The only really good part about coming home to real life is the big pile of mail waiting for you. Specifically the cards, the bills can go get fucked.
So let's take a look at the goodies inside these envelopes and packages.
Can you guess which card I bought this lot for? Hint, it is not the Bobby Bonilla. Oddly, it is also not the amusingly named Pete LaCock, who has a wonderful family history. X for the center square if you knew the answer without clicking.
There were some players I collect in that pile too. That is a Frank Thomas I needed as well as a couple of Big Papis. Saints vs. Colts? I always like how that turns out. Also, that's Ron Meyer (no relation).
This year is an Olympic year so when I saw this lot, I had to have it to make a page.
These are 1996 Collect-A-Card Centennial Olympic Collection cards and I'd be lying if I said I had ever heard of them before. The photography is nifty but you would expect that since the Olympics are pretty much the Olympics for sports photographers too.
Speaking of collections, these are from the famous (and infamously overproduced) 1992 Sporting News Conlon Collection.
While this batch seems to make a tidy page, they are actually destined for other things. A few name collections, a couple photo collections, and one is going with my Babe Ruth cards. Your rudimentary knowledge of baseball history should tell you which.
Okay, now things get a little more random. That 1960 Joe Cunningham All Star card is bound for a small collection of cards that I will reveal, well, around the All Star Break (I bought that one on eBay). That Rocky IV card is one from a set I never knew existed and captures one of the more ridiculous moments in a most ridiculous movie. Apollo Creed deserved better, dammit, and Rock should have thrown the damn towel. I got that lot of Piazza cards for the MLB Debut insert that I didn't have but it included that UD Masterpieces which might be my favorite non-Met Piazza card.
I am sure they are going for a Where's Waldo thing here, just another example of manufactured whimsy from Topps Opening Day. While nine card sets are ideal, I don't mind ten when I can pluck one of the cards for a player collection - in this case, David Wright - and use the rest for the page (even if it includes a Chipper Jones card).
I do love how busy this page looks and it will find a place of honor in my weird insert collection binder. There was also a 2020 Topps blaster waiting for me, but that will have to be another post. I needed something to cheer me up from missing that cute damn dog.
Agreed on the exotic traveling. I've come to believe it takes a certain gene to want to do that kind of thing, and I don't have it.
ReplyDeleteListia? There's a blast from the past. I forgot that existed.
Also, those OD Bazooka Joe cards are one of those interesting sets that I've never seen because there are no Dodgers in it.
Dog sitting rules! You get to enjoy bonding with the dog, but at the end of the day or week, you get to pass them back to the owner without the full responsibility of being a dog owner. Although the first major purchase when I retire will be to add a dog to the family.
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