Showing posts with label 2015 Topps Heritage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2015 Topps Heritage. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

2015 Topps Heritage - Sandy Koufax - A Legend Retires Subset

Following on the heals of their 2015 Baseball Series 1 retail exclusive subset of Jackie Robinson, Topps features another Dodger great for their Heritage series - Sandy Koufax.  It is exclusively available only in retail packs found at Walmart, and there are 15 total Koufax cards in the set.  As you can see below they each focus on an career milestone or important fact about "the left hand of God."

Of all the Dodger cards available in Heritage this year these might be the "must have" cards.  Check them all out below.  I apologize in advance for the poor cropping of some of the cards.

A Legend Retires Set (Walmart Exclusive)

#SK-1 Notches Shutout at 19                      #SK-2 Teenage Whitewash

Monday, March 09, 2015

2015 Topps Heritage - The Dodger Autograph, Relic, Box-Loader and Other Insert Cards

I'm not done posting about Topps' 2015 Heritage Baseball card set yet.  Featured below are the remaining autograph, relic, box-loader and other insert Dodger cards found within it.  In fact, all that remains are the Walmart exclusive Sandy Koufax subset called "A Legend Retires."  I hope to have photos of all of those cards soon.  Go here to check out all of my past post on this set.

Unfortunately, it doesn't appear that any of the Dodger autographed cards were seeded into packs (save the "1 of 1" cut signature cards).  Below is the known checklist.

1966 Cut Signatures
  • #66PCS-DD Don Drysdale
  • #66PCS-WA Walter Alston

Real One Autographs
  • #ROA-SK Sandy Koufax (redemption)

Real One Triple Autographs
  • #ROTA-KRW Kershaw, Ryan, Koufax (redemption)
The below '66 Mint coin cards are very scarce.  Four different variations are know:  Nickel #/15, Dime #/10, Quarter #/5, JFK Silver Dollar 1/1.

’66 Mint Set

#66M-CK Clayton Kershaw 
(not seen yet)

#66M-YP Yasiel Puig

Thursday, March 05, 2015

2015 Topps Heritage - All the Dodger Base, SP's & Variations

For the longest time I wasn't looking forward to seeing this Heritage branded flashback set.  The 1966 design is just bland and uninspiring.  There are no action photos, only portraits and posed shots.  The set screamed out, "I'm boring!"  And gosh darnit, my younger self didn't want to identify with that.

But as the years have gone by I've gained a surprising amount appreciation for it.  It's consistent and simple.  There's no unwarranted flash to get in the way, and who doesn't want a nice mug of your favorite players?  My older self has learned to accept that this minimalist approach is exactly the kind of thing I strive for.  And dammit, I sure do like it.

There are 20 Dodgers' in the base set, and it includes the very first cards of several new Dodger players.  Brandon McCarthy, Howie Kendrick and Jimmie Rollins get Dodger cards.  Strangely, Matt Kemp remains in Dodger Blue even though he was sent packing at roughly the same time we got Rollins and Kendrick.  Man, I tell ya, it's tough to be a Padres fan 'cause they get no respect.

There are several variations to chase if you're into that kind of thing; including a unique "Gum Back Damage" variation that has me intrigued.  For most of us older folks we had to accept the fact that the last card in any pack would always have wax/gum stains.  So, Topps decided to memorialize that with a variation that includes a "Gum" stain on the reverse.  Best yet, they also happen to smell like gum, so I guess you can call it a "scratch and sniff" card.  Anyway, go here to check out a complete checklist for this set and below are all of the cards.

#11 Michael Taylor & Joc Pederson

#43 Juan Uribe                                    #55 Justin Turner

Wednesday, March 04, 2015

2015 Topps Heritage - Some of the Dodger Insert Cards


The second Baseball card set of the 2015 Baseball season has officially been released by Topps.  It is the popular Heritage brand, and it pays homage to the vintage 1966 Topps set by using its design for the base set and some of its insert cards.  Go here to check out a complete checklist.


I've yet to collect images of all of the Dodger base cards, so you'll have to wait a bit for those.  In the meantime, below is a look at the more common inserts that are available.  Of note, there sure are a ton of Sandy Koufax cards.  Of note, one of the cards below features Dee Gordon as a Dodger. 

