Happy New Year - 2023!

How does one revive a dead blog? Make a bunch of empty resolutions that won’t be kept past January 5th? Promise to write every day even though you know the day job can be overwhelming, and leave little time at the end of the day because you’re exhausted?

Maybe the key is just to start with one word at a time. No real plan, other than to try and once again put yourself and your collection out there for all the world to see. Seems like a good enough place to start. It doesn’t have to be long. It just needs to…be. So with that in mind, let’s resurrect this thing. I’m paying for it after all.

I wanted to start with some very brief hobby goals for the month of January. I won’t bother with year long ones, simply because I’m not sure what they are at this point. I have not yet put the proverbial pen to paper if you will.

  1. For the last 4-5 months or so, I have been working on completing 1981 Topps. This is part of my quest to work backwards to at least 1976. However in 2022, I picked up multiple vintage cards from sets prior to 1976, so I will definitely be going as far back as I’m able. In fact, I told a seller at the last card show I went to that I plan on going as far back as my wife will allow. For now, I will focus on completing the 81 set. Currently, it is at 559/726 cards (77%). By the end of January, I want to be up to 90% complete. This means I need to trade for, or purchase, 95 more cards. I should have 18 of these on the way through a TCDB trade, but the mail system has been decimated by recent bad weather. Hopefully they come on Tuesday.

  2. At the previously mentioned recent card show, I purchased a starter lot of 1980 Topps so I could a jump start on that set. The box had 420 cards, labeled as being in EX-MT condition. I need to go through them, put them in order, and figure out which ones will meet my centering requirements. If I have more than 50% of the set when that is said and done, then it needs to go into a binder.

  3. Space has become a little bit of an issue in my office/card room. I have cards everywhere. I made a lot of headway in 2022 by donating some unwanted commons to Goodwill. I have another box 2/3 of the way full. By the end of the month, I will drop it off, regardless of it is full or not. That way I can just get rid of it.

I don’t want to over burden myself. These tasks should be easily obtainable over the next 30 days. Let’s start small, and build some momentum. And take it from there.

JDM

Mail Day Recap: 1953 Bowman Black and White

How do you spend eBay bucks? That once a quarter, one percent rebate on the hundreds of dollars you could otherwise spend in a three month period. Personally I didn’t even know about eBay bucks until Q4 last year. But anyway. As I alluded to in my 2021 Hobby goals, I am at a point where I want to be a little more selective with my buying choices instead of going after any easy dollar insert I can find almost anywhere.

Enter the 1953 Bowman Black and White card of Philadelphia A’s pitcher Morris “Morrie” Martin. The ‘53 Bowman set first came onto my radar late last year when I was looking in a Beckett Vintage Price Guide. I noticed there are only 64 cards in this set, and none of them are really that expensive. In fact, if you believe the prices on TCDB, there is no card in this set valued at over $100.00. The vast majority can be had for less than $15.00. That’s my kind of vintage set! So I decided that I want to build this set, one card at a time for as long as it takes me to build it. I settled on this one, since the card is relatively well centered and the corners look pretty decent. I don’t much care about corners, but centering is and I liked the way this card looked. I applied my eBay bucks to the purchase and am loving the result now that it’s here.

1953 Bowman Morris Martin Black and White

1953 Bowman Morris Martin Black and White

So what do we know about Mr. Martin here? According to his Baseball-reference page: (Morrie Martin), he had a 10 year MLB career with seven different clubs, starting with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1949. Working mostly in relief, Martin was able to achieve a lifetime 38-34 record with a 4.29 ERA over 604.2 IP.

Thanks to my Twitter friend Nick Diunte (@ExamineBaseball), and his wonderful blog Examine Baseball, I have also learned that Morrie fought in Europe in World War II. At one time, he and two of his buddies had to dig their way out of a basement they had been in when the house collapsed after being bombed. Pretty impressive to remain calm and get yourself out of that kind of situation. If you have the time, check out Nick’s blog.

