Topps Baseball cards are no more....MLB ending its 70 year partnership with Card Company

EPDC

El Pirate Del Caribe
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Haven't collected sports cards since the early 90s. Damn, still have thousands of cards stored away.
MLB's 70-Year Partnership With Topps Is Over : NPR
MLB Is Ending Its 70-Year Partnership With Baseball Card Manufacturer Topps
Conor Donahue says 1987 was the first year he remembers going to the store by himself to buy a 40 cent pack of Topps baseball cards.

Donahue, now an adult and the vice president of publicity for the Washington State Sports Collectors Association, has been collecting baseball cards since he was seven.

Now he says his collection is up to a "few thousand," he told NPR.

All of the memories, history, nostalgia, and sentimentality tied up in these small cards are closely aligned with the brand that made them — Topps, Donahue said.

"Those memories stick with you. And that's pervasive across all collectors. Their first memories of the sport are tied up in these cards and those memories circle around Topps," he said.

Members of the collectors community like Donahue were left reeling this week after news that Major League Baseball is set to end its 70 year trading card partnership with Topps.

The news was like a "huge shockwave," Donahue said.

Fanatics, a sports apparel company, is reportedly expected to be the new partner with MLB to manufacture trading cards.

Representatives for Topps and Fanatics were not immediately available to respond to NPR's request for a comment.

Citing a memo from the Major League Baseball Players Association, ESPN reports an unnamed Fanatics-founded company will be the exclusive licensee "in the baseball card category." This license gives Fanatics the power to manufacture the only cards that can show team logos.

Fanatics wedges into a lucrative business

Collector and Taylor's Baseball Cards and Collectables store owner Ian Taylor, displays a very rare 1965 Topps promotional sample sheet.
Mindy Schauer/MediaNews Group via Getty Images
The new deal with Fanatics could be hugely lucrative for players and MLB. It's more than 10 times larger than any other deal MLB or players have agreed to, according to ESPN. MLB and the player's association as well as the NFL and NBA players unions will have a stake in the new company.

The news of this deal could be a huge blow for Topps, which was set to soon go public in a deal that valued the company at $1.3 billion.

Topps was founded in 1938 and began producing baseball cards in 1951. It's current deal with MLB as exclusive license holder of league-backed cards extends through 2025.

Topps produced the 1952 Mickey Mantle card that sold for $5.2 million last January. Without baseball, Topps is left mainly with Major League Soccer, according to ESPN.

Though there are a few years left before Topps' license expires, the concept that the company as he's known it for years might be going away, is hard to think about, Donahue said.

"It's kind of hard to put your finger on it. It's like losing a friend. Every year there is a new Topps issue and everyone is looking forward to it," he said.

Collecting cards is a hobby "steeped in tradition and regularity," Donahue said. "For [Topps] to not have a licensed baseball issue, that's going to be a tough pill for a lot of collectors to swallow."
 
Never though I'd see the day. Wonder if this means the value will go up for older tops cards in general. :idea:

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Back in 91...my aunt threw away my entire baseball and football card collection.
In my dresser drawers, I had no clothes.....just cards......thousands of Topps, Upper Deck, Donruss.
She did it on trash day when I was at school. Boy I hated that woman forever for doing that.
 
Back in 91...my aunt threw away my entire baseball and football card collection.
In my dresser drawers, I had no clothes.....just cards......thousands of Topps, Upper Deck, Donruss.
She did it on trash day when I was at school. Boy I hated that woman forever for doing that.
those mafuggas from that era had no understanding of the value of comics and collectibles and were QUICK to "throw that shit" away. :smh:
 
Back in 91...my aunt threw away my entire baseball and football card collection.
In my dresser drawers, I had no clothes.....just cards......thousands of Topps, Upper Deck, Donruss.
She did it on trash day when I was at school. Boy I hated that woman forever for doing that.
Sounds devious......sad. I would have hated to see your face when you opened that dresser drawer, the devastation.
 
Back in 91...my aunt threw away my entire baseball and football card collection.
In my dresser drawers, I had no clothes.....just cards......thousands of Topps, Upper Deck, Donruss.
She did it on trash day when I was at school. Boy I hated that woman forever for doing that.
Hey auntie let’s check out this house I was thinking about getting
 
No sir. White parents were worse. I got a partner whose dad tore up an issue of Xmen because it was "demonic".

It was this one:

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Worth about $12000 right nigh.
My older bro was a big time comic book collector… had several hundred maybe even close to a thousand..wrapped in comic book covers..I have no idea what he did with them… just like my damn sis in law sold damn near all the old records I had in my crib..it was close to 900.. I’m talking mad Barry whites, Isley bros, Tina turner, etc.. sold it for cheap to smh.
 
Back in 91...my aunt threw away my entire baseball and football card collection.
In my dresser drawers, I had no clothes.....just cards......thousands of Topps, Upper Deck, Donruss.
She did it on trash day when I was at school. Boy I hated that woman forever for doing that.
I always kept my stuff. Still have all my comics from the my childhood until this day. The only 2 I dont have (i was way young when I bought them) was the 1st 15 issues of Transformers and GI Joe
 
Damn I still got all my cards that I need go through, but do kids nowadays collect cards?

I wanna say its mostly people buying them looking for a come up.

The same people buying the Xbox's, playstation, graphic cards etc.
 
Man i had so many players rookie cards with Donruss. Ken Griffey Jr, Daryl Strawberry, Julio Franco, Rafael Palmero, Bo Jackson....etc
Have a few Bo's.Pulled a Ken Griffey rookie from Bowman lost that bitch. Pulled Jordan rookie baseball and Lebrons rookie from Upper Deck
 
Man, those were the days.
I bought Beckett Magazine religiously every damn month.

I still have a few MJ cards from my middle and high school days. Had a binder with over 100 MJs at one point :(
My thieving older brother from NYC stole 'em and sold them one summer when he came to visit. QB scumbag.
The one I have left are not in mint condition but some are near mint. I'm curious what PSA would rate/grade them...
 
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i used to have boxes of them as a kid. Wish i held onto them.
I still got mine and will be looking for sample sheets and lots of other first with any Fanatic cards made..... loading up on their first year issues when they come out .... shit.... any issues for the first ten years most likely :yes:


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