Showing posts with label 2016 Topps Marketside Pizza. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2016 Topps Marketside Pizza. Show all posts

24 October 2016

Contested Shots 16: A Guessing Game at Highly Subjective and Completely Arbitrary

Back in early October there was a contest on the Highly Subjective and Completely Arbitrary blog. The task was to make some guesses about the game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Baltimore Orioles, like which team would hit the most home runs, how many total home runs would be hit in the game, and which player would hit the first home run of the game. I got enough answers right to be considered a winner, and the other day a PWE stuffed with cards arrived in the mailbox as my prize.


Up first we have a few cards for various teams that I follow/collect. The Blue Jays, Astros, and Athletics are all represented here. I am torn on whether that Jose Canseco card shows him as a Ranger or a Blue Jay. I am leaning toward Rangers, though, as the pinstripes seem to be the right colors. Someone with more baseball smarts than me could probably tell right away, but my cursory image search didn't turn up much outside of a lot of people wearing pajamas. Either way, I find Canseco's post-baseball antics to be much more entertaining than his on-field exploits.


I had to scan the horizontal cards separately. I don't know how Brian got 12 cards into one PWE. There were extra stamps on it, though, so that probably helped to grease the wheels of post office bureaucracy. My wife and I are currently trying to get our hands on a package that a substitute mail carrier dropped off at a house with the same number on the wrong street. It is not a fast process. I hope the person who got the box is enjoying our bottle of dog mouthwash. I personally don't think mouthwash is going to improve the freshness of my wife's dog's breath anyway, but it's not worth it to me to fight that battle.


If this were a box break, these would be the hits. That shiny card in the upper left is a Gold parallel from 2016 Topps of Athletics pitcher Ryan Madson. He had 30 saves this year, although he wasn't one of those sub-2.00 ERA knockout closers. Carlos Gomez didn't fit well with the Astros and spent the last bit of 2016 playing much better for the Rangers than he did in Houston. It looks like the card is a Platinum parallel from the 2016 Topps Bunt product. I like the design and price point on Bunt, but for whatever reason I didn't pick up any of it this year. I've purchased a lot less baseball stuff this year than in years past. I don't know if that's a permanent change or just how things played out in 2016. Tyler White is a retail-exclusive Black parallel from 2016 Topps Heritage High Number, and George Springer is from one of the cooler releases this year, the Topps Marketside cards that were packaged with Wal-Mart's Marketside pizza and breadsticks for a couple of months.

All around this was a very cool prize package, and I was pretty happy to be a winner, especially in a contest that required guesses. I am going to go ahead and say that it was a contest of skills, and that my skills and training were good enough to propel my guesses to the top of the heap. Thanks, Brian!

16 May 2016

Pack(s) of the Day 133: 2 Packs of 2016 Topps Marketside Pizza Baseball


I recently bought a full set of Topps Marketside Pizza Baseball cards from an eBay seller. I had considered chasing the set through buying pizza and breadsticks, but my wife said the pizza isn't that great and I'd be better off just buying the set online. It's not often that she encourages me to buy things online, so I waited for the right listing to pop up. The seller included a couple of unopened packs of cards along with the set, so I thought I'd open them up for a blog post. Each pack has three cards from the 50-card set as well as two coupons for Topps products and a code for a Topps Bunt pack.


My first pack features Albert Pujols, the Phillie Phanatic, and Ryan Braun. I've never been much of a Pujols fan, although he is obviously a great player on the downhill side of his career. I just never had any real interest in the teams he's played for. He did have a cool moment at last year's Home Run Derby with Joc Pederson's brother, Champ Pederson, who has Down syndrome. Pujols has a daughter with Down syndrome, and his Pujols Family Foundation does a lot of work to help people with Down syndrome and their families.

The Phillie Phanatic is one of the more famous mascots in baseball. I went to a Phillies game last month and I found the Phanatic's antics pretty entertaining.

Ryan Braun is one of those players whose cards seem to follow me around everywhere. I don't collect his cards and I don't really want his cards, but it seems like every batch of packs I open has him in it. He's got the whole steroid thing going on, and he also designed his own line of clothes for the Affliction Clothing brand. That is practically unforgivable. I am not sure what to say about the steroid / PED thing. I think cheating is wrong, and I think PEDs are cheating, but some players I give a bit of a pass to (Bartolo Colon) while other players I don't (Alex Rodriguez, Ryan Braun). I don't know exactly why, but I realize I am inconsistent when it comes to holding PED use / allegations against a player.


The second pack was okay, with Troy Tulowitzki, Adam Jones, and Todd Frazier. Troy Tulowitzki is a guy I am kind of indifferent about. He's a great player who seems to be injured a lot, but that's about it as far as my impressions of him. He recently hit his 200th home run, as did the next guy in the pack, Adam Jones.

Adam Jones is also a pretty good player. I've had him on quite a few fantasy baseball teams. He's kind of tailed off a little as a fantasy pick lately, because his power and average have shrunk a bit and he doesn't steal bases much anymore. His sweet spot in fantasy was probably 2012-2014.

Todd Frazier is about 8- home runs shy of these other two guys, but he might catch them eventually. He's got plenty of power. It's kind of weird that he's with the White Sox now. That hadn't registered with me until I looked at his Baseball Reference page today.

These two packs didn't really yield the greatest pulls in the world, but they were a nice toss-in with the complete set I purchased. It was fun to open them, and I didn't have to figure out what to do with a bunch of frozen pizzas.