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Showing posts with label 1991. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1991. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

1991 Japanese Mike Tyson Toyota Truck Telephone Card

It's Super Strong....piffff.  Back in 1991 Toyota paid Mike Tyson a crap ton of yen to be the spokesperson for their line of Toyota Trucks.  There was a whole advertising campaign behind it with commercials (click here for three of them), magazine and pamphlets....and telephone cards.  Telephone card collecting was in full force in the late 1980s and early 1990s and Toyota decided to use this advertising medium to capture one of the most iconic boxers and athletes of all time, Mike Tyson, with one of the most profitable collecting hobbies ever, Telephone Cards.  Toyota ended up printing three different versions with Tyson on them and this red one is one of the most common.  Anyone else ever run across one of these?

Have a great Tuesday!




Friday, January 29, 2021

Thanks Daniel @ It's Like Having My Own Card Shop! - Paul O'Neill Relic w/"Star" Power

Back at the end of last year, Daniel over at It's Like Having My Own Card Shop ran a giveaway for commenting on his post letting him know what three of your hobby related goals are for 2021.  Daniel's blog is one of the best out there and you can't argue with 222 followers.  Low and behold, Daniel randomly selected my name and generously sent my a 2001 Upper Deck Gold Glove Slugger's Choice Game-Used Batting Glove of Paul O'Neill!  What a cool card, and reading up on Paul I discovered he is from Columbus Ohio...I have a handful of relatives there so that in of itself makes this card that much more special.



Daniel didn't stop there and also sent along two unopened packs of Star cards.  I'm not going to lie, I have a hard time opening vintage packs and this time won't be any different....so will leave them sealed, but will show them off here.  First up is a pack of the 1989 Star Kevin Mitchell/Will Clark set.  Most of you reading post also collected in the late 1980s and Will and Kevin were household names on the powerhouse Giants team.  1989 happened to be the year they went to the World Series, but lost to the Athletics in a 4-game sweep.  The Battle of the Bay also had some drama as right before Game 3 kicked off, there was a powerful earthquake that hit...I remember watching it live on TV and the ensuing coverage of collapsed roadways. 




As an additional bonus is this pack of the 1991 Star Tim Hardaway set.  I didn't follow basketball too much in the early 1990s, but Tim is a name that everyone knew as well.  These bad boys are also staying sealed.



Thanks again Daniel for the goodies and Happy New Year!

Saturday, March 7, 2020

Unopened Box Bepop

Fuji and I have a little dual-post action going on this Saturday where each of us is posting our Top-10 favorite unopened boxes we have in our collections.  Check out his here.  It was tough narrowing it down to ten, but I was able to break them down into different categories to help me decide.  From #10 to #1, here is what I came up with:

#10 (Also known as my favorite Vintage Japanese Sport Box) - 1991 BBM Baseball
This was the first large-scale baseball set that BBM issued which also happened to contain a bunch of Hideo Nomo 2nd-Year cards and baseball legends Sadaharu Oh and Shigeo Nagashima as coaches.  My box is a bit beat up, but still a beauty and hard to believe it was 29 years ago!  30 packs per box with 10 cards per pack.  



#9 (Also known as my favorite Collector's Choice Box) - 2013 BBM P. League Bowling
I used one of my 10 boxes as kind of a miscellaneous box, or Collector's Choice Box.  Pretty girls that are bowling seems pretty quirky, but if you go watch videos of them in action they are very talented.  The P. League has somewhat of a reality show feel, but fun to watch and the ladies do not disappoint.  The autographs of these ladies are extremely well done as well.  54-card set per box with 2 special insert cards to boot!
 
 
#8 (Also known as my favorite Vintage Japanese Non-Sport Box) - 1950s Weapons "Gold" Menko


In the mid-1950s, the world saw a proliferation of nuclear weapons as well as rockets, jets and bombers filling the skies.  This set captures the imagination of the artists through weapons and destruction  What makes this set very interesting beyond the artwork, is the liberal use of gold ink on the packaging and cards.  A great example of Japanese artistry.  These boxes are considered "unopened and sealed" when the twine is present with the box.  50 packs per box with 6-7 menko per pack.
 

