Showing posts with label Royal Rookies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Rookies. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

600 Posts Later and I STILL LOVE This Hobby!!!

Okay, so when I started writing this I didn't realize it was POST #600. I knew I was close, but I didn't know I was that close... I didn't have anything special planned, but I did want it to be wordy with a lot of pictures-a typical Troll post. I think this exemplifies that just fine, plus it shows off some great new cards from an awesome blogger. Since it is a milestone post I am going to add in a bonus card. This came in the FIRST pack (jumbo rack) of Series 2 Topps I bought. It is the FIRST Rays HIT card I have EVER pulled myself. Please read on...The rest of the blog-o-sphere is completely Allen and Ginter crazy. I am not complaining. They are great cards and I can’t wait till I have the funds to get my mitts on my box. For those of you who want your Ginter fix, but can’t swing the bucks for a box there is a great case break at Long Fly Ball to Because… where you can get a case worth of cards of your favorite team for less than half the price of a box. Go check it out and tell him the Troll sent you! I am not going to end the post here. Even if I had the cash to order my box I wouldn’t have time to post it. My desk is still full of unposted cards. Rather than waste my time being bitter that I am not in the Ginter party I am going to use my time wisely and try and post up some of the great cards I have received this year. I have said before that I don’t have a specific favorite person to trade with. Actually I am pretty lucky that there are about 10 bloggers who send me a package like clockwork every month or so. These folks rock! They rock because they aren’t prearranged trades; they are awesome surprise packages that make my day. I have received at least 4 of these packages from Madding at Cards on Cards that I haven’t posted. Some great relics and other Rays awesomeness. This package I am posting today is the most recent surprise pack I got from my favorite Cardinals fan. Now I will say that I have gotten plenty of “mojo hits” from CoC in the past, but you won’t see any in this post. This trade rocks because it was SUPER thoughtful. Sometimes I post about wanting a certain card and wonder if anyone is reading, well apparently someone was cuz I got it! Anyway, without further adieu, here are some of the highlights for me from my latest trade pack from Cards on Cards
First up from the 2002 Donruss Super Estrellas set, card #92 of Greg Vaughn. I was never a Vaughn fan when he was with the D-Rays, or before or after for that matter. This card rules because I love this set and it is the only D-Rays player in it. 2001 was a lean year in Tampa Bay and Vaughn’s 24 homers were enough to attract National attention. As a Mexican-American I enjoy cards geared towards Spanish speaking people and this set is ALL Spanish. Super Estrellas translates to Super Stars and yes “super” has the same meaning in both languages. Next up is another favorite obscure set of mine. This one is special for different reasons. It is a 2000 Royal Rookies card of Charleston Riverdogs (D-Rays) shortstop Ramon Soler. Soler stole 46 bases in low A ball in 1999. That would be his career high. He spent 5 years in the minors getting a cup of coffee with the Norfolk Tides (Mets) in 2002. That would be his highest level; he never sniffed the big leagues. This card is rad because Royal Rookies was one of the worst card companies ever and I took this picture and never got paid for it. Next time you get upset with a card company, google Royal Rookies and remember that it could be worse... I am psyched to at least have a copy of the card now… Next up is a great card of my favorite player of all time, the great ballplayer and humanitarian Roberto Clemente. I try to collect any cards of Clemente I can get my hands on. His vintage stuff is a little out of my league, but I do enjoy his modern stuff as well. This card looks AWESOME! It is a 2009 Topps refractor, card #GR-9. This is one of those cards you get as a bonus for buying the cereal box. I am pretty sure that is the only way you can get one. I love it! From the greatest ballplayer of all time to one of my favorite players who never really made it, former Devil Rays third baseman Jared Sandberg. This one is a 1999 Bowman Chrome, card #118. The front of the scan looks awful in the scan, so I scanned the back. I am on an active mission to collect one of every card every made of the less famous Mr. Sandberg. Thanks to Madding I have a complete list of all of his cards. His career wasn’t too long, but with all the parallels out there I still have a long way to go. I do appreciate getting his cards whenever I can. Another player that I am trying to collect completely is Danny Tartabull. The Bull was my favorite player as a kid and the first player I ever collected. I still have the original binder my Mom got me when I was 10 years old for my collection and fortunately still have most of the cards, too. I stopped collecting Tartabull after he signed with the Yankees. Enough years have past that I have forgiven him for playing for such an awful team and now I am catching up on his pinstriped cards. Madding sent me several I needed including this