Because of Mr. Martin’s service, he was 26 year old when he made his debut with the Dodgers. This of course was the case with a lot of players in the late 1940s and early 50s. His service during the War makes me extremely grateful that his 1953 Bowman Black and White was the first card from this set to be added to my collection. I chose wisely. And now I’m looking forward to adding more with my next round of eBay bucks!

That’s it for now, more later. Stay safe!

JDM

Mail Day Recap: Rockies Sepia

Yesterday’s Mailday brought me a long overdue envelope that I was getting ready to hand over to the Postal gremlin. They were mailed a week before Christmas by new TCDB user @PennsylvaniaTiger. And am I ever glad the cards made it!

In exchange for ten 2019 Topps Heritage duplicates, I was able to obtain these two 2020 Stadium Club Sepia parallels for my Rockies PC. The images really pop for me, especially while looking at them side by side. Both guys have their gloves in a position to field the ball, and they’re both focused on fielding it just a fraction of a second later. The Rodgers card is especially sharp, as there is no motion blur on the baseball. That photographer definitely knew what they were doing. Thank you for the trade Michael!

2020 Topps Stadium Club Sepia Rockies Cards

2020 Topps Stadium Club Sepia Rockies Cards

The pre-Christmas trades are slowly starting to trickle in. In addition to the cards above, I also received three more 2018 Topps cards from a Twitter friend, and three more 1982 Topps Cards from TCDB Trader @nkandy11. That last trade had a throw in card from 2017 Topps as protection, but it’s one that I didn’t have, so I’ll definitely take it. Thanks for the trades guys!

1982 Topps Set Progress: 40 / 792 cards (5.1% complete)

2017 Topps Set Progress: 17 / 700 cards (2.4% complete)

2018 Topps Set Progress: 645 / 700 cards (92.1% complete) - I’m so close!!

I have a couple of other cards to show off some time this week. I know this one was short, but that’s going to happen as I get into the flow. Until next time, stay safe.

JDM

Mail Day Recap: 13 JAN 2021

Scratch one off the want list! I ordered this 2020 Heritage Josh Bell New Age Performer at the beginning of December from a seller on Sportlots. It was mailed December 12 in a nondescript envelope with a Non-Machinable stamp. It arrived today after a 30 day journey. Only the USPS knows where all it went or how long it sat in a post office sorting facility. But it’s here. And it’s the last New Age Performer for that particular insert set. This one feels good to get done.

The second picture are some cards I received from TCDB trader @jimsisco. They represent essentially the first cards I’ve acquired as I get ready to work on 2017 Topps during the year. He had a bunch, so I picked nine at random so we could use PWE. So these cards will go into the box with the seven I had previously. In one day, I doubled the number of 2017 Topps cards I had.

2017 Topps Set Process: 16 / 700 cards (2.3% complete)

Anyway, just a short one to show off the new acquisitions. More later, and as always, Stay Safe!

JDM

2020 Topps Heritage Josh Bell New Age Performer

2020 Topps Heritage Josh Bell New Age Performer


2017 Topps Cards from TCDB User @jimsisco

2017 Topps Cards from TCDB User @jimsisco

2021 Hobby Goals

If 2020 was about experimenting with new product, then 2021 will be about focus and restraint. Last year before the pandemic took hold, I bought box after box of Gypsy Queen because I could. GQ wasn’t around when I was a kid, so it was something new. Looking back a year later, I’m wondering why I spent a couple hundred dollars going after a set that looks like it has the same basic concept year after year instead of evolving. I won’t be completing Gypsy Queen in 2021.

I did however, fall back in love with Stadium Club. At the end of my collecting as a kid and young adult, I really liked both Gold Label and Stadium Club. What I didn’t like was spending $3/pack, but whatever. Stadium Club was especially nice because of the photography. So instead of going after Gold Label, in 2020 I chose to buy boxes of Stadium Club. And I’m glad I did. It’s a beautiful set, and I was especially pleased with the image selection. Stadium Club will remain in 2021.

The other sets I’ll complete this year will be Flagship and Heritage. The ‘72 Topps design for Heritage are going to be solid, and I’m really looking forward to when I can get my hands on it. The decision to complete Chrome will depend on cost. I might take the cash required for boxes and just apply that to the autos, and work on the set through trades and Sportslots. But we’ll see, I’ve personally pulled a couple of really nice autos the last couple of years.

Anyway, let’s get to the goals:

  1. Establish www.apackperday.com and get into a routine of publication - A carry over from last year. But I really want to make more of an effort to write about my love for the hobby on a more consistent basis. I wrote about it last night, but in the blogging world, Inconsistency leads to Irrelevancy. So if I want to become relevant, I need to become consistent. As always, the challenge is carving out time after family and the day job.

    Goal Difficulty Rating (GDR): Medium

  2. Establish YouTube channel with pack rips, completions of sets, Mail Days, eBay sales - My kids still like the idea of us making videos together. I still want to do this, too. Finding the time and the dedication to film, edit, and post though. Wow. I don’t know how YouTubers manage it.

    GDR: Very Difficult

  3. Take 1976 Topps up to 200 cards - At the end of 2020, my 1976 Topps box has 98 cards, meaning the set is 14.8% complete. The goal for this year will be to at least double that, to 200 cards, including the Eckersley RC.

    GDR: Easy

  4. Complete remaining 1980’s Topps Base and put them in Binders - I want to complete my early 80’s Topps sets. As of today, this is where I’m at:

    • 1980 Topps - 15 / 726 cards (2.1%)

    • 1981 Topps - 15 / 726 cards (2.1%)

    • 1983 Topps - 62 / 726 cards (7.8%)

    • 1984 Topps - 628 / 792 cards (79.3%)

    • 1985 Topps - 671 / 792 cards (84.7%)

      GDR: Easy

  5. Re-binder/Re-page all previously completed sets - We’ll give this another try. All it takes is funds. And time.

    GDR: Easy

  6. Identify 35-40 cards for my various PC’s - I’m done going down the eBay rabbit hole to buy cards just to buy them. I want the cards I buy to have personal meaning. So I’m working on a list of 35-40 PC Cards that I want to look for throughout the year. The cards I purchase will span the four major sports, and so far looks to favor the Denver sports market. These are the guys I love (or loved) watching though. The list does include a 2011 Trout and the ‘84 Fleer Puckett, but this is what I’ll be working on when not trading for set cards.

    GDB: Medium

  7. Get all cards sorted numerically and uploaded to TCDB - Time and dedicated effort. Trading with other collectors is one of the things I enjoy most about the hobby community. Especially helping other set builders. In order to do that most efficiently though, the cards need to be organized in numerical order so it doesn’t take an hour to find three cards in a stack of 1,000. And if I want to achieve more impactful trading on TCDB, then the cards actually have to be entered into my For Trade collection.

    GDB: Medium

  8. Complete 150 trades on TCDB - I joined TCDB in March of 2020. Over the course of the preceding 10 months, I have completed 214 trades. At times it can be overwhelming, and when that day comes where I have to go back to onsite work, I might not be able to spend as much time proposing trades with other collectors. Cutting back just a little, to 150 completed trades over the course of the year should be a reasonable goal.

    GDB: Medium

  9. Donate commons to Twitter Hashtag @Commonsforkids - I’ve got two medium flat rate boxes ready to go now. My hangup with this goal last year was not wanting to get rid of cards in my collection. That’s done. They take up too much space. I want the completed sets for the cards I have, but I DO NOT need the duplicates. The sets can be built over time. So as I go through and enter the cards in TCDB, if I have three or four of one card, they’re gone. At most I will keep one duplicate for trading. The rest need to find a new home.

    GDB: Easy

So there they are. Nine goals last year, nine goals this year. Being focused will help build a collection I can be proud of.

Did you put together Hobby goals for 2021? I would love to read them, so drop me a note below. Don’t forget to leave me a link to your want lists. Lets work out some trades! Later.

