Posts Tagged ‘baseball cards’
2025 Topps Finest Baseball Card Checklist + Pack ODDS
Full Base Set Checklist – Cards 1 to 300 Below is a streamlined list of the first 50 cards and the last 50 cards, plus a sampling across the middle tiers to illustrate the full scope. The full roll from 1 to 300 spans Common (1–100), Uncommon (101–200), and Rare…
Read MorePSA Expanded OFFERS Changes the Card Buying & Selling Game
How Many Cards Does PSA Grade? Mind-blowing volume alert: Since 1991, PSA has graded over 65 million items—that’s across cards, memorabilia, photos, and more Professional Sports Authenticator (PSA). In 2023, they graded about 13.5 million cards, leading the industry SI. 2024 was even bigger—they nailed 15.34 million cards graded (9.1M sports and 6.23M TCG &…
Read More2025 Topps Shoebox Treasures Baseball Checklist + PACK ODDS
Full Base Checklist – 100 Cards (Card by Card) Here’s your artistic treasure map, numbering each player and the original Topps card inspiration: Stan Musial (1961 Topps #290) Ed Mathews (1962 Topps #30) Phil Niekro (1975 Topps #130) George Bell (1986 Topps #338) Tom Seaver (1976 Topps #600) Robin Yount…
Read More2025 Topps Tier One Baseball FULL Checklist + Pack ODDS
Base Set Breakdown (100 Cards Total) Three Tiers, from legends to rookies—all decked out in foil parallels. Tier 1 (Cards 1–20: Past Legends) Rarest tier (~1:30 packs; huge hits), featuring icons like: Ty Cobb Sandy Koufax Harmon Killebrew Pedro Martínez Randy Johnson Dizzy Dean Cal Ripken Jr. Alex Rodriguez Christy Mathewson Eddie Murray David Ortiz…
Read More1989 Upper Deck Baseball Cards: A Complete Guide
Introduction: The Hobby Before 1989 Let’s set the scene. In 1989, baseball card collecting was already booming. Kids were ripping wax packs of Topps, Fleer, and Donruss, building sets with gum-stained fingers, and trading “commons” on the playground like a second currency. The hobby was fun, affordable, and… a little stale. Topps, Fleer, and Donruss…
Read MoreThe 1952 Topps Baseball Set: A Collector’s Epic (With the Full 407-Card Checklist)
Introduction: When Baseball Cards Grew Up If the baseball card hobby were a rock band, the 1952 Topps set would be The Beatles. Before 1952, Topps made candy, gum, and some smaller test issues. Then, they decided to go big. Literally. The ’52 Topps cards were oversized compared to Bowman, had bright colors, facsimile autographs,…
Read MoreThe Complete Guide to Mickey Mantle Cards
The Complete Guide to Mickey Mantle Cards — The Hobby King If Michael Jordan is the GOAT of basketball cards, then Mickey Mantle is the cardboard Babe Ruth of baseball cards. He’s the guy your dad, your grandpa, and probably your grandpa’s drinking buddy all said was “the one you wanted to pull.” Mantle isn’t…
Read MoreThe National Card Show is Different This Year
Event Highlights The 45th NSCC took place July 30 to August 3, 2025, at the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont, Illinois.The Cardboard Connectionnsccshow.com It featured a massive setup, with over 500,000 square feet of trading floor, more than 600 dealer booths, autograph sessions, live breaks, auctions, and exclusive brand redemption programs.The Cardboard Connection…
Read MoreFanatics Fest 2025. Will it be worth it?
Fanatics Fest is back in 2025 and I’m excited to hit NYC with my wife this year, after missing last year. As a sports card content creator, my big question is will Fanatics (who owns Topps), have success converting over the casual sports fans over to sports card and/or collectibles collectors. Since Fanatics has entered…
Read MoreSports Card Radio CALLED Me OUT
Sports Card Radio—also known for their video channel as The Sports Card Show—has been a beloved and influential presence in the hobby since 2008, founded by Colin and Ryan Tedards after they closed their card shop during the recession . 🕰️ Origins & Format Founded: 2008 Roots: Born out of inspiration from popular poker podcasts,…
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