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mudflap02 said:The green tint info is incorrect - I pulled one from a rack pack.
AMAZIN HOF COLLECTOR said:Thanks for the info.
Heritage always confuses the hell out of me!
Jeff N. said:mudflap02 said:The green tint info is incorrect - I pulled one from a rack pack.
Then Topps LIED.
No card company has EVER done that.
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mudflap02 said:AMAZIN HOF COLLECTOR said:Thanks for the info.
Heritage always confuses the hell out of me!
Jeff N. reported for thank poaching.
mudflap02 said:http://www.beckett.com/news/2011/03/topps-confirms-2011-heritage-baseball-sps-and-variations/
Topps confirms 2011 Heritage Baseball SPs and variations
By Chris Olds | Editor
Collectors have been examining their 2011 Topps Heritage baseball cards closely since their arrival earlier this month, discovering variations and nods to the past here and there.
But on Thursday Topps made all the guessing games end as it confirmed a group of variations in the set.
The short-printed base cards are Nos. 426-500, while card Nos. 110-158 and 160-196 have green-tinted cards, while there are blue-tinted versions in Walmart loose packs and red-tint cards found in Target loose packs.
Six short-printed variations in the set include:
– Alex Rodriguez (reversed negative), a card that has sold for as much as $300.
– David Wright (Cincinnati Reds listed on front)
– Joba Chamberlain (appears on a version of card No. 139)
– Bengie Molina (Wrong birthday on back)
– Ryan Zimmerman (batting average incorrect on back)
– Vladimir Guerrero (listed as a pitcher on the back)
Topps also confirmed that Green Refractor Hot Boxes are found one per hobby case.
nice to see my speculation has been confirmed as fact by Topps, although the original #279 had a word discrepancy rather than a birthdate error. I agree with others that Topps either doesn't know or seems to not know what the heck is in their own product. It's frustrating beyond belief to not have them post this sooner than this. Every year it's the same, though - why should we expect any different?mudflap02 said:Six short-printed variations in the set include:
– #490 Alex Rodriguez (reversed negative), a card that has sold for as much as $300.
– #478 David Wright (Cincinnati Reds listed on front)
– #139 Joba Chamberlain (appears on a version of card No. 139)
– #279 Bengie Molina (Wrong birthday on back)
– #392 Ryan Zimmerman (bbatting average incorrect on back)
– #125 Vladimir Guerrero (listed as a pitcher on the back)
TNP777 said:I agree with others that Topps either doesn't know or seems to not know what the heck is in their own product. It's frustrating beyond belief to not have them post this sooner than this. Every year it's the same, though - why should be expect any different?
Even though it has lipstick on, I'd recognize that pig anywhere.
topps is oriented toward making money...perioduniquebaseballcards said:TNP777 said:I agree with others that Topps either doesn't know or seems to not know what the heck is in their own product. It's frustrating beyond belief to not have them post this sooner than this. Every year it's the same, though - why should be expect any different?
Even though it has lipstick on, I'd recognize that pig anywhere.
Its great Topps doesn't know these little details, or claims not to know... its seemingly been that way since 1951. There's no reason why a corporation would want to make themselves overly accountable for such small details over such a simple product...or else hobbyists who are too serious would start demanding even more accountability, making a simple product less so...and probably thereby making the product less interesting & collectible at the same time
Its also funny in a way when people who buy their - again, admittedly very simple - product are more serious about it then the people who produce it. It shows Topps is more oriented to general, simple collecting and that there are still plenty of nerds out there hooked on the status quo.