stickers.

To give you an idea of what the All Star cards look like, here is the card from the last time the game was played in Yankee Stadium which was 1977:

As a side note, I am now officially OLD. If you have been watching baseball long enough to have seen the All Star Game played in the same stadium twice, I think that makes you an “old timer”.
I remember watching this game back in 1977 and being really excited because my favorite pitcher Jim Palmer was starting the game. He proceeded to get lit up for 3 home runs (Joe Morgan leading off the game and Greg “The Bull” Luzinski with a 2 run homer later in the first inning, and Steve Garvey with a solo shot in the third inning), and left the game down 5-0.

Taking a look at the starting lineup from that 1977 All Star Game, HALF of these guys are now in the Hall of Fame, including 6 out of the 9 starters for the AL (and they still lost!):
Starting lineups
Order
Player
Team
Position
Order
Player
Team
Position
1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
6
7
C
7
C
8
8
9
P
9
P
There were also 8 reserves who made the Hall: Steve Carlton, Goose Gossage, Tom Seaver, Bruce Sutter, Mike Schmidt, Dave Winfield, Dennis Eckersly, and Nolan Ryan. That makes 17 Hall of Famers at the 1977 All Star Game, plus all time hit king Pete Rose. Not a bad year in terms of talent.
Getting back to the stickers, the designs are the same as the 1980 set with 4 different stickers for each team, with the only real change being the fact that the stickers with the team’s won - loss records have been updated to reflect the results of the 1980 season.

For some reason Fleer did not honor the Phillies with a World Series designation as they had done the previous year for the Pirates. However, the same Orioles & Pirates border color variations exist from the previous year.
Only 2 teams underwent any significant changes from the 1980 set to the 1981 set. The Braves went from the lower case "a" to the upper case "A"


and the Padres went from a dark brown "SD" to a lighter brown "SD" with an orange outline:

The one other difference on many logo stickers was the addition of the registered trademark symbol (R) as seen on the Yankees logo sticker on the right:

The (R) symbol was added to most of the teams in 1981, but not all of them. If you look at the A's logo stickers above, you'll see that they did not add the symbol.
1981 was the last year that the stickers were issued on their own. As I mentioned in my previous post about the 1981 Fleer Baseball Card set, even though Fleer won the right to produce baseball cards, a later ruling gave Topps the sole right to be able to issue baseball cards with gum, so Fleer decided to use the logo stickers as an insert in place of the gum.
In honor of tonight’s All Star Game, here is the complete set of the 1981 Fleer All Star Game cards:


Note there is no card for 1945 as no All Star Game was played that year due to World War II.




Finally, here is a look at the wrapper:


This set marked the end of an era for Fleer as they would no longer issue Baseball Logo Stickers as their own product after having done so since 1967 starting with the Cloth Emblems (1967 – 1968), which were followed by Cloth Patches (1969 – 1976), which then became the Hi-Gloss Grand Slam stickers (1977 – 1979), and finally just Baseball Stickers (1980 – 1981). Starting the following year, the Logo Stickers would become Fleer’s standard insert in its baseball card packs for the next 10 years.

UPDATE: 

Thanks to this picture from Joe, it appears these stickers were also offered in rak packs containing 4 packs: