Saturday, February 21, 2026

Happy 2nd Baseball Card Day!

 

We've had one, yes.

What about 2nd Baseball Card Day?

It's true. For me, there are 2 big Baseball Card days every season. Today, for me, is the 2nd one - the Detroit Tigers first Spring Training game. Perhaps, such a glorious day for your team was yesterday. 

The Baseball portion of the day began perfectly, when the MLB At Bat app finally managed to stick the launch - the broadcast began with long-time Tigers broadcaster Dan Dickerson reciting a short ode to Baseball, a nod to Ernie Harwell doing the same thing on each season's first broadcast. MLB has not been faring well in delivering me this enjoyable rite of spring in that I would guess I have heard it about twice in the last 7 years.

That was sweet. Immediately afterward, Dickerson introduced his broadcast partner, long-time MLB starting pitcher Dan Petry. And then... MLB cut to commercials and obliterated the next simple joy of another rite of spring - hearing the announcement of my team's first starting 9, year 2026. Not well done.

To be fair, this sometimes happens on FM broadcasts on certain stations. What I particularly dislike about losing the line-up announcement to commercials is that the same broadcasters, both MLB and some radio stations, inevitably also broadcast filler commercials for themselves, because they couldn't sell all the possible ad spots. Let.Me.Hear.The.Lineups! Is that too much to ask of a paid audio subscription service?

I'm pretty sure the simple frustrations of enjoying audio Baseball lead me to focus on also having some packs to rip on Spring Training Opening Day. This year I largely went with a brand new "2025" Baseball Card set, released just 3 days ago:
Stadium Club is usually the "blaster" where I most notice the pointless extra packaging of 8 separate packs instead of a single brick of the 40 cards. Here we go with one last 2025 First Pack -

zero complaints

Say it with me now: "Baseball" "Picture" "Cards"

I will surely once again be enjoying a new Stadium Club release. I expect it has a perfect record in this regard. This year's design is simple, small, & baseball-esque.

I quite liked my 2026 First Card. Is that the Catcher gear for a "Brew Crew" game in Milwaukee? I'm not sure but will be doing some sleuthing on that as, if so, this will be a clutch add for my Brew Crew collection.

Let's flip over


another elegant effort; the background image is a subtle nod to the name of the product. I particularly appreciate the font size on Stadium Club.

I must confess that I always hope for repeat of a card back feature from the very beginning of Stadium Club — the use of the player's Rookie Card for the card back image. Another year of SC, another nope. Heritage Stadium Club? I'm ready.

Not seen on that card, but on many other cards, is a small detail in the "Acquired:" line, which reveals the round and even pick # in that round, for players still with the club that originally drafted them. Trivia on the back of a Baseball Card is a good thing.


Another truly "Stadium Club" image, as with the Contreras card. Another good thing.


The inevitable bad thing in Stadium Club packs: parallels. Always, in my opinion, completely useless. That's something which is particularly bugging-me when each card costs 62.5¢. I do not want Stadium Club parallels. 

This one actually scans better than it appears in hand, as it is the 1/blaster Sepia parallel. In a tiny bit of grace from the Baseball Card gods, there are no more Sepia parallels AND Orange parallels. Let us hope they never return.

Touchdown!

I pulled this card while the Tigers were batting for the first time in 2026. I briefly suspended pack openings on the thought that the Tigers #1 Ace would be on the mound for "Opening" Day, wouldn't he? 

No, no, that's not how it works on the first day of Spring Training. Duhh.

Rookie! Wheee!

The blaster stats weren't full-on ridiculous in that regard, at all, as of the 33 base cards, only 7 were Rookie Card cards. I have seen slightly worse ratios in small checklists; SC is slimmed down back to 200 cards this year, so RCs could have easily gotten out of hand. Just one blaster sample though.

That concluded the 5 card pack. Of the 33 base cards, 3 were Retired players; often a highlight of Stadium Club, perhaps those lights will be a little dimmer this year.