End of Year Review: 2020 Hobby Goals

At the beginning of the year, I set out nine hobby related goals intended to drive my reintroduction to the hobby of my youth. Some were easy to accomplish, and some I knew would be a stretch. Exactly what goals are supposed to be. At the sixth month mark, I did a mid-year assessment and put in an honest reflection of how I was doing. Now it’s time for the same year-end exercise so I can see where I succeeded and where I didn’t, before heading into 2021. So without further adieu, here we go (with mid-year included for transparency):

  1. Establish www.apackperday.com and get into a routine of publication - I want to make this blog another stop on your content consumption when it comes to Hobby related reading.

    Mid-Year Assessment: Bwahahahahahahahahahaha!!! My, my that’s funny. If this was real, I’d be placed on some sort of Blogger Improvement Plan with bi-weekly check-ins with my manager and HR.

    Year-End Assessment: Eight total posts in the second half of the year doesn’t exactly make people want to come back for more. Inconsistency equals irrelevance. That’s how I’m going to have to look at it heading into 2021.

  2. Establish YouTube channel with pack rips, completions of sets, Mail Days, eBay sales - Much like with the site as a whole, I am to integrate myself into the broader collecting community through YouTube.

    Mid-Year Assessment: STRIKE TWO!!!!

    Year-End Assessment: I bought a USB powered ring light and a small tripod for my phone. Does that count?

  3. Buy/Obtain 100 cards from 1976 Topps - Begin hand collating the Topps set from the year of my birth, 1976.

    Mid-Year Assessment: Now we’re making some progress. I have managed to obtain 13 separate cards as of today. My favorite of which is #554, Catcher Ray Fosse of the Oakland A’s. What a beautiful action photograph. Especially for some time during the 1975 season. Film rules.

    Year-End Assessment: Finally a success! According to my TCDB collection for the ‘76T set, I managed to trade for, or purchase a total of 98 beautiful cards from the year I was born. The set is 14.8% of the way complete, with the cards sitting in their own 600 count box waiting on the day I acquire enough of them to put in a binder.

  4. Complete 1988 Topps Base and put in a Binder - Self explanatory.

    Mid-Year Assessment: This goal was completed in March or April. It took awhile to find the last two cards in the condition I wanted them to be in, but Bill Buckner and Steve Sax did eventually find their way into their forever homes. Now for extra credit, I’m working on the 1988 Topps Glossy All-Stars. I only have one left. I have to make up for my failings in Goals 1 and 2.

    Year-End Assessment: After completing the Glossy All-Stars set, I moved back and finished off both ‘87T and ‘86T. The last card for the 1986 set was Ryne Sandberg. Do the two extra sets make up for the abject failure of Goals #1 and #2? I didn’t think so.

  5. Re-binder/Re-page all previously completed sets - All the sets I completed as a kid have been entombed in cheap binders and whatever page brands I could afford. The pages are often of different sizes, so they don’t line up. I want to rebind everything in new consistent binders and Ultra-Pro pages.

    Mid-Year Assessment: I’m gonna give myself a pass here. With the Coronavirus currently running rampant throughout the World, the production of binders, pages, and top loaders came to a screeching halt. For a few months, they were unavailable. I’ll get back to this one later.

    Year-End Assessment: The binders and pages that have been purchased in the second half of the year were allocated to the mid-80’s Topps sets and working on personal player collections. This is something I still want to do however, and will look into it in 2021.

  6. Buy one of 2011 Topps Update Mike Trout or 1984 Fleer Update Kirby Puckett - My two biggest bucket list cards.

    Mid-Year Assessment: This should still be possible. With Trout on a seemingly linear trajectory with regard to the card value, it might have to be the Puckett. But I’m okay with that.

    Year-End Assessment: The Trout card seems to have stabilized in the last few months, but I never could justify pulling the trigger since we had other priorities as a family. I bid on a couple of Pucketts in December but lost each time, and I want to make sure I don’t overpay on a Buy It Now. I tried on the Puckett, but it didn’t line up. One reason is that I want a PSA graded one, either a PSA 8 or 7. I remember reading about the number of fake Puckett ‘84 Fleer cards when I was a kid, and I’m sure there’s even more now. Getting a graded one is my way of making sure the one I buy is real. Problem is, there’s a lot of competition for PSA 7-8’s.

