ronfromfresno
Active member
Donruss has already done a nice job of offering Leaf buybacks in 2005.
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There's just 1?morgoth said:I don't really get this move at all.
1. Leaf will not be producing anything baseball related. So the person who was tired of the Topps monopoly, well this won't solve that.
Sean_C said:If true, that would make even less sense, since supposedly Razor has a good reputation in the non-baseball card market, or at least that's the story Brian has been trying to hammer into our heads the past 18 months or so.
DWright5 said:coltsnsox07 said:Can he make Leaf Limited? What about Leaf Century(remember Panini made it but didn't distribute it? It had Ruth and Gehrig and Cobb stuff in it, I remember seeing actual cards in the sell sheet.)
From what's been shown, it seems like he's more worried about putting an established brand name on Razor products (MMA, Pop Century, etc.).
Haven't heard one word about re-introducing ANYTHING Leaf yet.
If that were to happen, it might actually seem like a good move, and I'd probably buy some ( I liked Leaf!). Otherwise, like has been said, he's just trying to buy a reputation with the name.
If you're buying the Leaf brand name, use it for Leaf products, don't just waste the name to re-brand yours.
morgoth said:I don't really get this move at all.
1. Leaf will not be producing anything baseball related. So the person who was tired of the Topps monopoly, well this won't solve that.
2. Leaf had alot of brands that collectors liked that were basically taken over by Paninni so what's left for them to scavenge?
3. The designs and product lineup is just a name change from Razor to Leaf so what has the name actually gotten them? Leaf sure doesn't have a 60 year history in MMA cards. Its kinda silly as all the past history with Leaf was in Boxing (one set) and the rest in Football and Baseball.
4. If they don't try and start making licensed MLB product then its just a waste of time and effort on their part and basically screwing up the Leaf name.
AKA Coastal said:Good move by Leaf/Razor. They needed a new name. The Razor name has to much baggage. Now they just need to stay off message boards and put some quality products out. Did I mention stay off message boards? It just doesn't work.
Really? ::facepalm::MarlinsManiac20 said:Can it make MLB licensed cards?
Why all the negativity and stereotyping of MMA fans?pigskincardboard said:morgoth said:I don't really get this move at all.
1. Leaf will not be producing anything baseball related. So the person who was tired of the Topps monopoly, well this won't solve that.
2. Leaf had alot of brands that collectors liked that were basically taken over by Paninni so what's left for them to scavenge?
3. The designs and product lineup is just a name change from Razor to Leaf so what has the name actually gotten them? Leaf sure doesn't have a 60 year history in MMA cards. Its kinda silly as all the past history with Leaf was in Boxing (one set) and the rest in Football and Baseball.
4. If they don't try and start making licensed MLB product then its just a waste of time and effort on their part and basically screwing up the Leaf name.
I think you have to look at the bigger picture. By large, MMA fans are relatively new to the Hobby and between the ages of half-retarded (okay, that's not an age) and about 30-something. The name Leaf doesn't have to symbolize or stand for anything, it just has to be somewhere in their minds. To compete with Topps -- remember, most of these customers can't tie their shoes -- all you need is basic name recognition. The people who actually know the difference between Topps and Leaf are probably smart enough to purchase the best product or both products, regardless. You never have to worry about *those* type of people because they're generally not affected by simplistic marketing moves. To address those people, you literally just have to put out a good product.
This is a move to address people the people that aren't card fanatics and it's a good move. People that buy cards still want them to be worth something one day and will gravitate to stability rather than a fly-by-night corporation. Half of these people probably haven't the fondest clue that Leaf disappeared.
This should signify a move to the mass-market and walmart (that's where these people shop, when they're not clothing themselves in potato sacks,) I'd imagine.
pigskincardboard said:morgoth said:I don't really get this move at all.
1. Leaf will not be producing anything baseball related. So the person who was tired of the Topps monopoly, well this won't solve that.
2. Leaf had alot of brands that collectors liked that were basically taken over by Paninni so what's left for them to scavenge?
3. The designs and product lineup is just a name change from Razor to Leaf so what has the name actually gotten them? Leaf sure doesn't have a 60 year history in MMA cards. Its kinda silly as all the past history with Leaf was in Boxing (one set) and the rest in Football and Baseball.
4. If they don't try and start making licensed MLB product then its just a waste of time and effort on their part and basically screwing up the Leaf name.
I think you have to look at the bigger picture. By large, MMA fans are relatively new to the Hobby and between the ages of half-retarded (okay, that's not an age) and about 30-something. The name Leaf doesn't have to symbolize or stand for anything, it just has to be somewhere in their minds. To compete with Topps -- remember, most of these customers can't tie their shoes -- all you need is basic name recognition. The people who actually know the difference between Topps and Leaf are probably smart enough to purchase the best product or both products, regardless. You never have to worry about *those* type of people because they're generally not affected by simplistic marketing moves. To address those people, you literally just have to put out a good product.
This is a move to address people the people that aren't card fanatics and it's a good move. People that buy cards still want them to be worth something one day and will gravitate to stability rather than a fly-by-night corporation. Half of these people probably haven't the fondest clue that Leaf disappeared.
This should signify a move to the mass-market and walmart (that's where these people shop, when they're not clothing themselves in potato sacks,) I'd imagine.
Topnotchsy said:Why all the negativity and stereotyping of MMA fans?pigskincardboard said:morgoth said:I don't really get this move at all.
1. Leaf will not be producing anything baseball related. So the person who was tired of the Topps monopoly, well this won't solve that.
2. Leaf had alot of brands that collectors liked that were basically taken over by Paninni so what's left for them to scavenge?
3. The designs and product lineup is just a name change from Razor to Leaf so what has the name actually gotten them? Leaf sure doesn't have a 60 year history in MMA cards. Its kinda silly as all the past history with Leaf was in Boxing (one set) and the rest in Football and Baseball.
4. If they don't try and start making licensed MLB product then its just a waste of time and effort on their part and basically screwing up the Leaf name.
I think you have to look at the bigger picture. By large, MMA fans are relatively new to the Hobby and between the ages of half-retarded (okay, that's not an age) and about 30-something. The name Leaf doesn't have to symbolize or stand for anything, it just has to be somewhere in their minds. To compete with Topps -- remember, most of these customers can't tie their shoes -- all you need is basic name recognition. The people who actually know the difference between Topps and Leaf are probably smart enough to purchase the best product or both products, regardless. You never have to worry about *those* type of people because they're generally not affected by simplistic marketing moves. To address those people, you literally just have to put out a good product.
This is a move to address people the people that aren't card fanatics and it's a good move. People that buy cards still want them to be worth something one day and will gravitate to stability rather than a fly-by-night corporation. Half of these people probably haven't the fondest clue that Leaf disappeared.
This should signify a move to the mass-market and walmart (that's where these people shop, when they're not clothing themselves in potato sacks,) I'd imagine.