
25 Facts You Probably Didn’t Know About Topps Trading Cards
Long before our childish bubble was burst and we figured out that baseball cards were nothing more than a commodity that could be bought and sold at card shows, there was a junior collector in all of us. We used to spend all of our weekly allowance on packs of cards and a can of soda at the local convenience store or pharmacy. We experienced the anticipation of opening the wax paper pack, praying there would be something of value within the fifteen cards. The dried up gum in the back of the pack was usually cracked into pieces, and there was always a fair share of useless Stan Javier or Calvin Shiraldi cards that we had no idea what to do with. It was actually a lot of fun. Here's a nostalgic look back at Topps trading cards knowledge that should make you yearn for those simpler days.
- 1
The name ‘Topps’ was meant to indicate that it would be 'tops' in its field. How incredibly innovative. And we thought 'Kramerica' was a great name.

SportsCardsUncensored.com SportsCardsUncensored.com - 2
Originally, Topps was purely a gum company, and its first product was simply called 'Topps gum.'

ToppsArchives.Blogspot.com ToppsArchives.Blogspot.com - 3
In 1951, a set contained 52 cards (Red Backs and Blue Backs), like a deck of playing cards. The cards could be used to play a head to head game that would simulate the events of a real baseball game.

VintageSportsCards.com VintageSportsCards.com - 4
The 1952 Topps baseball card set was designed on a kitchen table of an apartment on Alabama Avenue in Brooklyn.

1952ToppsBaseballCards.com 1952ToppsBaseballCards.com - 5
This 1952 Topps baseball Cards Wax Box with 24 individual packs of cards sold for $208,740.00 at auction in 2004.

1952ToppsBaseballCards.com 1952ToppsBaseballCards.com - 6
The leftover 1952 cards were dumped into the Atlantic Ocean off of the Jersey shore. The cards included Mickey Mantle's first Topps card, the most valuable card of the modern era.

TheGoldenSombrero.com TheGoldenSombrero.com - 7
The language of early Topp's contracts with players focused particularly on the rights to sell cards with chewing gum, which had already been established in the 1930s as a popular product to pair with baseball cards.

Baseball-Cards.com Baseball-Cards.com - 8
Those who played with baseball cards could study the numbers and use them as the basis for comparing players, trading cards with friends, or playing imaginary baseball games. Many believed that baseball cards helped encourage a generation of youngsters to take an interest in the underlying mathematics of baseball.

1964Topps.Wordpress.com 1964Topps.Wordpress.com - 9
Topps owner Sy Berger traveled to London in 1964 and was able to secure the rights to the Beatles by speaking in Yiddish to their manager Brian Epstein.

iCollector.com iCollector.com - 10
To avoid a legal mess with Bowman, Topps sold its 1951 cards with caramel candy instead of gum.

Sweet Treats Baking Blog Sweet Treats Baking Blog - 11
Gum was dropped from baseball card packs in 1992, and brought back in their 'Heritage Line' set in 2001.

MarshallMatlock.com MarshallMatlock.com - 12
The gum in the Topps packs was as hard as a rock. If the gum wasn’t hard they would have ‘buckled’ during the production process. When Topps included it in their 2001 'Heritage Line' set – the gum was soft. That’s progress.

DaCardWorld.com DaCardWorld.com - 13
One of the most prominent errors, Topps reversed the negative on the 1957 Hank Aaron card, showing baseball's future home-run king batting lefty.

SportsMemorabilia.com SportsMemorabilia.com - 14
Cards for rookies and traded players would be prepared by airbrushing over their uniforms and hats in photos.

Vintagesportscards.blogspot.com Vintagesportscards.blogspot.com - 15
The 1969 card of California infielder Aurelio Rodriguez is actually a picture of the Angels' batboy.

Oriolescards.blogspot.com Oriolescards.blogspot.com - 16
In the 1970s when Kellogg's began producing '3-D' cards and inserting them in boxes of breakfast cereal. Topps never considered the Kellogg's cards a threat and took no action to compete against or stop them.

FleerSticker.Blogspot.com FleerSticker.Blogspot.com - 17
In 1974, Topps changed 'San Diego' to 'Washington' on the cards of 15 players as they thought the team would relocate. The Padres stayed in California and thus got to experience the Bip Roberts era.

1977topps.blogspot.com 1977topps.blogspot.com - 18
In 1985, Gary Pettis' teenage brother is pictured instead of the Angels outfielder.

CNNSI.com CNNSI.com - 19
Topps obtained a license to produce cards featuring the U.S. Olympic baseball team and thus produced the first card of Mark McGwire prior to his promotion to the Major League level.

lickandriz.blogspot.com lickandriz.blogspot.com - 20
Topps also created two sets of cards for the short-lived United States Football League in the 1980's. Steve Young, Jim Kelly, and Reggie White had their Rookie Cards produced in these sets.

USFLMemorabilia.com USFLMemorabilia.com - 21
Derek Jeter’s 2007 Topps card was altered to include an image of Mickey Mantle standing in the dugout and President George W. Bush walking through the stands.

Donklephant.com Donklephant.com - 22
Topp’s foray into satire resulted in 'Wacky Packages' (a takeoff on various household consumer products), and the 'Garbage Pail Kids' (a parody of the Cabbage Patch Kids Doll).

Gpkworld.com Gpkworld.com - 23
Former Disney head Michael Eisner now owns the 'Topps' company. He bought it in 2007.

Getty Images Getty Images - 24
The longest-lived Topps product line remains Bazooka bubblegum, small pieces of gum in patriotic red, white, and blue packaging.

- 25
Topps has complained that increasing public attention to childhood nutrition undercuts its candy sales. How noble.

Accoutrements.com Accoutrements.com
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