Tuesday, November 15, 2016

1992 Classic Minor League set break (and lamenting the lack of ladies on the blogs)


I won a sealed factory set of 1992 Classic Best Minor League Baseball Cards from Julie way back in January. I exercised some patience, but finally ripped into it last night, deciding to raid it for my PCs and dump the remainder in the spirit of tightening up my collection a bit.


These are the big 3 of the set, no doubt. Jeter, Piazza, and Chipper.


A few of the other guys who went on to solid careers.


These 4 were all PC needs for me.


Giving you a look at the backs and a few of the more quirky names in the set.


Classic snuck in 3 MLB stars. I often see that Griffey at the card show whilst digging through bins and for a second I'm like, "minor league Griffey card!" then I notice the "1992" and I'm like, "hey, Junior was already an established star by that point. πŸ‘Ž"
The Nolan Ryan is a nice card.. and one I don't recall seeing before.
The Mike Schmidt card is a bit of a head-scratcher. It has nothing to do with minor leagues. He had "a minor league card" in the previous Classic Minors set (the only such throwback in 1991 Classic Minors), so I guess I understand them not wanting to repeat themselves, but still wanted to milk their association with him. So we get a card commemorating his 500th home run from a few years earlier. The back features the full box score of the game, yet neglects giving the date. (Google tells me it was Apr 18, 1987.)


And an artist's rendering of one of the Schmidt photos (see 500th HR card) is used on every checklist. As a player collector, I feel like I should include these in my Schmidt PC and count them towards my goal of 100 unique cards of the guy.. but I don't necessarily feel good about that. Kind of like breaking up a no-hitter in the 9th with a bunt. Or losing the popular vote but still getting elected.

Anyways, there are some highlights from the set. But yeah, the gist of the cards are guys I've never heard of. Any team collectors out there (who also collect minor league affiliate cards), feel free to get in touch regarding trades. But do it ASAP, because I'm currently loading up a big box of cards to dump on Billy, and the majority of this set will likely end up in there.
Red Sox trader buddies... do you need/want the Sox from this set?
Same question to Cubs collectors. And Braves? Brewers? Pirates? Let me know.

Big thanks again to Julie for surprising me with this set as the prize for losing a contest of hers. Very nice of her to do.

On a side note...
It's a bummer that Julie hasn't been seen around the cardsphere for quite a while now (7 months since a new post on A Cracked Bat, and I don't recall her commenting anywhere since then either). I hope things are going well with her and she makes a comeback soon. And thinking about women cardbloggers... it's kind of depressing. The lady from Portugal (Hobby Cards Europe) hasn't posted much in the past several months. Caitlin, the young collector from Canada, seems to have gotten run off the blogs for reasons I'm not privy to. Funner Here, the cardblog run by a female Phillies fan, is completely dead and gone now. A Cardboard Problem isn't updated very often anymore (though Sooz is active on Twitter, with #CardChat being a cool weekly social event she runs). But yeah, it sucks that the cardsphere is such a sausage party these days. Even Fashion Shoes hasn't been around lately! (ok, that one was a joke.) I'd love to see more diversity around these parts.. gender, race, age, etc. But what can you do? I don't really have any suggestions other than to say collecting cards is fun, and it's made even better by being part of a community who shares your interest. So start a blog if you haven't already! Even if you're a middle-aged white guy.. but especially if you aren't!
 πŸ‘―πŸ‘±πŸ‘³πŸ‘΅πŸ‘ΆπŸ‘ΈπŸ˜Ž
(Have you noticed Blogger now has an "insert special characters" button on the blog compose page? LOL. These are fun. I hope the faces are actually showing up for everybody, not displaying as plain squares or whatever.)

Ok, enough rambling.
Thanks for stopping by!

15 comments:

  1. I see plain squares.

    The female collector/blogger phenomenon has been going on for awhile. There are several pre-your time that blogged for a year or two then disappeared. Dinged Corners seemed to have the most staying power but they've been gone for quite some time. It's too bad. Obviously there are many more male collectors than female but you'd hope a couple would stick around.

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  2. I can see the faces and no, I didn't notice the new feature. Thanks for point it out. I miss Julie and wish we were a more diverse group, but it is what it is: a sausage-fest.

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  3. Hopefully Julie is well. I think I came in second in her contest. I have an unopened set she sent as well

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  4. Sherrard Clinkscales is a legend in my family. My card blog was mostly spurred by the discovery of Wonderful Terrific Monds the Third, but I don't think it would've gotten off the ground without Sherrard Clinkscales.

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  5. Wonderful Monds! I remember the first time I saw one his cards...did a triple take. Pretty sure I need the Angels in that set.

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  6. I was pondering on that a few days ago myself. When you look in the stands at any sporting event, the breakdown (no pun intended) is roughly half men and half women...yet at collecting events and websites, which I am counting blogs in, it's almost totally men. I don't understand it. I don't know what every card blogger looks like, but I only know of one blog run by a black man. ONE! I know there have to be more collectors out there who aren't white, but where? I don't know. I'd like to read their thoughts about their collections and see their newest highlights too.

    One thing I will say is that I've seen a huge upswing in female participation in the comic book hobby over the past few years. I think it's a good thing. Hobbies are fun for everyone, not just middle aged fat white men as the stereotype is...(and as a little too close to home for comfort, here) Room for everyone. Maybe some day cards will see that same level of participation.

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  7. I had done a trade with Caitlin right after she quit blogging, if I remember correctly she told me that she just didn't have time and she deleted the blog because she knew she would not return but she still was collecting.

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  8. I've seen this set a thousand times but never ran across a checklist. They're not what I expected.

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  9. I guess I'm hopeful that in 15 years or so the girls who are collecting as kids now will get nostalgic and come back to the hobby as adults. That seems to be the way it goes.

    During the time I collected most heavily in the 1980s, I don't recall many girls/women being interested in baseball cards. Not sure why, either.

    I haven't the foggiest idea if I need any of the Brewer-affiliated players from this set. I haven't gotten that far in my sorting to figure it out. My sorting is now going on year 3, by the way. :-)

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  10. Maybe I should really try to get my daughter to like cards. She can start a spinoff blog!

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  11. Great set. If I stumble across one at an affordable price at the flea market, I'll grab it.

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  12. LV is still going strong:
    http://ttmautographs-lv.blogspot.com/

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  13. For what It's worth,I'm Hispanic.Puerto Rican. Not sure how many others like me are blogging about cards but In all actuality,I don't stress the race factor as much.If you like cards ,you like cards,shouldn't matter what you look like or where your from.I'm sure we all slab our cards the same ,one at a time.

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  14. I got a pack brand new never opened before whi shiukd i be looking fir in that year

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