`
Connect With Us!
IOS Store
Share Thread:
 
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
What do you like/love about the hobby?
#11

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
(05-31-2019, 01:44 PM)zeprock Wrote: I enjoy the entire process of adding cards to my collection. Entering them on Beckett, entering them into my backup files on my computer, sleeving the most valuable cards and putting them in their new homes and marking them off my want list. Some find that tedious but not me. I enjoy sitting in front of the tv with a binder of cards in my lap shuffling each card to the right to make room for my newest addition to fit in order while my wife drones on about whatever it is that she drones on about. As long as I nod a lot and say, "Yes Dear", I'm good.

I love the history of the game. I love the nuances. I love the stats and the comparisons. What a great game!

I love to play. I played sandlot ball, little league, junior high school and varsity, men's softball, pickup games, coached little league and senior little league and softball. I'm 60 and still go to the batting cages and face 90mph pitches and I can still make contact and every once in a while drive one. I still go to the school ball field with friends and pitch and hit and field.
Oy vey. So much to respond to, but I'm just going to focus on a few things. I totally understand what you mean about organizing cards and adding them to databases. I find it immensely enjoyable as well.

The stats on the back of cards! Yes, I know I can just look them up online these days, but I still enjoy seeing them on the cards. It is different, somehow.

Although I was never able to be on any teams because I've been a paraplegic since shortly after birth, when I was in elementary school, I was made an honorary coach on my school's team and they gave me a uniform. IT WAS AMAZING! I loved "suiting up" for games and cheering on my teammates.

(05-31-2019, 01:51 PM)mberger Wrote: I love it when I get a card signed for my 1997 Fleer Set (500 cards). All in person, no paid signings, no trading, no mailing. Up to 342/500 and I get about 2-3 a year now. No active players left, sometimes a guy I need will pop up as an mlb or milb coach or instructor. Before I go on vacations, I write to guys who live in that area to see if they will meet me to sign my card. Probably sent 15 letters out and 1 former player did meet me (so it gives me motivation to continue). Years ago I figured 350 was about the limit which would be 70% of the set. The funny thing is one player I need owns a business literally two miles from my dad's house and he would not let me stop by to get my card signed (his secretary said to send it in the mail after I had clearly said it had to be in person).
Hempick, if you're interested in trading I have a bunch of blue refractor type cards as well as some Allen and Ginter baseball minis.

Mike
I am in awe of how many sigs you have for that set, but that reminds me of another thing I love about the hobby. Completing sets! It doesn't happen too often for me, but when it does, it is a fantastic feeling.

I've traded in person before, but never online and from what I understand, in order to trade you need to have access to Beckett's ORG feature. I don't have that and I don't think I'm going to get it anytime soon.

(05-31-2019, 02:02 PM)soey10 Wrote: I love everything about collecting, the pros outweigh the cons in my opinion. Whenever I travel I like going to the local card shop and see what it is all about. I love being able to purchase cards now that I only dreamed about as a kid. I would take my Beckett and highlight the cards that I would love to own as a kid and now I have been able to purchase most of them. I love oddball cards, due to the fact that they are cards that I have never seen before. This is a great hobby and there are so many things to love, I love the prospect of being able to pass these on to my 3 year old son one day
Yeah, I'd have to say that for all of us that are still on these boards, the pros would outweigh the cons. If we had more negatives than positives, I'd think we'd all stop collecting.

I agree on the oddball stuff. Especially the fact that just when I think I've heard of every set/product that has ever been made, I find out about something that I never knew existed! There is just so much out there.

Definitely agree, too, on the point about being able to buy the cards I always wanted as a kid! So many of them are cheaper now, which is nice, but even for some of the ones that are still a bit pricey, as an adult it is nice to have some of that disposable income that I didn't have as a kid.
There is a God and his name is Billy Joel
Reply
#12

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
(05-31-2019, 04:26 PM)hempick Wrote: Although I was never able to be on any teams because of I've been a paraplegic since shortly after birth
I had no idea. Have you ever mentioned this before, since it seems like you went thru that sentence as if you have. It is amazing what the human drive can accomplish when tested!