 
#7 (Also known as my favorite Foreign "Non-Japanese/U.S." Box) - 2019 Panini European Kimmidoll


I went through Spain and Portugal earlier last year right during the Kimmidoll craze.  Panini issued these cards only in this part of the world for a span of 3-6 months.  After I saw them, I ended up buying two unopened boxes online as well as an album.  Now you can't find them anywhere it seems.  These postcard-sized cards are strangely appealing to me and the artwork is amazing and refreshingly Japanese.  There are 18 packs per box with 6 cards per pack.
 
 

#6 (Also known as my favorite Modern Japanese Non-Sport Box) - 1986 Amada Famicon Mini Cards

I was and still am a huge NES fan.  The hours/days/weeks I spent engrossed in these games always brings a smile and air of nostalgia to me.  Amada kept the mini card craze strung along until the mid 1980s and issued these cards which captured screenshots of actual in-game play.  These boxes have 30 packs with 2-3 mini cards per pack.  I can still hear the Super Mario Brothers music playing in my head right now.... 
 
 
 
#5 (Also known as my favorite Oddball Box) - 1997 Takara Basscole Fishing Lures

 Most of you are scratching your head on this one.  Me too.  Why do I have this box?  Read about it here in full detail.  But basically Brad Pitt's movie, A River Runs Through It" sparked a bass fishing frenzy in Japan which also happend to coincide with the boom in trading card production.  What are these cards?  Trading cards of bass fishing lures.  No, no the actually people bass fishing, just the lures.  A must in my collection for sure.  30 Packs per Box and 10 Cards per Pack.
 
 
#4 (Also known as my favorite Modern Japanese Sport Box) - 2016-2017 BBM Basketball
I have a PC of Yuta Tabuse...or at least a really good handful of them in my collection...and decided I wanted to collect these boxes.  At the time, the new B.League partnered with BBM to produce these trading cards.  That was back in the 2016-2017 timeframe and they have since been making these for 4 years.  This was the very first series issued back in late 2016.  20 Packs per Box and 5 Cards per Pack 
 
 
 
# 3 (Also known as my favorite U.S. Non-Sport Box) - 2018 Topps Stranger Things Series 1

I love the show Stranger Things and when Topps announced they were releasing a trading card set based on the series, I knew I had grab a few boxes.  I can't remember the exact story or controversy, but I believe the odds for special cards there was stated on the retail? packs wasn't accurate and this evolved into a lot of complaints and poor reviews of this first product.  Alas, this box stays on my shelf with unknown content....mysterious!  24 Packs per Box, 7 Cards per Pack
 
 
 
#2 (Also known as my favorite Modern Sumo Box) - 2016 BBM Sumo

I chose this year of BBM sumo cards because this was the year I connected with a great group of collectors on Facebook devoted to strictly BBM sumo cards.  It has been a great opportunity to share my passion with like-minded collectors and fans.  A sharp-looking set with great box art.  24 Packs per Box with 5 Cards per Pack. 
 
 
 
#1 (Also known as my favorite Vintage Sumo Box) - 1958 Dash 7-8 Menko


 This box is what got me into sumo card collecting in the first place. The very first sumo box I owned!  While vacationing in the southern islands of Japan, I found this box in a small antique shop in the resort town we were staying at.  I knew I had to have it!  This 1958 Dash 7-8 (Catalogue #M581) has resided in my collection as the first-ever sumo card box that I have owned and so it captures a special place in my heart and the #1 spot on my list of unopened card boxes.  I haven't counted the packs, but there are at least 100 packs with the special uncut gold prize card sheets on top. 
 
 
Well, there you have it.  Thanks for stopping by and please make sure you check out Fuji's unopened box bebop as well.  Cheers and Sayonara!

