Sunday, August 31, 2025

Sport Card Blogger Stats – Pages views / per post. Update - Blogger is going crazy

 Night Owl mention on his blog something strange is going on with page views. They numbers are up big time- See Below comparison - From around June 7 

 

Blog

Views

Posts

Page View Per Post

Night Owl Cards

6,727,950

5759

1170

Sports Card Collectors

3,043,673

6311

482

Chronicles of Fuji

2,619,848

2601

1007

Cardboard Collections

1,876,217

1673

1121

Cardboard History

1,794,078

1100

1630

My sports card obsession

1,595,897

2675

595

Donruss 1982

 277,199

1196

 231

 Cards over Coffee                                  400,000                     750                      533



Here are the numbers around the end of August

Blog

Views

Posts

Page View Per Post

Night Owl Cards

8.001,868

5799

1379

Sports Card Collectors

3,588,390

6311

568

Chronicles of Fuji

3.092.792

2626

1117

Cardboard Collections

2,011.183

1673

1201

Cardboard History

1,889,195

1106

1708

My sports card obsession

1,759,025

2706

650

Donruss 1982

 332,454

1205

 275

 Cards over Coffee                               no page views listed on page


To put things into perspective Night Owl had 15.9 percent of his total views on his blog came in the last almost 3 months


16.6 percent of Donruss 1982 Blogs of all views came in the last almost 3 months


For Chronicle of Fuji it is 15.2 percent


        Here are Jim From Downingtown blogs

 

 

Blog

Views

Posts

Page View Per Post

1968 Topps Baseball

594,787

258

2305

1966 Topps Baseball

501,665

214

2344

1969 Topps Baseball

424,334

174

2438

1970 Topps Baseball

369,666

140

2640

1963 Topps Baseball

178,104

58

3070

1965 Topps Baseball

83,131

50

1662

 

For 1968 Topps Baseball it was not as quite as high at 8.5


Something strange is going on - its like we are being probed - maybe it is 3I Atlas



Sunday, August 24, 2025

When will Topps Heritage End?


 

A couple of years before the Pandemic, On The Shlabotnik report that I thought Topps Heritage was going to end in 2021 (with the 1972 design) because I felt that 1972 was the end of the Vintage years. I also thought that Topps would revert back to 1952 and start with that set because in 2022 everyone who was in the 2001 set would be out of the league.

I was wrong but I was partly right - instead of getting rid of Topps Heritage they started Topps Chrome Platinum.

Crazily in June of 2022, they released 2021 Topps Chrome Platinum using the 1952 design - So I was kind of  right they were reuse the 1952 design for  major set on current players.

In June of 2023, they released 2022 Topps Chrome Platinum using the 1953 design.

In June of 2024, well...........

Topps ended Heritage minors in 2022. Unless they put out a set this year (possibility???)

Which got me to thinking. I really liked the 2024 (1975) and 2025 (1976) Topps Heritage sets. But I think I know why, because that was in my wheelhouse, 11 and 12 years old collecting.  I started collecting at 7 the 1972 Topps Set (My First Love - and still my favorite), and a lot of kids in the neighborhood were collecting but by 1975/1976 it was just me trying to all the cards in the set. Which I never did. 

Demographics. The Baby Boomer era 1946 to 1964 when the birth rates were high, The 1952 set came out when the baby boomers were 6 years old. The number of births per year fell every year from 1965 to 1977. In 1976 - The 11, 12, 13 year olds were the end of the baby boomers. As I mentioned before by 1976, I was basically the only one in the neighborhood collecting - there was no one to trade with (and come to think of it, I was one of the younger kids, there was a kid around 11 but I don't remember any kids in the neighbor between 5 to 10 years at the time. In fact, I can only remember when I was 17, a 4 year-old girl who lived down the street and she had to have been born in the late 1970s so I really believe that declining birth rate was true.

In 1979, 1980, 1981 there were a hell of a lot less 11/12/13 year-olds collecting cards than there were 5 to 10 years before. 

These heritage sets are about nostalgia - which the coming design years would have less adults who collected them as kids. 

Part of the reason I never really sought the heritages (the biggest reason was cost of short prints), was I did not collect them as a kid and they did not have the hold on me (though I love looking at cards from the 1950s and 1960s).

Back to Demographics - if I remember correctly the number of births increased each year from 1978 to 1989. They fell in 1990s (beginning with the terrible GDP years in 1990 and 1991) until sometimes in the early 2000s but I am not positive about this. 

These demographic partly explain the junk wax era. In 1987, those born in those increasing birth rate years would have been 9, and reached 13 in 1991 (which appears to be the age (13) when a lot of kids drop out collecting - I had a 12 year old cousin who completely lost interest in cards after 1989). The junk wax explosion may have also been from some of the Baby Boomers (35-41 years old - stashing cards for their 5 and 6 year olds). 

