Showing posts with label impossible sets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label impossible sets. Show all posts

Monday, April 22, 2013

1999 Topps Tek: Set Builders Despair



In my collection: 2 5B, Patterns 6 and 21

Griffey looks: well-planted

Is this a good Griffey card? Yes.  Shiny, refracting plastic cards in myriad patterns - a frustrating yet forward-thinking set.

The set: I'm sure you've heard of this one before - 45 players, 2 different poses per player, 30 different patterns per card.  That makes for 60 different base cards per player - the whole enchilada is a whopping 2700 cards.  That is not including two inserts and a gold variant for every pattern.  Set builders hate this one.

The cards are hard, sturdy plastic.  You could use them to chop tomatoes, dig a splinter out of your finger, and scale a fish.  After all that you'd still get a grade of BGS 9 or better.

There are also two inserts: one for rookies called FantasTEK Phenoms and one for stars called TEKnicians, both seeded at 1:18.

There are 30 different patterns per pose, each with a different number but no name.  If you are a regular sports card blog reader, you've probably scome across Community Gum who recently attempted to assign names to a lot of the patterns found in this set, a daunting task.  They included such names as Lumber River, Sketchy Diamond, and Grandma's Couch. 

Unfortunately I only have two patterns, but one of them was not listed on Community Gum's post, so I will be naming it today.

Let's look at some Griffeys:




This is pattern P-21, which Community Gum calls "Sketchy Diamond." 

It looks like Griffey may have grounded to first or maybe fouled across the first base line.  Either way, that right foot looks well-planted, and I don't think he's running anywhere soon.  But check out the back - flippy shades!

There are three trademarked names listed in the legalese on the back: Serillusion, Premier Illusion, and Select Metalization.  They sound like a trance DJ, a strip club, and the process by which Wolverine was surgically altered, respectively.



Scans can make refractor cards each look different; hence, this one looks a lot less gold than the other Tek card in this post even though they were both in the same scan.  I assure you they are the same amount of shiny and gold.

This is the one that did not already get a name.  Well, pattern P-06, I hereby dub thee "City Triangles."  We're not ones to go nuts on the creative names here at the Junior Junkie.  We aim for bland and easy to guess.

There are 121 different Griffeys to be had, 60 of which are #/10.  Here are the 119 Griffeys I still need from 1999 Topps Tek:
5A P01-P30
5A P01-P30 Gold (1:15)
5B P01-P30 (except P-06 and P-21)
5B P01-P30 Gold (1:15)
T1 TEKnicians (1:18)

Sadly folks are very proud of their Topps Tek Griffeys, charging between 7 and 8 bucks for commons in any pattern.  I don't see me completing this set anytime soon.  And this is only the 2nd of three years they made Topps Tek.  That means there's a whole lot of different patterns floating around out there.....
But that's what collecting is all about: perseverence, patience, and paying too much for things.

Monday, April 1, 2013

A Real American Hero, or the 426 Unique Griffeys of 2008 SPx




In my collection: 22 different American Heroes, 24 total, and nothing of anything else including the base card.

Griffey looks: all G.I. Joe and stuff

Are these good Griffey cards? Yes.  It's a huge, expansive set dedicated to the man himself.  Gotta love it.

The set: 2008 SPx by Upper Deck is positively loaded with soul-numbing scarcity.  Numbered and relic cards abound with autographs, triple patches and all that nonsense.  The packs only contained 3 cards each but with an autograph or relic in every one.  It's as though the set was built in reverse with the autograph and relic cards having numerous parallels and the base set having none.

This means the base set ended up being pretty overlooked.  It took me an absurdly long time just to find what Griffey's base card looks like.  Here it is:



This picture is as close as we're gonna get.  Not a bad-looking card, though.  Cool die-cuts, etching, light refraction, nice logo - I would love to find one. 

I must admit there's a sliver of my soul that hurts when I publish a post of a set for which I am missing the base card.  Sadly, nobody seems to care about the base cards here.  I think they were mostly protection for the auto/relic card in each pack.  In fact there's very little information to be found about the set in general - just a massive 29-page checklist issued by Upper Deck and a lot of eBay auctions for the American Hero and relic cards.

Griffey collectors know 2008 SPx for two reasons.  First, the American Heroes set which, I admit, is awesome and not impossible (even a little fun) to complete.  I consider it a healthy though funds-consuming challenge. 

The other reason is that there are 426 unique Griffeys in this whole set including 100 1/1's and 100 1/3's.  It's a monster.  A beast.  Insurmountable.  A spirit-crusher.  2008 SPx was never meant to be completed.

So, for the purposes of this post I am only covering the Ken Griffey, Jr. American Hero insert set.  It's all I have for now.

Speaking of which:

 

 





 



 





 





This set is rich-looking.  The cards are all an old-gold foil backing color pictures and nice blurbs.  The foil fronts don't scan great, I'll admit; but I love how every single card reminds you that he does, indeed, still play outfield.

And that he's an American Hero, fighting terrorism and inspiring American youth, all G.I. Joe and stuff.  God bless him.

