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Why I Collect Pujols Cards
Posted by: | CommentsWhen I was younger, it was my mission to build card sets: both complete ones and team sets. It made me feel like I accomplished something, and it felt good to put the final card into the box and put it in the closet with the rest. To this day, I keep two copies of each player card I like, one for the set and one for my binder. Now that I’m older my interests have changed a bit: I still collect small sets, but my main collecting focus is on a few players. One player in particular defines my collecting habits.
Think you know who it is? I can see your train of thought now. “Well, she’s a season ticket holder for the Yankees and a woman, so she must collect Derek Jeter, right?” Nope. “Well then it has to be A-Rod?” Wrong again.
Don’t get me wrong. I love Derek Jeter, and not because he’s “cute”, but because he’s a leader and he runs hard to first whether the team is down or up 10 runs in the 9th. As far as A-Rod goes, his stats speak for themselves despite the controversy, and he will end up being one the best players of all time when all is said and done. But despite my Yankee devotion, my heart lies in St. Louis with the Prince himself, Albert Pujols. Shocked? Most people are, so I’m used to it by now.

For anyone living under a collecting rock, Pujols rookie cards hit shelves in 2001; coincidentally and unfortunately, a time when I was in college doing other things and not buying baseball cards as much as I used to. From around 1999-2002 I bought some here and there, but not nearly as much as I bought after those years or even before. I really couldn’t have picked a worse time to take a break considering how expensive Pujols rookie cards are now, but what did I know? Once I got back into the hobby I decided that if I was able to complete a set then great, but my goal was to start collecting Pujols. The reason I picked him? Simple: I read the back of his cards, saw his stats, watched him play and knew that throughout his career, he’d be the best player on the field at any given time.
Over the years I have managed to put together a decent collection of Pujols cards: roughly 800 unique cards (including one triple relic autograph that I got for my birthday), a couple of rookie cards, and a 1/1 sketch card. I pulled the 1/1 Pujols out of a case, probably the best pull I’ve ever had. One of my rookie cards is the 2001 Upper Deck card, and it was actually sent to me months ago by a fellow card blogger who knew I collected Pujols. He sent it along with some cards that I knew were coming, though the contents were a surprise until they arrived at my door. Talk about a smile from ear to ear, I was ecstatic for days that someone would be that generous to little old me. The generosity of the hobby’s blogosphere truly is astounding. I could tell stories all day, but we’ll save that for another time.

Anyone who collects a player, or several players, knows how difficult it can be to track down all the different parallels (especially if you’re collecting someone like Albert Pujols or Derek Jeter). You can break pack after pack, boxes, and even cases, yet only end up with one single card of those guys. I say this from experience. For example, my friend Suzy and I broke a case of 2008 Upper Deck Masterpieces which yielded two Albert Pujols cards and two Derek Jeter cards. That gave me new meaning to the term “short print”, and more over a better understanding of why I end up paying more money for the base cards in some sets. To collect a player takes a lot of motivation, dedication, and discipline.
Did I just say “discipline”? I sure did, and I will tell you why. For many products it usually makes more sense to buy single cards of your player from the local hobby store, card shows, or the internet, rather than chasing down eight different color variants thinking you will actually get them on your own. Do I follow my advice? Absolutely not! It would take all the fun out of collecting. There’s nothing more alluring than those shiny wrappers just asking to go home with you in the store, so don’t feel bad: adopt a pack and take it home.

