Showing posts with label Denny's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denny's. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

The Food Isn't Good, But The Baseball Cards.....

There are several chain restaurants that I will not eat at for various reasons.  Usually there is just something really unappealing about their food.  Places like Jack In The Box, Hardees, and Denny's all make my list of places I will absolutely not touch.  Although my wife likes to point out that I will eat at White Castle.



Point taken.  

There is one thing that distinguishes one of those three restaurants on my list above: baseball cards.  

At Jack In Box there is the possibility of E. Coli, or perhaps getting really mediocre food off of a really overcrowded menu.  They are like the Cheesecake Factory of fast food, not really good at anything, but you can order all kinds of food.  No baseball cards though.  

Hardees.  Gross.  No baseball cards either.  

Which brings me to Denny's.  


I can't tell you the last time I ate at a Denny's.  I am going to say that it is a minimum of 20 years.  There was one where I went to college, but it was rather shady.  One of those places in town that you do not go near.  There were a bunch in St. Louis, I don't even remember a specific location of one though.  I am sure at some point I have been to one.  At least I think have been to one.  What's really important is that they have baseball cards.  

I posted one Denny's card a week ago that came in a random package.  



I was pretty excited to see this Jackie Robinson card.  I did not have it in my collection, but I knew I had a bunch of these Denny's cards from 1997.  Obviously I did not get these by eating at a Denny's, but after going through my collection, it appears that I am missing one card from the set.  Several of the cards are in my collection a few times. 

How did all of these cards end up in my house?  Great question.  A look at one 1997 Denny's card close up.....



There are some other quality Denny's sets out there from the 1990s, but this one is my favorite.  I like to think of it as a combination of two different classic baseball card products.  The fronts of the cards are very similar to the SportsFlix cards.  Right down to the texture.  

The backs of the card.....


have a hologram picture.  While the picture does not take up the whole card, this part of the card reminds me a bit of the mid to late 1990s SPx cards from Upper Deck.

There are a grand total of 29 cards in the set, but I am technically missing one of the cards from the set even though I have all 29 of the cards from the checklist.

A look at the cards in the set.



These are the first two numerical cards in the set that I was able to assemble by digging through my card boxes.  The Tim Salmon card on the right is actually card number 1.  However, Denny's made a Larry Doby card that was also card number 1, but it was only available at restaurants in the Cleveland area.  I will go find one at some point.

More of the set.


Two pretty good first baseman here.  Always forget how good Mo Vaughn was before he left the Red Sox for the Angels.  Never quite the same after that point.  Still good numbers though.  


A small checklist of 30 cards should allow for a really strong checklist of players who were active during the 1996 and 1997 seasons, but for some reason there is a Travis Fryman card in here.  He was on several All-Star teams and was considered the best player on some bad Tigers teams.  Tony Clark was a lot better though.  


Love seeing John Jaha in here.  Not a long career, but he had some great years in the mid 1990s for the Brewers.  Had a nice year or two with the A's too.  Johnny Damon on the Royals too.  Meh.

Shall we pick up the pace?


McGwire with a mullet.  The base runner in the picture is distracting and blurry.  I think it's Rey Sanchez, so Spring Training game?


ARod was in middle school when this picture was taken.  


I am pretty sure that someone at Pinnacle added that baseball to the Roger Clemens card.  


For no reason, here's Jose Hernandez.  It looks like they airbrushed him on the card next to Sammy Sosa.


The Rockies player in the set was not Larry Walker or Andres Galarraga.  I could have also lived with Ellis Burks, maybe Vinny Castilla.  Bichette.  Terrible.  



Always a positive when you can post an Expos card.  



Barry Bonds should be in the Hall of Fame because the numbers on the back of this card are that good.  Plus, he was not on steroids yet.  


Jackie Robinson a second time and Scott Rolen with the Phillies bat boy.

Overall, a great set.  They do not make these sets anymore, which is probably a good thing in terms of the quality of food consumed by baseball card collectors.  However, these were really good card sets.  

Sunday, October 28, 2018

A Lazy Morning

It was a really busy week.  No time for baseball cards.  I slept in the last two days, my wife made a good breakfast, and I spent time time with the littles this morning.  I am sitting in my office watching episodes of Tiny Desk Concerts and looking at some the new cards that showed up in my mail recently.  