Reply
#13

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
(05-31-2019, 07:25 PM)kerryandbeth Wrote: I had no idea. Have you ever mentioned this before, since it seems like you went thru that sentence as if you have. It is amazing what the human drive can accomplish when tested!
I don't think I've mentioned it on these forums before.

Side note: I just noticed a typo in my post that you quoted. Now it will haunt me for the rest of my days. D:
There is a God and his name is Billy Joel
Reply
#14

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
I want to keep it real simple and just list the biggest benefit for me personally...I started to collect with my son when he was around eleven, through the teen years when all else would fail we could still talk baseball and cards, now as his son approaches those years there is an enjoyment when my son shares his collecting years with the grandson
Reply
#15

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
(06-01-2019, 08:19 AM)mistral38 Wrote: I want to keep it real simple and just list the biggest benefit for me personally...I started to collect with my son when he was around eleven, through the teen years when all else would fail we could still talk baseball and cards, now as his son approaches those years there is an enjoyment when my son shares his collecting years with the grandson
Great point that you (and others in the topic) mentioned about collecting as a family experience.

My mom collected when she was a kid and bought a bunch of boxes/sets for me when I was born. I didn't really get into it until I was 9 or 10, but it wasn't because of her. I just kind of started on my own.

Then after I started collecting, we found a bunch of her old cards and I thought it was the coolest thing ever. The connection of collecting with her stuff being Musial, Berra, and guys of that era and then my collection starting with Ripken, Mattingly, Griffey, and others from the late 80s/early 90s.
There is a God and his name is Billy Joel
Reply
#16

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
I like opening old baseball cards from the 80's-90's. just to see it i can get one HOF rookie card every now and then
collecting Nolan Ryan, Jose Altuve,Rickey Henderson, Mike Trout,Ozzie Albies
Reply
#17

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
I love the fact that even thou the hobby changes ever so slightly you can have fun collecting what makes you happy

I like cards numbered to 100 or less non auto/gu
I like stickers/oddball cards
I like my many boxes of my Boston Redsox
I like manager/coach cards
I like collecting
Selling my org out
Rolleyes
Reply
#18

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
I know this is only tangentially related, but I love how my dog comes up to me whenever I have a new box of cards and sniffs it because he thinks there might be food inside.
There is a God and his name is Billy Joel
Reply
#19

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
+1 on all of the above ... another really fun thing for me is to pick up obscure PC cards in trades.

Example ... Steve Hendrickson is from our town and played fullback for the Chargers and 49ers in the early 90s.

He only has a couple of cards, and I was able to pick up his Pacific RC from Zeprock in a trade a couple of years back.

It was funny, too, before he mailed it, Zep was like, "it has a weird oil stain or something on it, not sure you want it ..."

But I did, and put that sucker in a magnet holder right away!
Reply
#20

RE: What do you like/love about the hobby?
(06-05-2019, 10:10 AM)rjcj2017 Wrote: +1 on all of the above ... another really fun thing for me is to pick up obscure PC cards in trades.

Example ... Steve Hendrickson is from our town and played fullback for the Chargers and 49ers in the early 90s.

He only has a couple of cards, and I was able to pick up his Pacific RC from Zeprock in a trade a couple of years back.

It was funny, too, before he mailed it, Zep was like, "it has a weird oil stain or something on it, not sure you want it ..."

But I did, and put that sucker in a magnet holder right away!
Ahh, right on.

I collected Miles Austin rookies back before those stellar couple of seasons with the Cowboys because he was the first player to go to the NFL from my alma mater.

I got ones #ed to 10 or so for just a few bucks because he was a nobody. Then he had two great seasons and suddenly his cards were going for hundreds of dollars.

...but of course I didn't sell! Now they are worth about as much as they were when I bought them. It is all good, though. I didn't get them hoping to make money. I got them because I liked the fact that we went to the same tiny school.

I just happened to see this article, too.

https://www.app.com/story/news/local/peo...112836001/

Apparently he went back to Monmouth University to finish his degree. ...AND he took some classes from my old law professor, Joe Patten!

Similar thing happened with Chris Hogan, the former Patriots receiver. He went to Monmouth, so I bought several of his cards early in his career. I'll never sell those either.
There is a God and his name is Billy Joel
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)