The back picture does not change until he goes to the Reds - this is not the only large Griffey-only set that does this.  I know it's for the sake of staying up-to-date on the uniform, but I'm surprised a set on this scale doesn't have a unique picture for the back of each card.  Still, no complaints.

Every card in this set is numbered to 725, meaning there are 72,500 regular cards of this set out there.  I have 24, putting me at 0.0331% of the lot.

In my research I used the official Upper Deck checklist as well as the parallels lists on Baseballcardpedia.com.  It took me a while, but here is a complete list of all 426 unique Griffeys from the 2008 SPx set and their quantities (again, apart from a few regular American Hero cards I have none of these.  Not even the base card):

#23
SSS-KG - Superstar Signatures
SSS-KG - Superstar Signatures Parallel
WM-KG - Winning Materials - #/150
WM-KG - Winning Materials - Autograph Parallel - #/20
WM-KG - Winning Materials - Die-Cut Parallel - #/150
WM-KG - Winning Materials - 3 Diamond Parallel - #/125
WM-KG - Winning Materials - Jersey # Parallel - #/125
WM-KG - Winning Materials - MLB Logo Parallel - #/99
WM-KG - Winning Materials - 3 Baseball Parallel - #/99
WM-KG - Winning Materials - MLB Team Letters Parallel - #/99
WM-KG - Winning Materials - Position Parallel - #/20
WM-KG - Winning Materials Rare - Patch Parallel 1 - #/99
WM-KG - Winning Materials Rare - Patch Parallel 2 - #/50
WM2-KG - Winning Materials 2 - #/75
WM2-KG - Winning Materials 2 - Jersey # Parallel - #/35
WM2-KG - Winning Materials 2 - Team Letters Parallel - #/25
WM2-KG - Winning Materials 2 - Position parallel - #/20
WM2-KG - Winning Materials 2 - 3 Baseball Parallel - #/20
WM2-KG - Winning Materials 2 Rare - Patch Parallel 1 - #/50
WM2-KG - Winning Materials 2 Rare - Patch Parallel 2 - #/25
WM3-KG - Winning Materials 3 - Parallel - #/99
WM3-KG - Winning Materials 3 - Team Letters - #/15
WM3-KG - Winning Materials 3 - SPx Parallel - #/10
WM3-KG - Winning Materials 3 Rare - Patch Parallel - #/15
WM3-KG - Winning Materials 3 Rare - Autograph Parallel - #/5
WT-GJP - Winning Trios (w/ Jeter & Pujols) - #/75
WT-GJP - Winning Trios (w/ Jeter & Pujols) - Parallel 1 - #/25
WT-GJP - Winning Trios (w/ Jeter & Pujols) - Parallel 2 - #/15
WT-GJP - Winning Trios Rare (w/ Jeter & Pujols) - Patch Parallel - #/25
KG1 through KG100 - Ken Griffey Jr American Hero - #/725
KG1 through KG100 - Ken Griffey Jr American Hero - Memorabilia Parallel - #/25
KG1 through KG100 - Ken Griffey Jr American Hero - Signature Parallel - #/3
KG1 through KG100 - Ken Griffey Jr American Hero - Boxscore Parallel - #/1

Ouch.

I have KG5, 6, 11, 12, 17, 19, 21, 25, 35, 37, 40, 42 (x2), 47, 49, 53, 62, 63, 64, 74, 78, 83, and 92 (x2).

I still hope to complete the American Hero set someday without spending a fortune, and also land a base card and possibly a 1/1.  An autograph would be nice, but I'm not holding my breath - I'm still hoping to land one of those from Nachos Grande's 2013 Topps Tribute Box break....

Have an excellent week, baseball card people!

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Too Many Medallions: 1998 Ultra




In my collection: 2 regular, 2 checklist #473, 1 checklist #473G Gold Medallion, 1 checklist #246, 2 Pizzazz, 3 Artistic Talents, 3 Big Shots, 1 Fall Classics, 1 Top 30

Griffey looks: like a boss

Is this a good Griffey card? Yes.  One of many card #1 cards assigned to Griffey by card companies, particularly in this set, and an exciting pack rip due to the large number of parallels and inserts.

The set: '98 Ultra was hitting the shelves right about the time I stopped collecting.  The officially-sanctioned Baseball Card Club at my school had disbanded, and I had nothing else keeping me engrossed in the hobby.  Plus I discovered girls. 

You know, now that I think about it, it was primarily the girls that distracted me from collecting.  Anyway, I wasn't buying packs.  That's what I'm saying here.

The design is nice and simple: full-bleed, nice raised foil script, and the updated Ultra logo.  The photography is also really good.  The back features a full-bleed, full-card photo with tons of stats and career highlights.

I know you card collectors can relate to this: you know when you're organizing a bunch of cards and you can't really tell what year the card is?  You may try to glean it from adding a year to the last line of stats or squinting to read the tiny copyright date.  Well Fleer noticed, so they started putting the set year in bold underneath their logo on the back.  Upper Deck started doing this as well.  Such a small change but great for collectors.