If only there were more time for baseball cards.  

There is always time for cards on a lazy morning.  

First up, I picked up another Anthony Banda card about two weeks back.  Weird thing is that I got it off of Ebay, half asleep, I did not realize that I bought it from my local card shop.  Probably could have saved myself a little shipping and them an EBay fee.  Not my finest moment.  




Banda has been my Durham Bulls player of choice this season.  He was not on the team long before the Rays called him up to the Majors, but tore up his elbow and ended up missing the rest of the season.  Last season, Anthony Banda pitched for the Diamondbacks and was traded to the Rays for Steven Souza.  A huge chunk of his Topps cards have still had him a Diamondbacks uni.  Better than some bad airbrushing.  

The coloring of the card feels really off.....


It's in the colorized movie neighborhood.  

I also added a few more Kellogg's cards from 1983 to help out with my set.  I will have more of these later in the week......




These were three that I needed for my set.  Love the Greg Minton card with the orange Giants jersey and cool mustache.  Moves me a little closer to finishing off my set.  No time for checklists this morning, but I am in good shape with finishing this off soon.  

I also got a big envelope of random cards.  A thank you for helping out another collector with some cards for a set.  It's hard to post all the cards from a big random envelope, but two stood out to me.  With the 1983 Kellogg's set being close to completion, both are candidates to be projects over the last two months of the year.  




There were actually four of these in the package, but I have enjoyed the 1983 Kellogg's set, so the 1982 version would probably be fun too.  I am actually a lot further along, starting point wise, then I would have imagined before I went to look.  The time spent looking is also part of the reason you're only getting two cards out of a big envelope.   Roughly 50% is already here.  

I don't love this scan, but these cards are hard.  




The last few Denny's sets were actually pretty nice.  This is from the 1997 set, which has a SportsFlix kind of design.  Not a very big set, not hard to find the cards, and most are inexpensive.  Again, this is a set that own a good chunk of already, might be fun to finish off.  

Sunday, August 19, 2018

Hall Of Fame Weekend Part Two: Ray Lankford

The Cardinals added three new members to their Hall of Fame yesterday afternoon when they inducted outfielders Ray Lankford and Vince Coleman, along with 1940s pitcher Harry Brecheen.  The team had a nice ceremony at the Ballpark Village, it's the building across the street in left field with the rooftop seating, which houses the team's Hall of Fame.  All of the living members of the Cardinals Hall of Fame were invited back......




there was also a little ceremony on the field before the game last night against the Brewers.  

On to the baseball cards.  

The first half of my post featured Vince Coleman cards.  He is a little bit older than Ray Lankford and played for the Cardinals before the real explosion of brands and sets that started in the early parts of the 1990s.  It was not hard to come up with a few Vince Coleman cards with the Cardinals simply because there are some limitations on how many there are floating around out there.  Lankford is a different story though.  

While Ray Lankford was never a real star player with the average baseball card collector, he was the best player on the Cardinals for the majority of the 1990s, which means he showed up frequently.  In some of the high end products that started popping up as the decade went along, often with a limited checklist of 100 to 200 cards, Lankford was often one of the few Cardinals in the set.  

If you have followed along with this blog from the beginning, you probably have seen enough Lankford's with serial numbers or were somehow scarce.  There are plenty of other Lankford cards floating around, so I thought I could do a post with Ray Lankford base cards.  

I went through and pulled a favorite base case card from each year that he played for the Cardinals.  No Padres cards.  All of these cards are likely in some sort of nickel, dime, or quarter box at your local card shop.  Maybe if you live in St. Louis some of these are fifty cents.  

Maybe.  



1990 Upper Deck- Always been my go to Lankford rookie card.  It's not obvious from the front of the card that it was likely a Spring Training photo, but if you flip the card over he is wearing 57.  The Cardinals turned over a lot of their roster that year, but Lankford was not the prospect of note in that wave.  No cool prospect stamps on these cards, that sort of thing was reserved for Todd Zeile.  



Nice little blurb on the back of the card about the number of extra base hits he had while he was in the Minor Leagues.  Love the Double A statistics on the back of the card.  Those are pretty impressive.  