As usual, routine In Action photos can create Baseball Card perfection in Stadium Club, even with an image point seen countless times before...

something also true of Hitters Hitting cards


The Tigers love continued excellently in this blaster:

This is how to Stadium Club.

Although this is a Detroit image from the 2025 season, it felt like the perfect image to pull a few minutes before the Tigers prospect strode to the plate in Florida. Batting Practice is always a welcome sight on a Baseball Card in my opinion, and was a perfect accompaniment for a Spring Training appearance. Particularly as Jung is very, very much "on the bubble" in his sophomore season, with a solid crew of Tigers infield prospects coming along right behing him.

I even managed to pull a 2nd repeat Cy Young award winner card from the same blaster!
Now I get it.
Best Pitcher Face = Best Pitcher.

I suppose this is a new SC insert though the little cardboard box doesn't brag on that fact like it does with this next insert:
strong Land of the Lost vibes

check out the true Rainbow Foil

these things photograph very well

The total blaster contents were:

2 inserts
5 parallels
33 base
7 RC
3 retired

A few more, of interest


I always like Steven Kwan cards.

This is the Base Lime Green parallel probably exclusive to retail blasters, the only retail format it seems. At first I found this a bit more acceptable than the previous pink can of paint dumped on to the card. I simply imagined I was looking at Kwan playing in Oakland, but underwater, and all was kinda queasy well. Because, I like Steven Kwan cards.

But then, I pulled this card -
That's the way an "Oakland" card should appear, I suppose.
However, this wiped out my grudging acceptance of the Kwan parallel.

Then, the Baseball Card gods again took pity on the newly poor Stadium Club purchaser...


much better than playing in the San Francisco Bay
let's discount double-check, side-by-side


no doubt, SC parallels still dumb

Fortunately, no one buys Stadium Club for the parallels. Do they? Purchasing packages of Baseball Cards just to get the parallels, hmmm, let's not get all Baseball Card existential here. Instead, we suffer the dumb-dumb parallels to get to the good stuff SC always delivers -


- and 2026 Stadium Club does indeed deliver. I was fortunate, I thought, to find a 2026 blaster for $25 at my temporary LCS near where I work. I would expect the local Big Boxes to charge $35 and I doubt I would pull that trigger. Nor will I likely repeat this blaster purchase as I will just plan on buying the most fun cards on the checklist from Sportlots for 20¢ each.

As a once weekly dopamine hit from "ripping" however, a small acquisition of Stadium Club is a good way to get motivated to finally dial in that Sportlots interface (I feel like taking notes might help) and get myself some of the most striking cards produced each year. Baseball Picture Cards. 20¢. Can't wait.































Thursday, February 19, 2026

A few more new LCS treasures

 This year I was lucky to be able to visit an LCS on the day some brand new Baseball Cards were released, back on the 11th when 2026 Topps Baseball Series one appeared.

However I can hardly visit an LCS without also looking at the old cards. I didn't have a whole lot of time for that, on that visit, but I managed some finds...

This card checked several very current boxes for me. Buying it felt like a great way to celebrate the surprise of the Tigers seeming to "push in the chips" for the 2026 season with a pair of big name starting Pitcher signings, JV being the 2nd of those after also hiring Framber Valdez for the next 3 (will there be 3?) seasons.

I had never seen this card before, not being one to deliberately look for Team USA or Futures Game type cards. As if there aren't enough Rookie Card cards to pick from, there are also of course "pre" Rookie Cards, sometimes also called Prospect cards, and although this next terminology - "pre-Prospect" cards - might not be in common usage, I well know there are cards created for players before they are even prospects, too.

Meanwhile I am in the beginning stages of a new effort at collecting 2005 Topps, a design which is also quite perfect for my simple one page Player Collections, with the dramatic LAST NAME up there at the top. So discovering a 2nd VERLANDER card (a fresh take on the idea is his 2025 Archives card, though in a Giants uniform) will potentially fit into multiple collecting efforts, particularly since his card in 2005 Topps Baseball says DRAFT PICK on top, which is far from ideal. His 2005 Topps Chrome card does say VERLANDER on top, but that card only appears in an autographed version. Justin never warmed up to signing Baseball Cards afterwards; his autos are rare and expensive as a result, and of course so many people only want autographed Rookie Card cards, so his '05 TC Rookie auto will never be a card that I own as it sells in the four digit range I believe.

