Saturday, October 18, 2025

7/4/25 card show report: fireworks on the fourth

I guess Saturday night's alright for blogging after enjoying watching your favorite college football team emerge victorious on a lovely fall day.

But for tonight let's go all the way back to July and the monthly show I made it to on the Fourth! I dropped $130 on some very nice stuff, a high so far this year, and some of that was thanks to the presence of some cards from my favorite decade. I also enjoyed another blogger meetup:

John and his wife made the trip all the way from the western part of the state and it's always great to see him when it's possible. Side note--we may be able to meet up at another show next month, fingers crossed! Anyway, as you can see we were repping our favorite teams.

I've slowed down my acquisitions of unassigned trade bait not destined for specific folks as I have a good amount I still need to move if possible on TCDb, so once again tonight it's all keepers. And yes, the "90s inserts rule" tag is in full effect!
CF Max Clark, the #3 overall pick from 2023, is one of Detroit's absolute top prospects, so I thought to snag a few Bowman Chrome inserts of him. Then I went much older school with Cobb on a GQ Framed parallel, which makes a set I don't otherwise care about look better.

Oh hey, it's the first of our awesome 90s inserts, Griffey-style! #1 is a '97 UD chase card called Long Distance Connection, one that notes Junior socking his 200th career HR the previous season thanks to a then-career high of 49. He'd go off for 56, 56, 48, and 40 bombs over the next four seasons. And speaking of a guy who could flat-out Play, how about a Pinnacle Epix insert, one of the cooler offerings from the 90s, with multiple colors and designs? This one mentions his '95 ALDS-winning run, which was probably the high point of the franchise until 2001, and maybe this season as well.

Maddux's 2008 Topps Gold parallel isn't a 90s insert but I do enjoy a good numbered card like this one numbered to the year it was made. I'll say it again: Gold is a good parallel but we don't need 74 others every year.

Also back when things were simpler, 2001 Bowman Chrome had exactly two parallels: Gold Refractors and X-Fractors, like the Dean-o you see above. I also happen to think modern X-Fractors look very ugly compared to the original ones from the 90s/2000s.

And would you believe I didn't own an '83 Fleer second-year of Junior Ripken? Well, I previously lacked that but can now lay claim to all of his regular issue '83s.
Speaking of the Iron Man, another sweet 90s insert I dug up this time was his '96 Flair Diamond Cuts. Nope, the scan doesn't do it justice at all as this one combines holofoil, a diamond-like background, and a simulated "cut-out" of the player. Sweet!

Next, Pudge isn't one of the guys I put much effort into collecting since his time with the Tigers was relatively brief, but I wasn't going to pass up a Refractor from the original iteration of Stadium Club's Chrome insert back in '99 (before it became its own product the following year).

I do believe the 2001 UD Vintage RC of HOFer Ichiro came from a $5-ish box, and the value was too good to pass up. Besides, I really respect the hell out of his game and still feel like he doesn't get enough credit for how good he was coming over from Japan.

We'll finish up baseball stuff by going back to the 90s one more time. Griffey makes one more appearance on the Radiance parallel of the 100% numbered '98 SPx Finite set. While the base cards were numbered /7000, Radiance came in at 3500, and Spectrum were limited to half that. Hooray for more numbered cards!

And Gwynn closes out the hallowed quartet with a shiny die-cut 1999 insert out of the awkwardly-named HoloGrFX product called Future Fame Gold, a parallel of a relatively easier-to-pull six-card set. Four of the subjects are the big four that I collect so needless to say, I'm a fan.
As for basketball stuff, well I did get some, but my write-ups above went kind of long and I'm not huge into the sport anyway. So I'll just say I nabbed the seven inserts above, probably from dime or quarter boxes. Cool.
Ending with football, here's four guys that were part of the '23-'24 National Champs who beat today's opponent, Washington. Corum (SAGE HIT) was the automatic short-yard back who rewrote the record books. Sainristil (Absolute Retail Red parallel) was the WR-turned-DB who led the defense.

And then we have two RBs represented on autographs to introduce them to the hits collection. Ben Hall ('24 Leaf Trinity) played a little during the regular season behind the dynamic duo of Corum and Donovan Edwards. He transferred to the dumpster fire in Chapel Hill with bowl star Jordan Marshall returning and stud RB Justice Haynes transferring in from 'Bama. His two TDs this season are hopefully softening the blow of being on a 2-4 Tar Heel squad led by a senile grandpa who's dating a girl that's barely older than a teenager.

Mullings (SAGE HIT), meanwhile, picked up a few carries in the title game as back #3, spelling those two guys after a position switch from LB over the summer. He then became the main guy in '24 and was a bit of a bright spot on a not-so-great team, going for almost 1000 rushing yards and scoring 12 TDs. The Titans grabbed him in the 6th round this year but he's been on IR with an ankle injury and hasn't played yet.

Both of these guys are very welcome to the hits collection which now stands at 269 subjects and growing.

That's it for the July show but I still have more pickups to share. Until then, RIP to the Tigers season and all of its squandered chances, happy belated Yankees Elimination Day, and thanks to John for the meetup!

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