I'm on a bit of a Baseball Candy roll of late and today we look at what is the least popular of the five subsets that made up Topps' inaugural release of a standalone baseball set. That would be the Team cards.
I've written about these oblong, gold bordered cards previously but there was a recent sale of a full master set of 18 at Heritage that caught my eye, although not my wallet. Sets do come up, a bit infrequently, but every year or so one is offered at auction. It's unusual for the master set of dated and undated varieties to pop up but that too, happens from time to time.
Printed along with the Connie Mack All Star cards, PSA as of December 13th, had graded 1,053 examples of which the highest is a lone 8.5 of the dated Athletics card. The dimensions work against them as a mere six straight 8's have been assigned and it's easy to infer high grade raw examples are just not out there. Meanwhile 996 Connie Mack's have been slabbed by PSA and 211 Major League All Stars. That's a different distribution from the last time I really checked, about a decade ago, with the spread between Teams and the Connie Mack's almost pulling even while the Major League All Stars have gone from about half the population of the Connie's to a mere twenty percent or so. Those MLAS cards are tough kids!
Distribution between the dated and undated Teams varieties seems roughly even and the least graded cards are those of the Giants, followed by the White Sox and Cardinals. I'm still tying to figure out if Topps used three different cardboard stocks and can say the recent Heritage lot only showed two, the brilliant white stock that seems to stay bright forever and the far dingier tan backs. I've long thought a cream stock exists but it didn't show up in this lot and relying upon scans doesn't always yield precise results. Let's take a look then at two different Teams, the Dodgers and Athletics.
The boys from Brooklyn were going to blow a massive lead in the National League pennant race by season's end but it was a dynastic squad that often brawled with an even more dynastic one in the Yankees from 1947-56, with six World Series clashes but only a single World Championship to show for it.
The back of this undated card shows off the brilliant white stock; it's a thing of beauty in a way:
There was no Yankees card as seven teams were never produced, so no corresponding American League Champions card exists. The back of the Phillies card is also brilliant white:
3 comments:
Any idea why certain teams, Yankees in particular weren't produced?
Unproven theory, noting the Team and CMAS cards were printed together and sold with Red Backs in the 5 cent and Trading Card Guild 10 cent packs. Assume then that the original intent may have been to print 8 additional Team cards with the MLAS to go with the Blue Backs. But prior to that, they may have had to pull Ty Cobb from the CMAS set (or hoped they could get him and failed) and had a slot to fill, so an extra Team card was stripped into the press sheet. The MLAS and planned 8 additional Team cards in that scenario got whacked by Bowman (I assume via some kind of legal action, or threat of same, that has not shown itself to date) due to the "Big 3" MLAS. It's just a theory that I doubt can ever be proven and may not even be accurate. But that 9 card "set" just seems off given the 16 possible teams.
It always blew my mind that Connie Mack, a man old enough to have participated in the Players League, survived long enough to be pictured on a Topps card while still an active manager.
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