While I do purchase single cards online and at card shows, I find it more fun and more gratifying to open up a pack or a box and find the Pujols card I needed all on my own. For example, I was roughly on my 40th (not kidding) blaster of 2009 O-Pee-Chee Baseball, and last night in the fourth-to-last pack, there he was . . . an Albert Pujols #100 black parallel just for me. Coincidentally, I got another card I really wanted in the same blaster: the Face of the Franchise Derek Jeter insert. Two hard to find inserts that made me super happy; buying boxes of cards doesn’t get much better than this.
Are you a player collector eager to share who you collect and how you do it? I would love to hear about it.
Come back later to see some pictures from the Yankees vs. Red Sox series. I was given tickets on the field level for Saturday’s game, in the “moat” (aka the $1300 seats behind the dugouts) for Sunday. While I can’t say the surrounding crowd in the expensive seats was as much fun as the bleachers, it will probably be the only chance I get to sit in these seats . . . so I took advantage.
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A Bleacher Creature and Her Card Collection
Posted by: | CommentsHello, my name is Marie and I am a season ticket holder for the Yankees.
That statement has to be the one that gets the craziest looks from most people. One of the things I have learned over the last few years is that people, mainly men, are absolutely amazed that I have season tickets for the Yankees by myself. Women shouldn’t be sports fans, much less have season tickets right? Most people feel the need to go with someone, or they go with their boyfriends and husbands. Yet I have no problem going alone.
Starting around 2005, I began attending Yankee games on an almost daily basis, buying tickets online or from eBay when games were sold out. For the first few games I had tickets in the bleachers, a place I had never sat before. I must admit that I was a little intrigued by some of the antics I remember seeing going on there when I was a kid, which made me want to experience it myself. Besides, my parents would never get tickets out there and told me I should never sit there. Once I was able to drive myself to the stadium, where do you think I sat? You guessed it.
Would you believe me if I said I have not sat anywhere else in Yankee Stadium since then? You should believe me, but I will be honest and say that I was give four tickets eight rows from the dugout one season and couldn’t turn those down. That would be the only exception. During that 2005 season I began to meet people who were “Bleacher Creatures”, or regulars. I learned the roll call, the player taunts, the cheers, chants and even songs that go on out there. That was all it took to get me hooked. I saw roughly 50 games that season, all from the right field bleachers.
I have kept my tickets over the years and moved over to the new stadium despite being very uneasy and unhappy about it. It’s not like the Yankees asked my opinion or would have cared for that matter because if I didn’t keep my tickets, there would always be someone else to buy them. I took a great deal of memories from the old stadium with me: my childhood, playoff games (everyone remembers the bloody sock game), the 2008 Home Run Derby, 2008 All-Star Game and finally, the last game ever at the old Yankee Stadium.
I consider myself very fortunate and lucky to have been able to have seen so many games in the old stadium, and to have been a part of Opening Day in the new stadium as well. While I haven’t attended as many games this season as past years as a result of starting on my graduate work, my loyalty to the Yankees hasn’t wavered. I watch every game on television or listen on the radio if I am not near a television.
Perhaps now would be a good time to tell you all that I am also addicted to baseball cards. While my collection is extremely large, the focus of what I look for is very clear. Normally I don’t build sets because I have more fun working on player collections, but Yankee Stadium Legacy changed that. I used to build sets as a kid and teenager and gave it up to build collections of my favorite players.
When the Yankee Stadium Legacy set was announced many people were too intimidated to try and collect almost 7,000 cards- not me. I am well on my way, with 1,313 cards logged into my collection and a pile sitting here waiting to be accounted for. This is the ultimate Yankees fan set and by far the most comprehensive insert set ever made. There is nothing not to like about the Yankee Stadium Legacy set . . . unless you are a Red Sox fan.

So here is my advice to all the women and young girls out there that have always wondered what it would be like to collect cards: I urge you to buy a pack- you won’t regret it. If you have children, buy a pack and you can “pretend” it’s for them, I won’t tell. There may also be some women out there that already collect and I say kudos to you, and welcome trade offers. Collecting baseball cards or sports cards in general is a great way to bring yourself one step closer to the sport while having some fun. There is nothing better than finding those last two cards to complete a set, or filling the empty slot in your binder with a parallel of a card you have been chasing for months.
Now that you know a little bit more about me and may even think I’m crazy, you should come back and see what I’m working on next. There will be much more about baseball cards and my current mission in my player collections coming soon. I’m looking forward to sharing more about my passion for the Yankees and my drive to complete the Yankee Stadium Legacy Set as well as my player collections right here on UpperDeckblog.com.
Marie co-writes the blog A Cardboard Problem in addition to being a season ticket holder for the Yankees and an all around baseball fan. Marie is an avid card collector and welcomes comments, questions, and e-mails.
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