  This takes me back to the potential upcoming heritage sets - I like the 1977 set, but I really don't care to collect it in modern version form. For some strange reason I would like to see a 1979 version of Heritage. I don't have much emotional attachment to the 1978, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1986 sets. 

I would like to see a version of  the 1983 and yes 1987 but that is about it. 

Personally, I can see Topps (Now Fanatics) not continuing this much longer. I think we are getting hints of things to come (see above) and with the Heritage update set coming out almost a year after the release of 2024 Heritage set.   Will there be an update set this year, I did notice the checklist did not really miss any big name players like they did last year. Is there a need for it. The way the rookie card status is manipulated is there a reason to get Nick Kurtz in any of the sets this year (He debuted in end of May) as the rest of the rookie class is really lacking.  

I don't think there is a nostalgia market for us people in our late 50s and early 60s to want to collect the upcoming designs. 

Saturday, August 16, 2025

Ranking the Topps Sets from 1952 to 2025. (updated from 5 years ago)

 This is an update from 2020.

Ranking the Topps baseball sets from 1952 to 2025. It is based on the look and feel of the card set (or mostly how I feel about them) - The last five years have not been kind. I have noted where I flipped some of the older set rankings - as I have become fickle - The rankings: 


1.  1972

2.  1959

3.  1983

4.  1971

5.  1953

6.  1965

7.  1975 - I don't know why I had 67 above this set - Heck I am not sure 65 or 53 is better. Moved from 8 to 7

8.  1967 - moved from 7 to 8

9.  1952

10. 1991

Maybe the most surprising pick is 1983, but it was an improvement over the 1963 set that is was based on. The 1983 set is sort like ‘The Empire Strikes Back” in the first Star Wars Trilogy.  The 1971s were not called Black Beauties for nothing.  The 1991 was most colorful and had the best anniversary logo ever. The 1972 set is Topps at its pinnacle. Its Large in size and Beautiful Looking.  The 1959 set has the kaleidoscope look of paintings.

11.  1956

12.  1963

13.  1987

14.  1969

15.  1962

16.  1968

17.  1957

18.  1976

19. 1954

20. 1955

The golden age really dominates the next ten. The 1987 set was an improvement over the brownish borders of 1962 and 1968.  The 1956 set is great looking but it reminds me just a tad of the late 1980s Topps Big set. The 1969 set was the 1967 just reworked a little.

21. 2008

22. 1966

23. 1958

24. 1964 - moved up one from 25

25. 1977 - moved up one from 26

26. 2003 - 2023 seems to be its equal so why is this set so far up here and that set so low down there - moved down two from 24

27. 2005

28. 1961

29. 1988

30. 1985

The 21st century breaks through, 2008 was one of the most unique designs ever though the photos may have been too small.  If you look closely 1964, 1977, 1986, 2004 sets are an evolving evolution of the same design.  2003 was a good rendition of 1963 and 1983 and the same goes with 1985 copying 1965.  This is truly the top half of the sets, we now move to the lower rung.  

31. 1970

32. 1978

33. 2010

34. 1981

35. 1984

36. 2006

37. 1986

38.  1973

39. 1974

40. 2023 - Not sure where to place  - nice 2 photo design - think it is equal 2003 but I placed that set too high

41. 2007

The 2006 had a well thought out design. The 2010 set was based on a 2001 Topps cereal issue. The 2007 was no 1971 set but black borders returned. Surprisingly the 1973 and 1974 are kind of dull and boring though nostalgic.

42. 1990

43. 1979

44. 1980

45. 2013

46. 2012

47. 2014

48. 2022 - a slightly classy. simple design that could grow on me through the years.

49. 1992

50. 1960

51. 2011

52. 1989 - Switched with 2018 - 2024 inserts made me take a slightly different look at this set

53. 2018

2018 was the best of the borderless era, its design looked like the Rolling Stones logo.  2012-2014, were decent sets which varied little in design. The 1990 is the craziest looking set and could be called the Purple Passion set

54. 1982

55. 1993

56. 2009

57. 2004

58. 1995

59. 2020

60. 2017

61. 2001

62. 2019

63. 2024 - 1986, 2015 all over a again? Though This set could grow on me

64. 2015

65. 2016

66. 1994

67. 2025 - this set could eventually fall to the bottom

68. 2021 - A monstrosity 

69. 2002

70. 1998

71. 1996

72. 1997

73. 1999

74. 2000

The last 35 years have not been the golden age but it is better than the late 20th century.  1982 set is the worst set  in brown card board back era.  Sorry Night Owl but 2015 is nutty and drab looking. The sets from 1997-2000 had so much gloss on them they stick together.