  7. Sort and organize the 5000 count boxes - Look through and sort in some way the five 5,000 card boxes I carried with me all those years.

    Mid-Year Assessment: After I published the goals, I actually found two more of them. So there are actually seven. The boxes are fairly well sorted, organized by brand and year. Now though, I am taking it a step forward and putting all those boxes into my Collection on the Trading Card Database (Handle: @CSUBiochem). This way I can see what I have and use the duplicates to trade with other collectors. I have gotten rid of over half of my 2019 Topps Chrome duplicates in trades through this platform. It’s gold. So I need to put the rest in there.

    Year-End Assessment: This is done actually! All cards are sorted by year and brand, from 1982 to 2020. Cards of 1989 Upper Deck are no longer spread out in multiple boxes. Everything was painstakingly stacked on our kitchen table and completely sorted. Then I took out the ‘ol label maker and made divider cards for each set. Sets that I want to work on building and putting into binders were taken out of the 5,000 count boxes and put into a BCW card house. That makes it much easier to store the cards that come in through TCDB or Twitter.

  8. Obtain 1% of Mike Trout All-Star Game 2019 Gold Cards (Serial #/2019) #US146 - By the end of the year, I want to own 21 of the 2019 Serially Numbered cards for Trout’s 2019 Topps Update #US146.

    Mid-Year Assessment: Yeah. I went for it with this one. I’m up to 29 of them with one more on the way.

    Year-End Assessment: Final tally: 34 of them. Actually had one more on the way, but the new seller didn’t put down all of my address on the envelope and it got returned to him. At least I got my money back for it. I still check for this card too. I can’t help it. But the ones that get posted are listed from $25-$35. They don’t come up very often either. It’s like there’s no inventory. Wonder why that is?

  9. Donate commons to Twitter Hashtag @Commonsforkids - I was planning on getting rid of junk wax commons by sending them to a charity that gives baseball cards to kids.

    Mid-Year Assessment: I am on the fence on this one. I still might do this, but I have really enjoyed trading with people from around the country through TCDB. There might be a home for these cards yet.

    Year-End Assessment: On my last big box to sort, I was trying to unstick yet another bricked block of Collectors Choice. I finally asked myself why I was doing that? So I stopped. Out came the priority boxes and all those bricked cards are getting sent off soon. I’ll let the kids unstick them. To round out the boxes, I put in random handfuls of all the late 80’s / early 90’s junk I don’t need cluttering up my house. There’s two boxes, so probably around 5,000 cards total. But that’s just getting started. Once I see where I’m at with set builds on those cards, the dupes are gone.

    I posted on Twitter recently that 2019 was the year where I got back into collecting cards, and I bought literally everything I could get my hands on. 2020 started off the same way, but then the devastation of the Coronavirus wreaked havoc on Humanity (and the card industry!). I have found retail once since March, and that was for Topps Update at the end of November. 2020 instead morphed into an experiment to see other types of product. For example, instead of buying a crap ton of Gold Label, I completed the Gypsy Queen and Stadium Club sets. I’m also trying to get every insert of every set I started. The result is that I’m still spending too much coin on sets and individual cards where that money might be better served being spent elsewhere.

    I want 2021 to be a much more focused year. I’ve got a list of PC Cards that I want to look for first and foremost when I’m scrolling through eBay. I’ll also spread these throughout the course of the year. 2020 taught patience. I don’t need to receive 2-3 envelopes a day of random eBay purchases. I need to wait, and look for the right deal. I’m learning hobby lessons daily, and implementing them in how I manage the collection. And that, is considered a success!

    2021 is going to be a great year! So stay tuned, and stay safe!