However I remained perplexed for a bit on just what set this card appeared from. So many collectors are so excited by the prospect of somehow obtaining their very own priceless '52 Mantle card, for pretty much every first round draft pick, every year, that countless pre-Prospect, Prospect, and Rookie Card cards exist for a chance for people to believe they can luckily complete that completely unrealistic quest. One result is "Futures Game" cards might appear almost anywhere in an impossible-to-know-them-all galaxy of Baseball Card product, in a set, or an insert set, or an online-only release, or who knows where; I certainly never ever care about the idea.

Fortunately, this card finally offered up the necessary set origin clue, on the back of the card -
- that being the "UH220" - the card #

which reveals that this is a card from 2005 Topps Updates & Highlights.

That theme - a new-to-me Tigers card from an update set, quickly continued:
2010 Topps Update

2010 did drop the "Highlights" concept from Series Three, and was perhaps considered the Update "Set" internally at Topps as this is card #US-37.

Personally I never warmed up to the 2010 design with the seeming graphical conceit that we are looking through a keyhole or possibly a camera aperture of the kind known as a "fisheye lens." I do however quite like the use of Team Color to create that effect, and overall the design stays out of the way to let the game of Baseball be the focus, not the graphics. The result of all that, for me, is just a very slow-motion effort to build a Tigers team set and probably not much else from 2010 Topps Baseball.

I will probably need another copy of this card however, as I was quite pleased to discover a Tigers card to use on a small collection of "It's a Pop-Up" cards.

Also I can note that 2026 Topps owes a tipped cap salute to 2010 Topps, it appears.

Very small collections informed my next pull from the single's box...
2004 Topps Baseball
® & © 2003 THE TOPPS COMPANY INC.

Yes, you are seeing that correctly; that is how the teeny-tiny legalese on the back of the card reads. This card must have been created not long after the era when the Topps Baseball set for the coming season was fully publicized and graphically disseminated via advertising -BEFORE- Christmas, a trend I completely abhorred, leading to the copyright date not matching the official season of the actual Baseball Card.

None of that has anything to do with why I kept this nice example of a Topps Gold parallel, which was because although I always like Manager cards, I particularly like Manager cards showing one "In Action," as the Baseball Card lexicon describes it. And I figured I would never ever see a copy of this card for sale ever again, regardless of being a parallel or just a boring base version, so this was my one chance to chip away at reaching 9 nifty Managers, In Action cards.

Those three cards were delightful finds from just a single row of 'single digit' cards ($1 ~ $10) in a multi-row box; that particular LCS had 5 more rows of them I could peruse on some anticipated future visit. Alas, sometimes the greater enemy of enjoying Baseball Cards is not cost, but Time, and that is all the cards I can scan for you right now, although that LCS visit did offer up some other surprising treasures -
yes, the Good Ole Grateful Dead on some cards, a new release from Upper Deck

stay away, is my advice, as a GD fan of several decades

will scan some soon

&, finally, this It Also Comes in Packs delight:

Preview: It was a "fun rip"

scans soon-ish

cya then


Sunday, February 15, 2026

Happy Baseball Card Day!

I'm not exactly sure if there is an official Baseball Card Day. And, it's not even the same day for different people. 

For me, Baseball Card Day passed on Wednesday, February 11, 2026. But maybe, for you, it hasn't arrived yet. 

I just apply this contented descriptor to the day I open a brand new pack of the new year's Topps Baseball set. Which is something I will -always- look forward to, every year / Baseball-season.

This year went particularly well in that I had zero knowledge of the design until I ripped an actual pack, mission accomplished on Wednesday night after work, which was the first day Local Card Shops could sell the cards. So I got in early, with no foreshadowing, always a tricky business in a daily life ever more awash in images. I did however have too much busy-ness going on that night to post cell phone pictures of the cards on my actual Baseball Card Night, and the upside was an ability to reach an actual scanner for them.