die-cut, foil gem from 1994 SP. The card is number 200 in the set and the back of the card mentions that when Tartabull hit 31 homers and drove in 102 runs for the Bronx Bombers in 1993 he was the first Yankees to top the 30/100 plateaus since Donny Baseball did it in 1987. Of course MANY have done it since, but the Bull brought it back in style! Another Tartabull I needed is this card from 1995 Topps Finest. I have started and stopped collecting so many times it is ridiculous. I have also started collecting specific brands only. In 1995 I did that. Topps Finest and Bowman are Best. I ripped both products like crazy. The Bowman’s Best cards are long gone, but I still have some of the Finest cards. I swear I will put together a want list and finish that set someday. For now I am glad to have the Tartabull card. I am really glad that Finest ditched the “protective coating” stamps all over the face of these cards, I am also on the lookout for the refractor version of this card and all of the Bull’s Finest releases. I don’t have ANY. He also included a White Sox card that I didn’t have. Card #356 of Tartabull from 1996 Pinnacle. The Bull had resurgence with the Chi Sox in 1995 when he topped 100 RBIs for the fifth and final time of his career. Batting between Frank Thomas and Harold Baines would be a luxury for any slugger, but still… The final Danny Tartabull card he sent in this package was this card from 1995 Upper Deck SE, card #9 of Tartabull in full foil. Shifting back to pseudo vintage and one of Roberto Clemente’s former teammates, this is a 2008 Goudey card, #151 of the starting second baseman on the All-Troll-All-Time-All-Star-Team Bill Mazeroski. A wizard with the glove who also hit a very famous homerun that won the Bucs the World Series against the seemingly unbeatable Yankees. I am going to try and get this one signed. I am running out of time but I will post two more cards. Each one is serial numbered and shows players I collect who are also starting for the American League in the 2010 All Star Game. First up is card #95 from 2010 Topps Series 1. This is the gold parallel version of Carl Crawford. I am collecting the team set in gold. Thanks to trades I finished series 2 before I bought a single pack, but I am only halfway to series 1. I love the CC! Now if only someone would send me the platinum… Another sweet colored and numbered parallel is card #99 from 2010 Topps Opening Day, the BLUE version of David Price. It’s a little ironic that Price is in this set considering he wasn’t in the opening day lineup, but it is a great card nonetheless. To Madding of Cards on Cards – I owe you a HUGE thank you sir!!! You should be getting a package from me later next week. All of the goodies from the long overdue group break and some odds and ends I have gathered over the past few months. To anyone interested I did finally arrange for the proper adult supervision and ripped into a few cans of cards. These will be posted on A Pack To Be Named Later very soon. If you haven’t checked out Cards on Cards yet, do yourself a favor and check it out right now! It aint just for Cards fans… I started this post talking about 2010 Ginter. Well, Cards on Cards is part of the Gint-A-Cuffs battle. He has pulled a Carl Crawford mini AND a spinosaurus so far. I repeat, check it out! To anyone reading that wants to get their trade on, please shoot me an email. If you sent me a package and I either owe you a return package OR you were hoping I would post it and haven’t yet, PLEASE send me a reminder. I’m not being a jerk; I am just really behind and really scatterbrained… Another end note... I know blog milestones are normally coupled with contests. I have 2 coming up, but I will be honest-I just don't have the time to keep up with a contest right now. One of them will be the "guess how many different Carl Crawford cards the Troll has". My wife has promised to help me attack the many stacks of cards all over the house to sort out the CC cards so I can get a count. Once I get all of the group break stuff ripped, packed and shipped I will post one so stay tuned! Thanks again to Cards on Cards for making my week with these cards and making my day again today as I flipped through them again. To all the new traders and bloggers-take this trade as some advice... You don't need to send people autograph relic cards or one of ones to make a great trade package. If you read someone's blog you can score WAY MORE trade points hooking them up with inexpensive cards they really want and will enjoy. Just a little message from experience. One more postnote... I need addresses to ship cards. If you have the Tigers, Astros, Angels, Giants, Pirates, Rockies, Yankees, Mets or A's-I have probably misplaced your mailing address. Anthony K, the Astros fan, I got your cards from the first break returned to sender so you will be getting a REALLY big box of cards this time around... Anyway, please shoot me an email at bacontowne at yahoo dot com. Thanks! I love this game, I love this hobby and I love this community!!! Oh, one last end note before I leave for work... Congrats to Rafael Soriano for being the 4th Rays player on the All Star team. He is 2-0 with a 1.65 ERA and 23 saves. You deserve it Sor! Go Rays! Troll out.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

The Future of Upper Deck???