    JDM

Mail Day Recap: 17 NOV 20

Today I received the back half of the second piece of what so far is a four part trade. Wait…Wut? Confused? Don’t worry it’s awesome. I have a Twitter and TCDB friend who was six short prints shy of completing his own 2019 Heritage set. I learned this after I posted on Twitter that I had finally completed mine. A couple of the cards he needed, I had also just bought through Sportslots or eBay for what I considered to be really decent prices, so I knew the cards were out there. The only problem for him though is a tight budget, and with him getting ready to move into a new house, exceeding that budget isn’t really an option.

UWBone and I have tried to come together on trades before, but he has an excess of vintage and very little modern, and I have none of the vintage he needs and an excess of modern. So the math hasn’t really worked. But he has a lot of cards I could potentially use to start my set builds for those early ‘80’s years, and I was thinking it would be a shame to be that close to closing out Heritage and not being able to finish it off when you’re that close.

So I figured I would buy the cards for him to get around the budget issue. After they arrived, I just mailed the short prints to him and let him decide what and how many cards to send back my way. Today I received the first 12 cards off my 1982 Topps list that he had available. All I sent him on the front half was the Ronald Acuna Jr. from ‘19 Heritage that I managed to score for $4.00 plus shipping. This is a very fair trade in my opinion because it helps both of us, and making another collector happy certainly makes me feel like a valued member of the Hobby Community.

1982 Topps from TCDB user @UWBone24

1982 Topps from TCDB user @UWBone24

As I alluded up on top, this was the second such trade. We have two more to go. The Walker Buehler and Miguel Andujar cards are sitting right here on my desk, just waiting for UWBone to move in to his new digs and get settled. More on this trade sometime in December! In the meantime, today’s haul gets me started.

1982 Topps Base: 17 / 792 cards (2.1%)

More hopefully tomorrow work permitting. Until then, stay safe.

JDM

2020 Chrome Auto Project and other Updates

Yep, it’s been awhile since I’ve written. That’s okay. Life has gotten in the way over the last few months. You’d think being locked in your house would be conducive to blog writing, but the truth is I’m overwhelmed at the moment with the day job. This typically happens in my industry towards the end of the year, where everyone tries like hell to finish their projects. Tomorrow’s the start of another long week, but I’m feeling rested and ready to tackle those challenges.

But I thought I’d give a really quick update on the status of some things. Since the last time I posted anything, I have completed three sets, one of which including obtaining the final five short prints from 2019 Heritage! That one especially feels good, as those short prints are a real pain in the neck. The other two sets completed were 1986 and 1987 Topps. They’re all paged up in the binders, and looking mighty fine if I do say so myself. This means though, that I have moved back a year to 1985 Topps. I sorted through all the ones I had from childhood, and bought a 300 count starter lot off eBay. That was enough to get me started. As it stands now, I’m at 391/792 cards (which is 49.4%). I’ve already got the binder started because I thought I was over halfway, but I guess that’s close enough. I’m liking what I’m seeing so far. Tonight I made a 50 card purchase from a Sportslots seller, which I will probably do again next weekend and the weekend after that until I’m done. I don’t want to spend too much cash on commons, and Sportslots has definitely turned out to be the way to go in this fashion. Spreading it out weekly like this is easier on the wallet too. I’m patient in this regard. This complete set is 35 years overdue anyway.

The other major project is also slowly making progress. I am up to 47 of the 76 Rookie Card Autographs from 2020 Chrome. I buy one or two per week, which I am fine with. I’m slowly whittling down the cheaper cards, and have pulled the trigger on one of the big boys plus a half big boy (as in Trent Grisham below). And it’s a damn good thing I pulled a Randy Arozarena from my jumbo box that I opened. That dude had an incredible World Series, and what his cards did with all the flippers was flippin’ nuts! The scans below are the last two autographs I’ve picked up, and they’re both great. I really like the photograph on the Dylan Cease card, as it makes me feel like I am in the batters box staring him down. He’s also got a really nice signature.

2020 Topps Chrome Dylan Cease_RA-DCE.jpg

As for Trent Grisham, I really like the intense look on his face. It looks like he’s getting ready to flat hammer that pitch. And the fact that Topps was able to get him into a Padres uniform for Chrome when he was a Brewers in Series 1 means this pitch was probably delivered from a Rockies pitcher. Ha!