2026, here we come...


...and I think I can Walk Off this First Card victory. The crowd goes wild!

Hopefully Boston fans can remember this exact game. If I still had my childhood affinity for the Bosox I would track down the source of this image. Well played, Topps.

I am particularly intrigued by the Celtics uniform homage? Or a Green Monster homage? There, on what must be the Red Sox City Connect uni 2.0? I could probably look up how many teams have by now released a second go with the City Connect uniforms, but I'd rather just wait and see them on my Baseball Cards. However, never did I ever expect to see some Powder Blue uniform accoutrements on a Red Sox player. Wonders never cease.

2026 Baseball Cards certainly began for me with a bang on that one. Which makes me think I will like this design in a general sense, as I am drawn into the image rather than the design work. I think incomplete white borders can be sneaky good in this way.

However my other quick conclusion after the image breathing so well is a vague been-there-just-the-other-day feeling, probably traceable to 2025 Topps Baseball also being a left edge design.

I have to think this isn't the first card design to use just 2 or 3 letter city name abbreviations. I will just stumble across some other example of that, on-card, eventually I am sure. Given a certain trend in those City Connect uniforms, we may be seeing a lot of those certain capital letters.

This 2026 Topps Baseball Cedanne Rafaela Baseball Card once again makes me wonder why the Boston Red Sox get the actual red socks on their cards, something which only sometimes appears on their uniform. Many a Baseball Card set have gone to the Boston socks while other teams live with card logos matching their caps. The teams have official logos, I have always presumed, and Boston has picked the pair of red socks. Topps -could- print a capital letter "B" on an old-timey font matching a Boston player's cap - but that is also a rare choice by Topps. Welcome back once again, red socks, I suppose, you do make for appealing Baseball Cards, even if I will never know why more teams can't have team graphics on their cards, instead of team letters.

Meanwhile, the color stripe. What IS that? I bought some tarps for work that same night. Each one includes this mysterious bonus piece, 

   in case you need extras and can magically connect them to whatever remains of your tarp. Never did I ever expect to be comparing parts of a cheap little tarp to parts of a .... Baseball Card.

What will this set be called? The Swatch? The Tire Tread? The Swatches? The 75th? Maybe by the All-Star break I will remember (hope so) to do some deliberate online sleuthing on nicknames for it, when Series Two rolls in.

And yeah, the back, you're supposed to read the backs. When Topps makes a Baseball Card with a blank back, it will be crazy expensive and crazy hard to get, so you'd better flip the card over, cuz that's 50% of each and every Baseball Card:

hmmm, the Swatches get much bigger here. But that's good; card backs can almost always use as much color as they can get out of the designer(s), and this one is no exception. Nor is it any exception to standard issue Topps Baseball card back style going back how many years sequentially now? I could laboriously go look up some card images from the mid-late '00s and figure it out, but I would rather just move along onwards into 2026 -

We all know labeling this player as a "Pitcher" is technically 100% correct, while we also know that on Baseball Cards, this image can only mean Trevor Megill is a "Reliever." The sun comes up, the sun goes down, the Topps Baseball set sails on with it's tropey tropes.

You just can't beat a Rookie Cup in the year's First Pack.

Looks like the Swatches will grow on the horizontal cards. The Team Card trope is steady as she goes, cap'n, steady as she goes.

Do the Mariners have a Powder Blue cap now? This seems both familiar, and unfamiliar. Sometimes, Baseball Cards leave me with more sartorial confusion than before I opened the pack they were in. I suspect 2026 might be a long year in this regard.

What Baseball Card collector doesn't cheer for the players with the most unique names? Oh, yeah, the ones who are only interested in the cards with the most unique prices.

My first Pete Rose memorial patch seen, on-card. These can often appear in the sets released after the Baseball season, which are many. But I can't recall pulling a 2025 Reds card showing this 2025 season uniform tribute. It feels just exactly perfect, to see in my 2026 First Pack.

Ahh yes, an everyday Major League Baseball starting Shortstop, shown In Action, is more perfection in a First Pack on a snowy winter night.

