(Today I bought some cards in the card aisle for the first time in 3 weeks. It was just a 3-pack of Chrome -- with the 5 pink parallels -- and the guy at the checkout asked if they put gum with cards anymore. I said, no, not really. He said his brother used to buy "old 40-year-old packs" with gum in them and eat the gum. I didn't ask him if his brother was still alive. It's time for Cardboard Appreciation. This is the 273rd in a series): In 1992, Pinnacle arrived onto the baseball card scene with a sleek, slick first set that framed its players in midnight black. I didn't like much about cards in 1992, but I did like Pinnacle. Pinnacle also featured an interesting subset that year called "Idols". This set -- similar in look to Topps' sets of the mid-1950s -- displayed a pair of photos, a smaller color action photo of the current player and a larger, sepia-toned image of the player's idol. (There was also an "Idols" insert set tha...
Up all hours talking baseball, cardboard & collecting