This set has an El Guapo-worthy plethora of inserts plus three different parallel sets, one of which is 1/1 (this one).  The subsets and checklists are all short-printed.  Those combined with the Gold, Platinum, and Masterpiece parallels add a big chunk to the "need it" column of '98 Ultra making this set a real asshole. 

Did I mention there's four of those 1/1 cards out there?  And one is a checklist?  Yeah.  Ouch.

If you add up all the base cards, subsets, parallels, inserts, and the four 1/1's you get 32.  I need 32 different Griffeys to complete this set. 

I have 9.

I think that if I had continued collecting through this time in the industry I would have developed an ulcer, something I did not get from girls.  This means that card collecting is, in fact, more frustrating than women

It may also be more expensive.  Think about that.

$1200, on sale for $720
Moving on, The toughest cards not counting the Masterpiece parallels are the Diamond Producers and Diamond Immortals inserts seeded 1:288 packs.  Both are valued in Beckett at $40.  Naturally, one is available on eBay for $720.00 (at the time of this post).  Yeah, it's a PSA 10, but come on.  You can get a 1993 Finest refractor for hundreds less.

Almost every insert from this set has Griffey as card #1.  That makes me want them even more.

I don't know what half the inserts even look like.  Remember when Beckett used to put pictures of all the different base and insert cards right there in the listings?  I miss that.  It would whet my card-buying appetite and give me the means to come up with a good want list.  Then again, it would probably be a lot thicker and more expensive (the Beckett, too).

Enough of that.  Let's look at some Griffeys!!!



How great is that front picture?  I don't even know what this guy just did to that ball, but I bet it was awesome.  Now he's watching his hit soar like a boss in no rush to run, taking in the awe of the crowd.  And I swear he's about to Dougie to first.

The lighting in the photo on the back is pretty much perfect like that of a late-afternoon game.  And look at that stat box - they did a great job fitting all that on one card.  And are those fielding stats?  Nice.



Checklists have come a long way.  If this didn't say "checklist," it could very well be the guy's base card.

Here's the Gold Medallion parallel:



This is much better than in previous years when it was just a little foil stamp.  Here's a side-by-side comparison fo the Gold Medallion parallel and the regular:



See how the swirly line is replaced by a description of the parallel?  That's a thing, too.

Here's the other checklist:


The green writing pops a lot better in this scan.  This is one of three cards from '98 Ultra that feature the flipped-up glasses look, but let's not spend all day on checklists, shall we?



The Pizzazz subset holds the record for most Z's on a Griffey.  That might not be true, but I sincerely doubt there's one with more.  Four on the front, four on the back: this is a ton of freakin' Z's.  If I find more, you'll be the first to know, gentle reader.

The background on the front has a rough texture, almost like sandpaper but less abrasive.  There is also a slight sparkle to it when you hold it in the light.  This is a subset that could easily have been an insert.  I bet it looks great in Platinum.

So I don't have any Platinum parallels, but they are silver and black with the name in sparkly holofoil.  If I ever land one, I'll slap it into this post for you viewiness.


The Artistic Talents insert is printed on a thick, canvas-like stock with his name in a cool font.  The photo on the back is unlike any Griffey pose I've ever seen.  It's kind of a sitcom-ish "puh-lease" look, like someone just said "Hey, Junior, are the Red Sox are on the verge of becoming a World Series-winning powerhouse?"



Hee hee, yeah.  You probly right.


 

This insert is shiny and colorful.  It depicts Griffey as a giant (as in huge, not San Francisco), towering over the ballpark.  He's a "big" shot.  Get it?  He's really big?  It's a crowd pleaser.

Anyhoo, bright colors, shiny title.  Just a fun card.

 


Griffey is framed on this card by a big, foggy egg.  What is hatching from this egg?  Success.

The blurb gives a rundown of how awesome Griffey was in the 1995 AL Divisional Playoff.  Not the most timely tidbit but a nice write-up. 

 

This is one of the better-designed inserts from this set, although the purpose of the insert as a whole remains a little vague.  I'm thinking it's just the top 30 players in baseball according to the folks at Ultra.  It's got a subtle metallic shine to it with an attractive logo; but overall I feel like I just watched a really good commercial (if there is such a thing) for a company I've never heard of, and I still don't know what they do.

Here's a list of all the 1998 Ultra Griffeys I don't have.

From the base set:
#1G Gold Medallion
#1P Platinum Medallion /100
#1M Masterpiece 1/1
#215 Season Crowns
#215G Season Crowns Gold Medallion
#215P Season Crowns Platinum Medallion /100
#215M Season Crowns Masterpiece 1/1
#246G Checklist Gold Medallion
#246P Checklist Platinum Medallion /100
#246M Checklist Masterpiece 1/1
#473M Checklist Masterpiece 1/1 (this one did not come in platinum)
#476G Pizazz Gold Medallion
#476P Pizzazz Platinum Medallion /98
#476M Pizzazz Masterpiece 1/1

Inserts:

Diamond Immortals #1
Diamond Producers #1
Double Trouble #1
Millenium Men #2
Notables #2
Power Plus #1
Prime Leather #1
Ticket Studs #7
Win Now #13

<sigh>

I also want #53 Mike Piazza playing the drums!  Neat card.