Only the best names.

The insert I was most looking forward to.
Will be building this checklist through the three 2026 series.

As Baseball Card-y as Baseball Cards get. 

This pack is now 6-for-11 in frame breaking and will finish at .583 here shortly. Who doesn't like a good frame break?

And, why doesn't Atlanta ever have the tomahawk on their Baseball Cards?

Another year, another Cardinals Contreras card; notable here is the Position played. This one is a well executed Redbirds card.

The 2026 Hobby Pack is 12 cards; I will next see 2026 Topps Baseball in single retail packs which will probably continue the Stars of MLB one/pack insert.

Overall, the colorful swatches balance well with the open white border while the stitching patterns on the left edge are neither overdone nor obtrusive. Every card element seems pretty crisp and on-point. Do we still use the expression "on-point" - I, dunno.

Looks like I will be routinely looking forward to visits to the Baseball Card store, errr, the grocery store, but only the one that has Baseball Cards, here in the nascent 2026 season, the 75th for Topps Baseball. 










Saturday, February 7, 2026

It comes in ... Packs?

The other day I was finally able to visit my ever more wonderful Hometown Local Card Shop. I truly hope you have one of those, in your Hometown.

The visit was on my way out of Hometown, heading back to where I work in the winters lately, 150 miles to the south. It had been an unfortunate visit in that just after I arrived I had begun to notice a fresh nasal drip in the back of my throat, which quickly escalated to yet another annoying round of respiratory illness. 2026 has not been kind to me on the Health front, that's for sure.

A definite casualty of the unpleasantness was some Baseball Carding time, in general, and in particular, no energy to run the scanner to create 600dpi res images to share with you, something I always look forward to. My previous post, featuring another round of $1-ish cards, was written with scans made over the recent holidays.

Fortunately the return trip had no time constraints so I could still squeeze in a visit to the LCS, something I only settled on upon concluding that my makes-no-sense (given that I had coughed through a round of Covid in the middle of January) coughing & sneezing was traceable to a new cat in the house where my Baseball Cards live, rather than a communicable disease.

I mostly stopped at the LCS to get the most important piece of information for me, this time of year: what day is 2026 Baseball Card Day? Although I think there is an official Baseball Card Day on some astutely chosen Summer day during the actual season of playing Baseball, I consider Baseball Card Day to be the big day in February of late, when Series One of the Topps Baseball set is released. That turns out to be next Wednesday, February 11th. If you aren't looking forward to that day, you are reading the wrong web page.

Although I had plans to sit down and wonderfully palm through a $1 box, or the 50¢ box, over a fresh cup of Java from the Coffee Shop next door, that establishment proved to be closed for a winter vacation. This threw me off my game-plan completely and I found myself contentedly chatting up the Baseball Card news with the only employee around, while gazing through all the display cases for the always predominant "Buy Singles" faction of collectors, full of cards I would never actually buy anyway.

Until, that is, I reached the end of those cases where a new shelving unit was sitting, full of a wide variety of "Junk Wax" products - mostly factory sets from the 80s to the 00s. And, an assortment of opened boxes with loose packs for sale. Including, these:


Much like I will have to do next Wednesday night, I can only post up images of my happiest day of Baseball Carding so far this year, via cell-phone camera. Sorry, not sorry.

I knew instantly what was held inside these Swell packs; I have had a "Baseball Greats" set on my eBay watch list for quite some time now, after pulling an Al Kaline Baseball Greats card from a repack box some years ago already.

But I have long had a not sneaking, but definite suspicion that I would never pull the trigger on purchasing such a set. Probably mostly because I just don't like the idea of paying > $10 shipping to receive Baseball Cards. Even though COMC shipping charges are becoming infamous at this point, I pay those with Free Money obtained by stupidly paying the gambling tax on packs of brand new Baseball Cards, just as I will be doing next Wednesday, and have been doing whenever a run for groceries turns up a blaster of Archives on the shelves, which is surprisingly not as common as you would think. People are just loving them Baseball Cards lately, seems to me. The not free-at-all money is partially returned to me when I finally get around to sending a 10 year old Manny Machado card out to COMC and someone gives me $1 for it, which I can never understand, but does make shipping not-Machado cards back from COMC become "Free," kinda-sorta, not really.