1991 Topps- This was the year that I really became a fan of Ray Lankford.  It was his first full season in the Majors, not necessarily his best year in retrospect, but you could see there was a lot of potential.  Lankford stole 44 bases, led the National League in triples, and had a few pretty notable moments during the season.  

This is a classic around St. Louis....



Apologies Phillies fans.  I know that's a tough play to watch. 

Lankford also pulled off a cycle during a September game against the Mets.  I went to this game and is probably the moment that hooked me on following Ray Lankford's career.  




I still have my ticket stub and program from this card.  I have thought about getting them framed to hang up in my baseball card room.  It has not happened yet, but someday soon.  




1992 Topps Gold- I know this is not technically a base card, but we are talking about a card that was in packs of 1992 Topps.  They are not hard to find and probably cost fifty cents on the high end of things.  I love the Topps All-Star Rookie cards.  Seems a little weird that he got one of these cards after he had been in the Majors for almost 200 games.  




1993 Kansas City Life/St. Louis Police Team Set- The Cardinals had some really nice team sets during the late 1980s and early 1990s.  I know there are a lot of collectors who like some of the borderless Cardinals team sets, but I still dig the blue border.  These were giveaways at baseball card night, not sure of the number that were available.  Seems like every card shop in St. Louis has a box of these in the store with some sort of sign pointing out that they are really really cheap.




1994 Upper Deck- Not sure where this picture was taken, maybe Mile High?  I really like the action shot of Lankford playing defense.  The vast majority of his cards seem to be batting, nice to see something different.  The Cardinals played the Reds on Opening Night in 1994.  Lankford was the first batter of the season.....



Pretty neat accomplishment.  



1995 Topps- Sunglasses, eye black, earrings, homemade arm sleeve.  I like the MLB Anniversary patch too.  



1996 Bazooka- I like baseball card that were taken in Busch Stadium II.  Surprised that the astroturf does not have heat emanating from it in waves.  1996 was a good year for Ray Lankford.  He made his first appearance in the playoffs after helping the team win the National League Central.  Lankford had a shoulder injury though, which limited his playing time in the Postseason.  





1997 Denny's Hologram- For whatever reason, I could think of several, Ray Lankford was only an All-Star once during his career.  All-Star voting is stupid.  He was also in the home run derby that year.  The Cardinals were horrible that season though, so I am not sure many noticed Lankford's great season.  Marquis Grissom made two All-Star Games.  Two.  Still, his stat sheet seems to indict that he set several career highs during the season.  Dante Bichette, Lance Johnson...managers picking players are ridiculous too.  



As for the card, I am not a fan of Denny's restaurants, but they gave out some nice baseball cards some years.  The 1997 set reminded me a lot of some of the old Hostess sets, or SportsFlix.  No consumption of Denny's took place in acquiring this baseball card.  




1998 Pinnacle- Not many cards out there celebrating Ray Lankford's appearance in the 1997 All-Star Game.  Almost certain that this is the only card that commemorates his participation in the All-Star Game Home Run Derby.  I am not saying that Ray came in last in the home run derby, but it was not a strong showing.  

Still, 1998 was one of the best seasons of his career.  He spent the whole season batting behind Mark McGwire while he was breaking the Major League home run record doing things like this.....  






1999 Stadium Club- The Cardinals do not change up their jerseys, rightfully so, and they do not wear a ton of different throwback jerseys either.  For a few years in the late 1990s though, the played a few times in Negro League uniforms.  I believe that they always used the St. Louis Stars uniforms.  Pretty sharp looking threads.  




2000 Fleer Ultra- I do not like the Cubs.  I do like pictures of players playing against the Cubs, especially if it involves having the ivy walls in the background.  This card is so green.  




2001 Topps Heritage- Last one for this post.  This was the beginning of a great baseball card product that is on the must have list every year now.  There were some really good looking Cardinals cards in this set, Lankford is no exception.  I like the orangish background on the card contrasted with the full color photo.  2001 was the end of the line for Lankford and Cardinals baseball cards in my collection.  He was traded to the Padres for Woody Williams during the 2001 season.  Lankford returned in 2004, but only had a card in the MLB Showdown set.  You know the card game.  Are those really even baseball cards?  I lean towards no.  

106.

Blake Snell number 106 is just a red herring to make two other announcements.      Announcement #1- I have not written very often in this sp...