The wife is off work today, but she had doctor’s appointments and important genius college school stuff to do, so I am left home alone with the dog and the computer. The past two days I have mailed out over a dozen trades, but today I am finally caught up with nothing to do but watch Sportscenter for the 18th time (hey, did you guys hear about Brett Favre?) and read the only post from today’s blog roll, which comes courtesy of Mr. dayf, the Cardboard Junkie. Although dayf is an awesome blogger, a great trader and a generally awesome internet buddy, I am bitter because he pulled more Allen & Ginter relics (any takers for Magglio?) in one blaster than I did in 154 packs.
He is the enemy. I thought, since we are no longer friends, I could begin our feud by stealing his posting ideas.
Today’s blog (by dayf) is titled “How Upper Deck Can Thrive In 2010” (without MLB licensing). He posted some awful pics from various Studio sets. Posed portraits of guys without their hats on, occasionally rocking a mullet helmet instead while pretending to play the drums. These were awful sets, but I do actually have one of these cards in my collection, too. A well-intentioned trader, who thought (mistakenly) that I was a Jose Canseco fan, sent me a pile of cards from the 90’s of the roid-rager, including this one from the 1992 Studio (by Leaf/Donruss) set. I can’t throw away a card that someone paid to ship to me, but I am glad there is just one of these in my otherwise awesome collection. The unfortunate thing is that it isn’t the only posed card of a man without hat, or at least hat logo in the boxes in my “spare” bedroom. These other logo less cards aren’t made by Studio or Leaf or Donruss or even Upper Deck. I think its story time…
Rewind to the year 2000. The new millennium had arrived and we were all still here. I was still foolishly hanging on to the idea that I could get paid to swing a bat. I was in minor league spring training with the Baltimore Orioles at the Buck O’Neill Sports Complex in sunny Sarasota, Florida where I somehow had weaseled my way to a non-roster spring training invite. Former Milwaukee Brewers skipper (then the minor league coordinator for the O’s) Tom Treblehorn had called me over. The conversation (totally paraphrased) went something like this. Tom: “You looked pretty good out there today Tooser (his nickname for me)”.
Me: “I feel great! I had two hits today (infield singles) and I think I have my swing and my speed down. I didn’t think I could keep up with these kids”
Tom: “Yeah, most of them are a good 10 years younger than you; they are only going to get better”
I will end the conversation right there. Basically Tom was being super nice, but making the point that I was barely keeping up with Rookie Level minor leaguers who would improve, while I was the best I would ever be. He suggested that I clear out my locker. I asked him if I could stick around and work for the team. He looked scared, like he thought I wanted to be a coach or something. Basically, I lived one town away, I knew I wasn’t going to make a team at my age, but camp was too much fun to leave. He told me to ask Don Buford. I was scared to talk to Don; he was somewhat of a hero to me. A short, scrappy guy who could play second base like nobody’s business. This guy was an All Star, a World Champion, a Legend… That said, I didn’t want to go home, this was still a few years before I would meet the lovely Esther Gin N Juice and home was not a happy place for me. I introduced myself to Mr. Buford; he avoided my question, but introduced me to his son Daryl, who happened to be hanging around in camp that day. Daryl is one of three sons to Don. Some of you may remember Damon Buford who played outfield for a handful of Major League teams from 1993-2001. Daryl was not a ballplayer, he was a lawyer and a very successful one, he was also super nice and we hit it off right away. I told him that I didn’t want to go home; I wanted to find work with the club. He asked what I did (other than try and fool people into thinking I could play baseball) and I told him I was a machinist, a writer and a photographer. He thought for a few minutes and started explaining to me how he had just begun being a sports agent and that he was in camp to sign some players. I knew all of the guys and I introduced him to everyone and by the end of the day he had handshake agreements with a bunch of guys. An agents job (when the player is already under contract) is to get them exposure and endorsements. With about a dozen or so new clients, the young Mr. Buford got on the phone while I followed him around, just in case. After one call ended he turned to me and said “You said you take pictures, right? Do you have your camera with you?” Of course I did! This was pre-digital era for me, but I had my trusty Canon EOS 630 and a variety of lens and a bag full o film. “What am I shooting?” I asked. “I found a card company that will put the guys in their set if I can pictures of them by the end of the week. They will pay for each one and they need other people, too. They are going to fax over a list” “Awesome” I said, “What card company is it? Topps, Upper Deck, Fleer?” I asked. He paused and said, “I don’t think it’s one of those names, I think he said Royal Rookies, they are a brand new company and they are trying to sign as many prospects as they can”