Monday, October 1, 2018

1991 NTT Japanese Telephone Card - Yokozuna Chiyonofuji

I mentioned in a previous post that NTT switched to the barcode backs on their telephone cards in 1991.  Before 1991, each back had a unique numbered back for easy cataloguing.  After 1991, they went to a generic back with a standard barcode number making cataloguing that much more difficult.  Here is one of the first barcode backs (The dreaded 955595 100160 <110-016> number)....which happens to be the great Yokozuna Chiyonofuji.  He was called the "Wolf" because of his cunning in the ring and his superb physique was popular among the fans.  Chiyonofuji is regarded by some as the greatest wrestler in history due to his contributions to the sport on and off the dohyo.  My goal is to start cataloguing Japanese sumo telephone cards with earnest in 2019....as Fuji would say "Down the Rabbit Hole."








Saturday, January 6, 2018

1991 Rodeo America - Pro Rodeo Cards

Here is a quick, non-sumo post.  I picked this set up really cheap at an antique mall I was browsing....I grew up around cowboys so always have a fascination with rodeos and this fits perfectly into my collection.  This is Set A consisting of 50 cards and there is a Set B as well.  It appears the entire set was distributed in box form, but the checklist that I have seen at The House Of Checklists doesn't match this set so I'll checklist it here.  I haven't done in-depth research on this set, but it appears this is one of the first rodeo sets out there and it has a ton of Hall-Of-Famers!



(Hall of Famers in Bold & Italic)

#1 - Cody Lambert
#2 - Rabe Rabon
#3 - John Jones, Jr.
#4 - Clint Johnson
#5 - Marvin Garrett
#6 - Tee Woolman
#7 - Jim Sharp
#8 - Charmayne Rodman
#9 - Jim Shoulders
#10 - Dwayne Hargo
#11 - Unknown
#12 - 'Ote' Berry
#13 - Jake Milton and Walt Woodard
#14 - Billy Etbauer
#15 - Clint Corey
#16 - Cody Custer
#17 - Marlene Eddleman
#18 - Miles Hare
#19 - Roy Cooper
#20 - Mike Sanders
#21 - Robert Etbauer
#22 - Wayne Herman
#23 - Clint Branger
#24 - Martha Josey
#25 - Mike Horton
#26 - Joe Parsons
#27 - Joey Roberts
#28 - Ty Murray
#29 - Lewis Field
#30 - Wacey Cathey
#31 - Gayle Beebe
#32 - Chris Lybbert
#33 - Blaine Pederson
#34 - Dan Etbauer
#35 - Shawn Frey
#36 - Ted Nuce
#37 - Martee Pruitt
#38 - Casey Tibbs
#39 - Rick Chatman
#40 - Cliff Williamson
#41 - Dean Wang
#42 - Duane Daines
#43 - Charles Sampson
#44 - Butch Lehmkuhler
#45 - Jakes Barnes & Clay O'Brien Cooper
#46 - 'Skeeter' Thurston
#47 - Deb Greenough
#48 - Shaun Burchett
#49 - Jess Franks
#50 - David Burnham & Rob Smets

Saturday, April 30, 2016

1990s Japanese BBM Baseball Pack "Rips"

Back in the day, before sumo wrestling cards took over, I was a big baseball card collector.  I was fortunately to work at a card store for most of my high school years to fuel my passion, but the combination of the 1994 strike, going to college, and the overwhelming number of baseball sets being produced killed my collecting mojo during the late 1990s.  However, before it was totally dead I had some of my Japanese friends pick up some Japanese baseball card packs for me during my freshman year of college.  This weekend, when I was tidying up the basement, I came across the packs.  Before anyone gets too excited they were already opened, but I apparently only cut off the top of the pack and then slid the cards back in after I was done looking at them....typical me of the era.  So 20 years later, here I am again getting ready to open/reopen them and see what lies within.  All the cards appear to be in the 6 different packs so it's really like I never even opened them....my memory of what lies within long ago faded.  I'm a true amateur when it comes to Japanese Baseball stars so all I'll really recognize is Nomo, Ichiro, and Matsui.  I'm using Engel's book as a guide to see how I fared.  The packs are as follows: 1995, 1994, 1993, 1992 Series 1, 1992 Series 2, and 1991.  Wish me luck.

