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Old 07-18-2020, 01:11 PM
droid714 droid714 is offline
John
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Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Northeast Ohio
Posts: 37
Default Does anyone know the answer?

For many years I've wondered why Topps, Fleer and Philadelphia each issued the football card sets that they did in the 1960's.

After buying out Bowman, Topps had a monopoly on football cards and the NFL was the only "major" American football league. Then, in 1960, the AFL is created to compete with the NFL. One would have assumed that Topps would have made football cards of both leagues, but apparently opted to only make an NFL set, while Fleer, which had never been a real player in the sports card market, steps up and makes an AFL football set.

The following year, both companies put out football sets that included both the AFL and the NFL. The next two years, 1962 and 1963, Topps went back to making NFL only sets and Fleer made AFL only sets.

Then suddenly, in 1964, Topps flips over to making AFL only football sets and a small, almost unknown gum company, Philadelphia, steps into the vacuum and produces NFL only sets. This arrangement lasts for four seasons, 1964 through 1967.

In 1968, the AFL and NFL merge into the singular NFL. The Philadelphia Gum Co. fades into sports card oblivion and Topps becomes the only company making football cards.

The questions I have are why would Topps allow Fleer to cut into their football card market when the AFL was created? Historically, Topps was very protective of it's market. Why not make football card sets of both leagues and shut Fleer out of the market entirely?

Second, since Topps dominated the sports card market, why would they end up making card sets of the AFL, beginning in 1964, while newcomer Philadelphia made card sets of the older, and presumably more popular, NFL? One would assume that Topps could have had their choice of which league to associate with. Why not stick with the NFL and force Philadelphia into making cards of the "inferior" AFL? Better still, why not just start making sets of both leagues in 1960 and continue to do so until the merger in 1968?

I've never been able to find any information on this subject. Does anybody know anything about this?
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