The signature on this one is pretty sloppy though. His “T” especially, as it looks like a “Y” to me. It’s got an overall scribbly feel to it. Where does the first name end and the last begin? It will be interesting to see what the value of this card does in 2021. Grisham had a really good season in this COVID restricted bubble, but can he keep it up for the full 162? If he gets off to a good start in April, I suspect this card will be harder to get at a reasonable price. But if he falters, well, then I overpaid. We’ll see, but I’d rather not take the chance. I just want to complete this project.

2020 Chrome Auto Trent Grisham_RA_TGR.jpg

So that’s it for now. I spent a little time yesterday making some more scans of the cards in my Mike Trout collection. Please check those out if you feel so inclined. Also, I’d be interested to know what you think of the photo captions on each card. Does it work for you? Let me know in the comments. I’m determined to do a couple of cards from my PC until all have been scanned, and I’m thinking I’ll caption them this way. I’m open to feedback here, so I can change if needed before getting too far down the road.

I’ll try to be back tomorrow. Work duties permitting of course… Until then, stay safe everyone!

JDM

Mid-Year Review of Hobby Goals

Every June. Every June in the day job, we all get that email from our Managers or Supervisors. The one announcing that it’s time to evaluate yourself against the goals you set at the beginning of the year. Usually though, we don’t actually set our goals. We just mindlessly write down the corporate speak that is handed down from the C-Suite to the VP’s, then to the Directors and the Managers, until it finally comes to you, the worker bee that actually does all the work. We all dread evaluating ourselves, because we know no matter what we say, the work remains the same and we carry on.

So it’s basically mid-year. I haven’t touch the blog basically since I started it. In fact, my last post was my 2020 Hobby Goals. So what the hell? Might as well make my next post my self-inflicted Mid-Year Review (not required by HR!).

  1. Establish www.apackperday.com and get into a routine of publication - I want to make this blog another stop on your content consumption when it comes to Hobby related reading.

    Mid-Year Assessment: Bwahahahahahahahahahaha!!! My, my that’s funny. If this was real, I’d be placed on some sort of Blogger Improvement Plan with bi-weekly check-ins with my manager and HR.

  2. Establish YouTube channel with pack rips, completions of sets, Mail Days, eBay sales - Much like with the site as a whole, I am to integrate myself into the broader collecting community through YouTube.

    Mid-Year Assessment: STRIKE TWO!!!!

  3. Buy/Obtain 100 cards from 1976 Topps - Begin hand collating the Topps set from the year of my birth 1976.

    Mid-Year Assessment: Now we’re making some progress. I have managed to obtain 13 separate cards as of today. My favorite of which is #554, Catcher Ray Fosse of the Oakland A’s. What a beautiful action photograph. Especially for some time during the 1975 season. Film rules.

No_554_1976 Topps Ray Fosse.jpg

4. Complete 1988 Topps Base and put in a Binder - Self explanatory.

Mid-Year Assessment: This goal was completed in March or April. It took awhile to find the last two cards in the condition I wanted them to be in, but Bill Buckner and Steve Sax did eventually find their way into their forever homes. Now for extra credit, I’m working on the 1988 Topps Glossy All-Stars. I only have one left. I have to make up for my failings in Goals 1 and 2.

5. Re-binder/Re-page all previously completed sets - All the sets I completed as a kid have been entombed in cheap binders and whatever page brands I could afford. The pages are often of different sizes, so they don’t line up. I want to rebind everything in new consistent binders and Ultra-Pro pages.

Mid-Year Assessment: I’m gonna give myself a pass here. With the Coronavirus currently running rampant throughout the World, the production of binders, pages, and top loaders came to a screeching halt. For a few months, they were unavailable. I’ll get back to this one later.

6.Buy one of 2011 Topps Update Mike Trout or 1984 Fleer Update Kirby Puckett - My two biggest bucket list cards.

Mid-Year Assessment: This should still be possible. With Trout on a seemingly linear trajectory with regard to the card value, it might have to be the Puckett. But I’m okay with that.

