Grand Cards: Tiger Galleries
Showing posts with label Tiger Galleries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiger Galleries. Show all posts

Monday, May 23, 2011

Tigers Gallery & Review: 2011 Topps Opening Day

I'm sure right now everyone cares about bigger and better things. Well that's fine. I just got a package that contained team sets of Opening Day, Attax(!) and yes, Bowman. I'll be posting Galleries & Reviews for all of them this week, as well as filling in the rest of the year's sets. Opening Day starts things off because it is fun, quick and easy.

Every year I consider Opening Day a throwaway set, and every year I find that I like it as much, if not more, than the regular Topps offering. The 2011 edition continues in that tradition in many ways.

Take a look at the full team set in the gallery below. My take on the set can be found after the jump.









#16 Max Scherzer

#82 Brennan Boesch

#100 Miguel Cabrera

#104 Victor Martinez









#177 Magglio Ordonez

#184 Austin Jackson

#188 Justin Verlander

#M9 Paws








#OD55 Miguel Cabrera

#UL5 Miguel Cabrera

TTOD21 Austin Jackson


Thursday, February 17, 2011

Happier Times

Today has been a bad day for Tigers fans. I think a trip to Happier Times Blvd. is necessary. I give you the 1984 World Champions, in a "World Champions" commemorative set put out by Wendy's in 1985. Everything is happy. The people that don't look happy are happy on the inside (I'm looking at you Chet Lemon). Even Zombie Jack Morris is happy.

Someday we will be happy again.









#1 Sparky Anderson

#2 Doug Bair

#3 Doug Berenguer

#4 Dave Bergman









#5 Tom Brookens

#6 Marty Castillo

#7 Darrell Evans

#8 Barbaro Garbey









#9 Kirk Gibson

#10 Johnny Grubb

#11 Willie Hernandez

#12 Larry Herndon









#13 Rusty Kuntz

#14 Chet Lemon

#15 Aurelio Lopez

#16 Jack Morris









#17 Lance Parrish

#18 Dan Petry

#19 Bill Scherrer

#20 Alan Trammell







#21 Lou Whitaker

#22 Milt Wilcox

Checklist Card

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Always.

As someone who loves Oddball sets, you're sure to see me going ga ga over one that features a rookie card of one of the Tigers greats. This 1981 set was made by Topps and distributed by Coke in the Detroit area. There were sets made for 11 teams, most of which mirrored the 1981 Topps versions, but some which had subtle variations. Aurelio Lopez is the only Tigers card with a different picture than it's 1981 Topps version.

As oddball sets go, this one in fine, but nothing special. Really, it's just a 1981 set with a logo plastered on it. Still, for the Gibby alone, it's worth the price of admission (This came last week for $1 plus $2.50 shipping).









Title Card

#1 Champ Summers

#2 Al Cowens

#3 Rich Hebner









#4 Steve Kemp

#5 Aurelio Lopez

#6 Jack Morris

#7 Lance Parrish









#8 Johnny Wockenfuss

#9 Alan Trammell

#10 Lou Whitaker

#11 Kirk Gibson (RC)

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Tigers Gallery & Review: 2010 Bowman Sterling

2010 Bowman Sterling is another quick and dirty set, so I'll spare you the long write-ups and any normal "after the jump" content. Let me just preface this whole post with this: Bowman Sterling costs $223 per box at Blowout, and more elsewhere . A box has 6 packs with 5 cards per pack. 30 cards. Of course, 20 of those cards are "hits." Still, when your best Tigers hit is Chance Ruffin, $223 is just a tad steep. This post will show you ALL of the Detroit Tigers that this could possibly get you.

Base Set I actually like these cards--they are nicer looking than the 2009 version. The Prospect Cards are especially nice with their rounded frame. The best way to describe the set is that this is what 2010 Finest should have looked like.

I'm showing you the Gold Refractors (#/50) here because I think that they really pop and I was somehow able to get images of the whole set, which is usually tough to do for a low-numbered parallel set. Of course, there are base cards, and many flavors of refractor including regular (#/199), Gold (#/50), Black (#/25), Purple (#/10), Red (1/1) and four printing plates.

For an All-Rookie checklist it includes the two must-haves (Jackson and Boesch), a solid prospect that Topps has fallen in love with of late (Oliver) and a player who was so bad in his only appearance as a Tiger that was sent down two days later, was cut from the 40-man roster in November and has been invited to join the Braves for Spring Training. He shouldn't be here.









#5 Brennan Boesch

#8 Austin Jackson

#33 Andy Oliver

#37 Jay Sborz


Not bad, right? Even the regular versions of the cards look pretty nice, a stark contrast from Topps or Bowman Chrome or Finest, where the base cards tend to look dull:


What I don't understand are some of the production decisions. Like, why did they decided to make the purple refractors in reverse?


This is odd and, dare I say, stupid.

Prospects A slightly different design and numbering system for the prospects. There are two--Daniel Fields who is one of the better positional prospects in the Tigers system (and looks like he's put on a little weight since the last time we saw him), and Chance Ruffin, the 2010 supplemental pick out of Texas who looks to have high upside but got roughed up in the AFL this fall. He given the coveted Autograph Prospect card, and doesn't have a non-autographed version.





#BSP-DF Daniel Fields

#BSP-CR Chance Ruffin


Other Stuff Ooh, so descriptive. There happens to be a box topper in this set that is a dual relic of Albert Pujols and Miguel Cabrera. It's pretty sharp--this is the Black Refractor (#/25) version:



For $223 it can all be yours!

Seriously though, if you're anything but a prospect-mad collector, this is absolutely a waste of your time and money. The Tigers checklist is small and decent, but all of these singles can be had for a pittance. I hypothesize that I could put together a full rainbow of the entire team set, prospects and autographs for less than the price of a box. If anyone would like me to test that theory, I'll happily accept donations.