Up first is the 1995 pack.  Come on Ichiro!!!!  It says there are 10 cards inside and cost 200円.

No Ichiro and the best card it looks like is #349 of Kazuhiko Ishimine.  I do like the hologram on the back...reminds me of Upper Deck!

Here is what I got:

#638 - Tomohiro Kuroki
#550 - Shinichiro Minami
#461 - Shinjiro Hiyama
#382 - Takayuki Murakami
#349 - Kazuhiko Ishimine
#272 - Masashi Arikura
#212 - Katsuhiko Yamada
#176 - Tsuyoshi Shimoyanagi (Gold Facsimile Auto)
#152 - Hiroo Ishii
#92 - Hiroyuki Maehara

Alright, 1994 here we go.  Looks like Matsui and Ichiro are the ones to get here.  Engel also states that cards #1-42 are scarce.  10 cards in this pack as well No whammies!

Okay, another so-so pack.  Card #553 looks to be my best card "Power Aplenty" (Bryant and Winters)

Here is what I got:

#553 - "Power Aplenty" Bryant and Winters
#533 - Shintaro Yoshitake
#505 - Jun Yamada
#477 - Yusuke Torigoe
#449 - Chihiro Hamana
#421 - Masao Yanada
#393 - Yoshinori Ueda
#365 - Norio Tanabe
#337 - Kiyoyuki Nagashima
#309 - Yasuaki Taihoh

Next up.  1993.  200円 for 10 cards.  Hoping for an Ichiro, Matsui or Nomo.

Bam!  Hit the #423 Matsui!

Here is what I got:

#498 - Checklist
#473 - "Combination Card" Furuta and Okabayashi
#448 - Takahiro Ikeyama
#423 - Hideki Matsui
#398 - Akihito Kondoh
#373 - Tadaharu Sakai
#348 - Norihiro Akimura
#323 - Terumitsu Kumano
#298 - Kenji Tomashino
#273 - Shinichi Igarashi

Let's roll with 1992 Series 1.  200円 for 10 glorious cards.  I'd love to pull a Nomo here.

Nothing at all to report in this one.

#232 - Takahiro Konno
#219 - Yoshihiko Takahashi
#182 - Kenji Horie
#157 - Kenji Furukubo
#132 - Satoshi Nakajima
#107 - Hiroshima Municipal Stadium
#82 - Hiroshi Yagi
#57 - Takahiro Ikeyama
#44 - Hiroaki Hirota
#7 - Tomio Watanabe

1992 Series 2.  Hopefully I get at least a semi-star!

Another blah pack.  1992 was not kind to me at all here.

#497 - Checklist
#472 - Yasuo Nagaike
#447 - Hiroshi Motohigashi
#422 - Kohji Ohtsuka
#379 - Atsunori Itoh
#372 - Shinichi Igarashi
#347 - Norihito Yamashita
#322 - Shinji Sasaoka
#297 - Yoichi Okabayashi
#272 - Masahiro Takahashi

Alright, last pack.  1991....Inaugural year for BBM baseball cards.  Let's see what we get...would love a Nomo!

Not bad it seems.  I did get an Oh card...and for some reason this pack has 3 American players in it.

Here is what I ended up with:

#384 - Tetsuya Iida
#344 - Shinichi Murakami
#304 - Tom O'Malley
#264 - Koji Maeda
#223 - Sadaharu Oh
#183 - Shinichi Igarashi
#143 - Koji Takagi
#103 - Kiyoki Nakanishi
#63 - Johnny Ray
#24 - Jim Paciorek

Well that was definitely fun and some great looking cards these early BBM releases are!  A great way to spend an hour on a Saturday.