7. Sort and organize the 5000 count boxes - Look through and sort in some way the five 5,000 card boxes I carried with me all those years.

Mid-Year Assessment: After I published the goals, I actually found two more of them. So there are actually seven. The boxes are fairly well sorted, organized by brand and year. Now though, I am taking it a step forward and putting all those boxes into my Collection on the Trading Card Database (Handle: @CSUBiochem). This way I can see what I have and use the duplicates to trade with other collectors. I have gotten rid of over half of my 2019 Topps Chrome duplicates in trades through this platform. It’s gold. So I need to put the rest in there.

8. Obtain 1% of Mike Trout All-Star Game 2019 Gold Cards (Serial #/2019) #US146 - By the end of the year, I want to own 21 of the 2019 Serially Numbered cards for Trout’s 2019 Topps Update #US146.

Mid-Year Assessment: Yeah. I went for it with this one. I’m up to 29 of them with one more on the way.

9. Donate commons to Twitter Hashtag @Commonsforkids - I was planning on getting rid of junk wax commons by sending them to a charity that gives baseball cards to kids.

Mid-Year Assessment: I am on the fence on this one. I still might do this, but I have really enjoyed trading with people from around the country through TCDB. There might be a home for these cards yet.

So there you have it. My very own hobby Mid-Year Assessment. Am I on-track in the eyes of Management? Yes and no. But then again, I’m my own boss when it comes to cards. I can do what I want. We’ll see how far I get before the end of the year.

Thanks for reading! Stay Safe!

JDM

Welcome to A Pack Per Day!

Welcome to my new blog! Just as the title suggests, here we will attempt to open at least one pack of baseball cards per day. We will be building base sets, chasing inserts and autographs, building my personal collection, and talking about which cards are awesome looking, and which ones are not. When we can’t open packs, we’ll have #MailDay updates on eBay purchases and listings, hopefully some YouTube videos of pack rips, and general discussion around baseball (and sports) in general. And some other things thrown in too.

Some general things about me:

  • I grew up in Western Colorado, but claim Denver as home. The Rockies are my favorite team by far, but I also rooted for the California Angels as a kid. That has carried over to the Los Angeles Angels of today.

  • I spent all my allowance every week as a kid on junk wax, and amassed a lot of it. I didn't want anything else. I still have those cards, and all the sets that were built in those formative years.

  • Like most collectors, I stopped buying cards when I got to high school in the early 90’s. I think 1991 was my last completed base set. After I got my first real job in 1999, I bought a lot of Topps when they had the special subset of Sosa and McGwire’s Home Run cards. This was also when eBay first started. I managed to complete the 66 Sosa’s at around $8.00 a card, but $20.00 for McGwire’s was just too much. I also got accused of mail fraud by a buyer on a $20.00 J.D. Drew insert card and walked away from the platform. After that I was done again.

  • In 2017, I moved to Austria with my wife and two daughters for work purposes. They don’t sell baseball cards in Europe. I resolved with myself that I would begin collecting again when I got back to the U.S.

  • That happened in July, 2019. I bought my first couple of packs as soon as we were settled. The rest of my collection arrived fresh off the boat two months later, after successfully crossing the Atlantic for the second time.

  • My other hobby is photography (with my to be updated website at: www.focustheframe.com).

  • My personal collection of players will be documented here. I will be scanning the cards I have in the coming days and weeks. For now, I collect Kirby Puckett, Nolan Ryan, Todd Helton, Mike Trout, and Nolan Arenado, but I am always on the lookout for other guys.

  • My goal is to have complete base sets dating back to 1976 - my birth year.

  • I am open to trading cards with fellow enthusiasts, and can be found on Twitter at @focustheframe. I seem to have finally found my Twitter niche amongst other hobbyists. Let me know who you’re after and I’ll have a look.

I am looking forward to rejoining this delightful hobby, and sharing my experience and collection with all of you. Let me know what you think in the comments below, or hit me up on Twitter. Talk to you soon.

JDM

04 December 2019