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#1
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No doubt Topps was being cheap in 1968-69. The evidence is in the old photos the company continued to use. By the late '60s, it seemed like half the cards are just head shots without caps, or head shots with caps that have had the logo blacked out because the player was traded. You can find many photos that were used years after they were taken. Most photos are taken in East Coast cities — Topps never even bothered to visit many of the ballparks.
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#2
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I know this thread is about the 60,s but as a Young Mets Fan in 1972 I went all over Long Island trying to find the elusive Rusty Staub card in a Mets uniform. I guess I was to stupid to realize Singleton, Foli and Jorgenson were on Mets cards but no Rusty. At least I got one of the coolest cards of the childhood the 1972 Topps Expos Team card with the batting leaders on the back. Every category from AB's,hits,doubles,triples,HR's RBIetc has Staub listed. If you look at the back of the card it looks cool and will probably never be duplicated again especially for a team 3 years into existence.
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#3
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Also read during the late 60s early 70s MLB Union struggles , Marvin Miller told the players to play " hard ball " with Topps and don't sign anything or agree to photos.
This was that period when we seem to saw a load of " no team logo " stuff , because the owners also played " hard " and would not allow team names on stuff I understand the late 60s Coke bottle caps had to get a last minute -air brush, to erase the team logos |
#4
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There was a time in the 50's when the Yankees players got double the $125 rate. They were selling 250 Million cards a year roughly, if their PR is to be believed. They never made a ton back in the day, they had tight margins and moreso after buying out the Fleer Baseball contracts for $395K in '66. They weren't hurting but the bigger profits came in the 80's.
Last edited by toppcat; 02-08-2019 at 05:13 PM. |
#5
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I read were they sometimes gave players a sets of cards as " payment ".....I guess back then most guys would rather had had the 100 bucks or so
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#6
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That actually seems quite high.
All of the contracts I have seen in the 80s and 90s were well under 100 per year and not even real money. They sent the players a catalog with things such as televisions and toasters and they could use the "money" to order from it. So essentially they were paid in green stamps during the absolute peak card boom. Here is a scan of John Cangelosi's extension showing the catalog language from eBay.
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- Justin D. Player collecting - Lance Parrish, Jim Davenport, John Norlander. Successful B/S/T with - Highstep74, Northviewcats, pencil1974, T2069bk, tjenkins, wilkiebaby11, baez578, Bocabirdman, maddux31, Leon, Just-Collect, bigfish, quinnsryche...and a whole bunch more, I stopped keeping track, lol. |
#7
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wow, that's pretty cool...Im thinking with the blank spot for yrs, length of contract and money.... those figures would be filled in a bit higher for Nolan Ryan,Pete Rose, etc..
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