I also don't care for receiving Baseball Cards in shipped boxes, as even in small towns, boxes on porches attract Porch Pirates, and the thought of someone stealing my usually-worthless-but-still-surprisingly-hard-to-find Baseball Cards is of course totally horrifying. Whereas a single worthless Baseball Card in a regular letter envelope would never be stolen out of an actual mail box, because that is a Federal Crime and those seem to have pretty serious repercussions, as it appears on the News lately.

So the cool looking plastic box of 140 or so Baseball Greats routinely cycles to the top of my eBay fantasies and then fades away again, a conundrum never to be solved, I thought. I suppose a set of Baseball Greats could appear on a card dealer's table at one of those seemingly mythical Baseball Card "Shows" I have heard of, but are never able to attend, since they don't hold those out in the Backwoods, where I usually am.

The one thing I had never contemplated about this unfortunate yin-yang want-don't-want-enough push-pull was how a set of Baseball Greats had ever been delivered to Baseball Card fans, back in the day, when they were brand new. For all I knew, they were put directly into the plastic snap boxes as seen on my eBay watchings, and then handed out to collectors, fully assembled, much like the numerous such small 80s sets sold, complete, in a single small cardboard box, with names like the Kmart MVP Collection or Baseball's Exciting Stars, aka basic "Boxed Sets." That was my thinking, until the other day anyway, when I so unexpectedly found myself looking not at just that pleasing red waxed wrapper now already scrolled back off your screen, but instead, this glorious sight -

A Complete Unopened Box of Baseball Greats!

The cards not only arrive in soothing little wax packages, unbeknownst to me, but I suddenly had an opportunity to own a whopping 36 packs of these treats.

This delightful treasure was mine for the simple price of $25 + Zero Shipping.

Here's a closer look at some box details:

OK, a bit of an oopsie there in that I thought the MLB Logoman would appear in that picture, a Logoman telling me the product was OFFICIAL LICENSEE / MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL, continuing beneath with more probably required legalese "PLAYERS' NAMES AND LIKENESSES LICENSED BY MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PROPERTIES" — all information I already knew from seeing Swell Baseball Greats cards occasionally, on-screen, but still quite re-assuring in that I really do prefer to see the team iconography on fully licensed cards, which is strangely never mentioned in all that legalese that just seems to always grow larger, decade by decade, in the universe of Baseball Cards.

OK, ok, time to get this show on the road. Let's rip a pack!
We have a Winn-Ahh!
(best heard from the famous Comet Pinball machine)

Well it certainly appears certain that no one has searched this box, I must conclude. That's pretty Great. And it is just durn hard to beat opening a pack of Baseball Cards to discover Hank Aaron, right off the bat, no matter what year, product, manufacturer, whatever. I just got a Hank Aaron Baseball Card I didn't have before the other day, and that's freakin' cool. But we all know the card on the bottom of the pack isn't the First Card to be remembered forever and everer, or so we always hope. Let's flip the little stack of 10 cards over:
Sweet. A Powder Blue Baseball Card with a matching blue sky. And you wondered where they got the inspiration for these classic unis, way back there in the days of Baseball Greats known as - the 1970s? 

I will be honest here. I love the 1970s, very much. I just didn't expect they would be included amongst the Baseball Greats. And, even if they were, I expected I would know the names of every Baseball Great included in my pack of 10 Baseball Greats.

But I was completely unfamiliar with who Deron Johnson was. This likely traces to his exclusion from a key Topps set in my Baseball Card life - 1975 - my very first ever seen set of Topps Baseball Cards, from which I also pulled a Hank Aaron card from a waxed package. With that set, I probably knew the players I didn't have a little better than the ones I did, as they had an annoying empty square next to their name on the checklist card. He did appear one final time in Topps Baseball, in 1976, but I actually peaked a little early back there in 1975 and struggled to assemble anywhere near as many 76s as 75s and was unfamiliar with his 76er. 