Baseball Flashbacks

#BF-10 Sandy Koufax

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Blog Kiosk: 8/27/2014 - Dodger Links - Offense Came Alive and Puig's Lack of Power


Roberto Hernandez had another quality start for the Dodgers yesterday afternoon, despite having runners in scoring position in four of his six innings.  He struck out three, walked two, gave up six hits and allowed only three earned runs.  I wonder if the results of his work in Blue has made a potential trade for Bartolo Colon less likely.  Graphic above via @Dodgers on twitter.

Furthermore, the Dodgers offense exploded against the Diamondbacks.  They racked up nine runs on fourteen hits, and every starting player, except for Puig, recorded a hit.  Six different players drove in a run, and Matt Kemp hit his sixteenth homer of the season.  Overall, the Dodgers displayed a well-balanced attack.  They were even helped along by a couple of Instant replays that went our way during the six run fourth inning.  Ken Gurnick at MLB.com has a good rundown on what happened there, here.

The Dodgers victory allowed them to maintain their 5.0 game lead ahead of the Giants.  Now, below are some links to check out:
Of course, the chances that the Dodgers will bring up Urias are roughly equivalent to the odds that the franchise will move back to Brooklyn. The reasons are many: he's barely 18, he's three levels away from the Majors, they don't want to add more stress on his arm, he doesn't have to be protected on the 40-man roster until after the 2016 season. If he did get the call, Urias would be the youngest player in the big leagues since Willie Montanez in 1966 and the youngest pitcher since Larry Dierker in '64.
Even with the scary corresponding timing between the hip injury and the power loss, we should be cautious about assigning the injury as the only cause for Puig’s struggles. There’s the whole “correlation does not mean causation” thing, and as Chad noted in the excerpt above, Puig’s mean fly ball distance almost matches last season. A few of the longer hits have been classified as line drives, too. This could just be regression to the mean, using arbitrary endpoints to describe a story. In other words, it could be a coincidence. Puig hasn’t been visually impacted by his hip in some time.
  • The other day Chris Olds at Beckett unveiled some early preview picks from Topps 2014 Heritage Baseball card set slated to come out in Early March.  Go here to check those out.  To the right is a Kershaw insert card.
  • Here's a scouting report fron FanGraphs.  Via Ron Shah at FanGgraphs, "Dodgers Righty Chris Anderson Flashes Big Stuff."
  • This is a very interesting article that I think is worth reading and studying for modern day Baseball card collectors.  Check out what Jeff Hwang at Sports Collectors Daily says about, "The Upside of the Modern Baseball Card."
In The Modern Baseball Card Investor, we used the term multiple expansion to describe the widening spread in values between premium-grade (PSA or BGS Gem Mint+ in modern issues) and ungraded cards, and also the spread between premium limited print, serialized parallels and base cards in Chrome Era modern issues (1993/1996-present), generally as a function of some combination of increasing demand due to growing star power; the card removal effect; and/or grade scarcity. Multiple expansion is not hypothetical conjecture, but a very real concept, with the clearest evidence of its existence present in the values of vintage issues.
So premium graded modern scarcities can and have already experienced multiple expansion in values with the added caveat that beta (to borrow a financial term for risk) is significantly higher due to the players standing in the hobby.  In other words, as long as a player is deemed to be a legitimate Hall of Fame-caliber player the values for their scarce issues should continue to be strong.
A great example of this are the prices for scarce and high-graded Michael Jordan cards.  I am constantly amazed at the values certain low-numbered cards regularly receive.  So, ten to twenty years from now can you imagine the kind of values a Mike Trout scarce rookie card might achieve if he continues being a monster at the plate, or a Clayton Kershaw?  I'm not saying you should run out and become a card investor, I just think it's interesting to think about.
On a side note, if I had the discretionary funds to spend significant dollars on cards I would focus my attention on vintage (in particular pre-war cards).  As the article intimates, there is less risk involved with those issues.  Modern scarcities may represent a potential higher return, but they also represent the greatest risk.
  • Following up on the above article, Tom Bartsch at Sports Collectors Digest notes that, "High Grades Lead to Skyrocketing Market Values for Modern Cards."  He notes that a PSA10 1971 Topps Steve Garvey rookie card recently sold for $25,393.  Wow!  I know that issue is extremely difficult in high grades, but that is amazing.  Another card to look at are the OPC Wayne Gretzky cards.  I've been told that they are absolutely on fire.

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