I had never heard of Royal Rookies before, but a paying photography job was cool and it meant not having to go home or go back to factory work, so I was in! I shot beautiful action shots all day long, getting superb (if I do say so myself) pics of all of Daryl’s clients as well as some of the other stars in camp that day like Brian Roberts, Jayson Werth, Erik Bedard, Josh Towers, Larry Bigbie and Darnell McDonald. At the end of the day we shot portraits of everyone. He wanted standard poses, hat on, leaning on the bat. I can’t remember all of his clients, but I do remember Edward Rogers (who was a great friend of mine) shown here on a hand-numbered card 666/4950 that Esther Gin bought for me on eBay a few years back. He also had signed another guy who is actually still in the big leagues, with the Washington Nationals-Willie Harris. Well, by the end of that day, I had shot 20 rolls of film and I had a travel itinerary for the rest of the week. I ended up dealing with Royal Rookies direct (Daryl fronted me some money to develop the pics) and we worked out a great deal (for me). They would make the cards from 4X6 color photos (this was weird, I had always sent slides) and would pay $200 for a front picture and $75. for a back photo. This was better money than I had gotten from a lot of other more established card companies. They also agreed to sent me 100 (yes, one hundred) boxes of the product when it was printed. Somewhere (in my parents garage, maybe) I have all of the original photos I took that week; I need to dig them out and post them. The pics that Royal Rookies ended up selecting looked like they were shot with a disposable camera. They used the same pics on the front and the back and decided to skip all of the action shots entirely. They sent me a check (a deposit) for $800., which was nice money, but they used around 60 pictures that I took, so the check was around $11,200.00 short. They also didn’t tell me that they were not able to get licensing from MLB for things like logos or even team names. They did however get licensing from the Federal Reserve and used the five, ten, twenty, fifty and one hundred dollar bills on the card backs. I think that Willie Harris (whose card I don’t have) is the only player featured in the set to ever receive any of these bills to play ball. Aside from that, I never received a single pack of the product, never mind the 100 boxes they promised. A couple of years ago, while rooting around in the clearance box at Target, I found a pack of these crappy cards. I bought it, of course and ripped it immediately-saving the wrapper for an occasion such as this. The cards look awful. I am embarrassed to be associated with them. I still want my money. All that stuff aside, this is a message to Upper Deck. Royal Rookies had licensing from the Players Association (OPL) but did not have licensing from MLB. This is what happened. This could be you. Do something Upper Deck, before this is your FUTURE!!!!
Logo less nobodies smiling against a background of dollar bills. Do you want another young, can’t miss prospect like David McCarty to have to suffer through a disappointing career because he didn’t have a logo on his hat on his Upper Deck rookie? Do you want that blood on your hands? Do you?
I started collecting Upper Deck as soon as they busted onto the scene in 1989, why? Because it wasn’t the same old boring photography. They employed creative photographers (and some scrubs like me) and took risks. They produced the ridiculous along with the classic, but always brought us players with logos and team names over the years. In 2009 Topps was without a doubt the premiere manufacturer for baseball cards. Whatever order you choose, Topps Heritage, Topps Allen & Ginter and Topps flagship were the three best sets of the year, hands down. Upper Deck struck out with the ghost faced Goudey this year, other than the cool triple swatches-their regular set was lackluster. Aside from O Pee Chee, which was hit or miss, I don’t know anyone working on Upper Deck sets this year. Thanks to dayf for giving me an idea to steal and write a long winded story that no one will read. As an end note, the Ed Rogers auto may be the first card that I have posted that is NOT available for trade. MINE! In another end note... This is my 100th post. Woo Hoo! Go Troll! I love writing this blog, but I do wonder if anyone reads it, ever. Other than 2 people, I don't get many comments, unless I am giving something away. I'd like to do another contest, but I'd also like to know if people read this dribble otherwise. Let me know and there will be a HOF auto giveaway later this week, okay?
Go Rays! See y’all at the Trop! Don't forget, it is okay to post comments here...Troll out.