I am in no way unhappy about this, finding a true Baseball Great (1765 Games Played) with whom I was unfamiliar, just a touch surprised at this first checklist entry I finally managed to find. I did learn quite a lot about Deron Johnson from the back of the card -
Now this, I did expect, and was something I was quite looking forward to:
"LIFETIME STATISTICS"

Of course there is an instant fork in the road when the back of a Baseball Card is created for a retired player - a table of complete stats with one line per season, or the single career line as seen here. Overall I quite like this approach of trading in the year-by-year stats for a nice pair of paragraphs summarizing the career; quite well done.

I was a bit more chagrined that I did not know that Deron Johnson was a key cog in the legendary Swingin' A's, a team I quite admired mostly from those fabulous 1975 Topps World Series cards, but I was only 6 years old in 1973 and not yet cognizant of concepts such as "Baseball" and "World Series," yet.

Overall, a pretty perfect First Card of a Philadelphia Phillie in a set from Philadelphia, PA, kinda-sorta, as denoted by the appearance of PHILA. CHEWING GUM CORP. there on the back of the card....

.... which just created oodles more mystery in my mind however, something that was also part of the strange allure of Swell's Baseball Greats cards, before I finally found them to purchase. I well knew that Swell was a brand of bubble gum; if I saw a tub of it on a gas station counter today, like I routinely did as a child, I would buy a piece occasionally still today. I love bubble gum.

But whenever I had seen a Baseball Greats card, I always wondered how Swell managed to make both bubble gum, and Baseball Cards? I mean, I did know from even way before I ever saw a Swell Baseball Greats card that it couldn't possibly have arrived with any actual bubble gum, a concept that the Topps Chewing Gum Corp. had on 100% legal lock-down. Every Baseball Card collector surely knows that backwards & forwards, amirite?

Yet here we have a whole other Chewing Gum Corp. making Baseball Cards — and it's in (kinda-sorta) Philadelphia, PA???

That's where Fleer Corporation was from, too. I will never forget stumbling across this sight while visiting Philadelphia in 2016:
Oh, what a tangled web was woven, there in Philly. I'll suggest a setting of the wayback machine to 2014 and a visit to the Topps Archives blog (yes, you read the name correctly), for bit of history of the OG Chewing Gum Corporation and probably not at all coincidentally, the creators of the first set of "Baseball Greats" which was not the PHILA. CHEWING GUM CORP., even though that 1960 set of Baseball Greats was actually created in Philadelphia, which is not where the PHILA. CHEWING GUM CORP. actually was, being perhaps just across a City Limits line over in Haverton, PA.

Confused yet? I was. Another good look at the history of chewing gum and specifically Fleer Corp.'s role in that can be found at a Philly history website called Hidden City, which however also doesn't mention these Swell cats going all copy-cat on many things happening in Fleer land over the decades. Perhaps somewhere out there a wonderful blogger has written up a Swell history of PHILA. CHEWING GUM CORP., but I am getting itchy to see more Baseball Cards...
Hey, look — it's Mr. Mint!
(err, no, it's not that Al Rosen)

I did kinda vaguely already know that, but I confess I had to discount double check, just in case. I would have to imagine Al Rosen Baseball Cards were a particular favorite of the first ever famous Baseball Card dealer, but that's a rabbit hole I will never care to visit.

And I was proud to know that Al Rosen was a 1940s & 50s player, which was something I was more expecting from my nascent Baseball Greats collection. Big bonus points for you, dear Reader, if you can confirm the backdrop of this card, something I am very slowly beginning to think I understand, not being a proud owner of very many 1950s Baseball Cards, until perhaps, now, kinda-sorta.

The surprises just kept right on rolling on the 3rd card in the pack, too -
Confusion...is next.

Why confusing? Because in my mind, Fritz Peterson = mustachio'd. Because, 1975 Topps. But there, he is a Cleveland Indian, not a clean-shaven Yankee. And his 1976 Topps Baseball Card, well now there's one heapin' helpin' of straight-up confusion. But you'll have to 'clect that one on your own, I always get too quickly exhausted by all those 1973 style player silhouettes on 1976 Topps and I can never focus on them very well, so I mostly opted out of 2025 Heritage in favor of saving up for 2027 Heritage and thus lost my chance to get a 50th Anniversary stamped copy of that '76 Fritz Peterson, sigh. That card is truly a sight to behold.

Anyhow, it was cool to see Yankee Stadium still being the OG Baseball Card backdrop once again. Seems fitting for a Baseball Great. Batter up!
POW!
Powder Blue batting gloves, too.
Close enough for me.
The 1970s truly were Great.

Watching Baseball from a 3rd deck, though, perhaps not so much. Anyhow, a player I was vaguely familiar with, from cards, though one admittedly not on my Greats list.

Now this is what I was anticipating quite a bit more of, when I purchased this wonderful box of cards. Black & White photo, 30s to 50s player, name probably instantly known to fans of the time, but not to me, too many decades later. Quite Great.

100% what I expected to see in this set. I hope all 5 inaugural Hall of Famers are included; I sometimes wonder how many sets of Baseball Cards have ever achieved that feat. Probably several, but also probably many more were never able to do it as rights contracts expire, heirs change decisions, etc., yadda, etc.


Yet more as drawn up during the years of pre-game, imagining Swell Baseball Cards. A slight bend in the usual paradigm here is an early 1950s career, but a full color photograph including a bit of backdrop, something not seen on cards until 1957 I believe. My guess is this photo could be from a classic Yankees "Old Timer" game; hard tellin' for sure.

Powder Blue Hot Pack?

Larry Sorensen played until 1988, says one part of the card back, while another bit suggests he retired in 1987. Not the Greatest moment for Swell Card Back Writer. Fantastic Powder Blue flashback, surely. But I'm starting to get creepy 21st century Topps vibes with the mix of journeymen and Inner Circlers, though Topps does that with 11 game Rookies, not 11 year veterans like Sorensen. I will definitely be bindering up this set in order of date of player retirement, not card #, that I can tell you. It's the only way I can handle Hall of Famers mixing with commons.

All Aboard!
We're heading back to Cooperstown.
More, please...

What a treat.

Never did I ever expect to find a Hank Aaron Baseball Card that I could add to my Willie Stargell collection.

Wait, wot? 

Yes I enjoy collecting cards that show a player wearing a batting helmet over his regular ball cap, something I associate with Willie Stargell more than any other player. I am certain that as pages of such images reach my collection, I will be able to place a Willie Stargell card on every such page, quite easily. And now, Willie and Hank will be hangin' out together, foreverer and evers, right on my coffee table.

Well that was quite a journey through Baseball History, for the low low price of just about 70¢, kinda-sorta. I am quite looking forward to exploring this set just one pack at a time; I figure it will go particularly well with an upcoming subscription to the paid streaming service I plan to buy with a brand new Color Television as I move on up to that deluxe life in the sky, rather than on the road all the time. A streaming deal I have my eye on is the various documentary series from Ken Burns, certainly beginning with his look at our beloved Game of Baseball; these cards will be just one nifty accoutrement I will be enjoying right alongside that.

I only mostly expect I will easily complete this set however, as my first few days of pure Baseball Card bliss with these have now given way to the sad news that packs 5, 6, and 7 were card-for-card repeats of packs 1, 3, and 4 that I have pulled from this box. Yes, all ten cards the same, in 2 separate packs. Not the way any Baseball Card collector would draw it up in their mind, ahead of time, at all.

Perhaps that explains the availability of this particular box of treasures, 36-ish years later. If I purchased 2 packs of Baseball Cards as a child and the packs were complete duplicates of each other, I would have sworn off using the word Swell for the rest of my life for such a low down dirty crime. But for just 70¢ a pop, I think I can afford to be gracious here. I'll let you know how it turns out, some day. If you might perhaps need a card or 59 from 1990 Swell Baseball Greats, well, I'm your huckleberry.