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1935-36 Diamond Match Co. #.52 Charles Fischer RED (Tigers)Price = $ 7.95NEAR MINT to EX/EX+
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Below are some tidbits on baseball and sportscard collecting
along with a listing of the All-Time and Active Leaders in a
selected statistical cateogry.
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(part 1) Common - any card which is not short-printed, an insert, a bonus card, or has an insertion ratio. In short, the cards that comprise the manufacturer’s basic set. Condition - the physical appearance of a card/collectible. Centering, corner wear, photo clarity, edges, the presence of foreign material, signs of misuse are the critical components. Along with rarity/scarcity, it is a major factor in determining the value of a card or collectible. Crease - an obvious paper wrinkle defect usually caused by bending the card [i.e.- the result of being tortured on a rear-wheel bicycle spoke during the early ‘50s and ‘60s]. Die-Cut - an insert/parallel card that differs from the basic card by a process of the manufacturer "cutting" portions of the card revealing a special design. Recent issues may also be individually and serially-numbered.
![]() History Of O-Pee-Chee (T5)O-Pee-Chee, also known as OPC, is the Canadian equivalent of Topps. The history of this gum & sports card company is actually quite different. OPC is based in London, Ontario Canada and pre-dates Topps by many years. OPC’s first sports card set was back in 1933 when they produced the V304 hockey cards. The set included stars Eddie Shore and Howie Morenz and has a book value of around $15,000. Their first baseball set was released in 1937. It was a cross between the 1934 Goudeys and Batter-Ups and featured only American League players. The top player in the set is Joe Dimaggio. OPC started their long run of complete baseball card sets in 1965. In these early years, the OPC sets were much smaller than Topps and usually included only the first couple of series. Although they were printed on a slightly different card stock the cards front and backs were nearly identical to Topps but with a small "Printed in Canada" on the back. Baseball was much less popular in Canada and it is estimated that OPC cards from these early years were produced in a ratio of between 1% and 5% of Topps cards making them exceedingly scarce !!! Starting in 1970, OPC baseball cards became more interesting. Canadian legislation demanded that all items produced in Canada carry both French & English so O-Pee-Chee baseball cards became bilingual with their card backs printed in both languages. In 1971, the OPC baseball set had a much more interesting back design and also offered 14 different card photos not in the Topps set of that year. 1972 OPC included a card of Gil Hodges mentioning his death that was not a part of the Topps set. 1974 OPC did include any of the "Washington Nationals/San Diego Padres" variations. In 1977 although the card format remained the same, about 1/3 of the OPC set had different poses/images than their Topps counterparts. In the late ‘70’s, the OPC card fronts appeared similar to Topps but sometimes included traded information with a line across them saying "Now with XXXX". These differences were due the the OPC cards being printed much later into the season allowing for an update of the players status. OPC also was busy with their hockey and Canadian Football League issues. In 1968 they re- entered the hockey market. Today OPC is still strong in the baseball card and hockey card market and has also started printing non-sports cards.
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*** TOTAL BASES - ALL-TIME Leaders ***
Rank Player (age) Total Bases
1. Hank Aaron HOF 6856
2. Stan Musial HOF 6134
3. Willie Mays HOF 6066
4. Ty Cobb HOF 5854
5. Babe Ruth HOF 5793
6. Pete Rose 5752
7.+ BARRY BONDS (40) 5584
8. Carl Yastrzemski HOF 5539
9. Eddie Murray HOF 5397
10. Rafael Palmeiro 5388
11. Frank Robinson HOF 5373
12. Dave Winfield HOF 5221
13. Cal Ripken 5168
14. Tris Speaker HOF 5101
15. Lou Gehrig HOF 5060
16. George Brett HOF 5044
17. Mel Ott HOF 5041
18. Jimmie Foxx HOF 4956
19. Ted Williams HOF 4884
20. Honus Wagner HOF 4862
21. Paul Molitor HOF 4854
22. Al Kaline HOF 4852
23. Reggie Jackson HOF 4834
24. Andre Dawson 4787
25. Robin Yount HOF 4730
26. Rogers Hornsby HOF 4712
27. Ernie Banks HOF 4706
28. Al Simmons HOF 4685
29. Harold Baines 4604
30. Billy Williams HOF 4599
31. Rickey Henderson 4588
32. Cap Anson HOF 4574
33. Tony Perez HOF 4532
34. Mickey Mantle HOF 4511
Sammy Sosa 4511
36. Roberto Clemente HOF 4492
37. Paul Waner HOF 4478
38. Nap Lajoie HOF 4474
39. Fred McGriff 4458
40.+ KEN GRIFFEY JR (35) 4414
41. Dave Parker 4405
42. Mike Schmidt HOF 4404
43. Eddie Mathews HOF 4349
44. Sam Crawford HOF 4328
45. Goose Goslin HOF 4325
46.+ CRAIG BIGGIO (39) 4283
47. Brooks Robinson HOF 4270
48. Eddie Collins HOF 4268
49. Vada Pinson 4264
50. Tony Gwynn 4259
51. Charlie Gehringer HOF 4257
52. Lou Brock HOF 4238
53. Dwight Evans 4230
54. Willie McCovey HOF 4219
55. Jeff Bagwell 4213
56. Willie Stargell HOF 4190
57. Rusty Staub 4185
58.+ GARY SHEFFIELD (36) 4153
59. Jake Beckley HOF 4147
60. Harmon Killebrew HOF 4143
61. Jim Rice 4129
62. Zack Wheat HOF 4100
63. Al Oliver 4083
64. Wade Boggs HOF 4064
65. Harry Heilmann HOF 4053
66. Andres Galarraga 4038
67. Roberto Alomar 4018
68. Carlton Fisk HOF 3999
69. Rod Carew HOF 3998
70.+ STEVE FINLEY (40) 3966
71. Joe Morgan HOF 3962
72. Orlando Cepeda HOF 3959
73. Sam Rice HOF 3955
74.+ FRANK THOMAS (37) 3949
75. Joe DiMaggio HOF 3948
76. Steve Garvey 3941
77. Frankie Frisch HOF 3937
78. Chili Davis 3914
79. Joe Carter 3910
80. Larry Walker 3904
81. Gary Gaetti 3881
82. George Sisler HOF 3871
83. Darrell Evans 3866
84. Duke Snider HOF 3865
85. Joe Medwick HOF 3852
86. Bill Buckner 3833
87. Ted Simmons 3793
88. Ed Delahanty HOF 3791
89. Roger Connor HOF 3788
90. Ryne Sandberg HOF 3787
91.+ LUIS GONZALEZ (37) 3783
92. Graig Nettles 3779
Ron Santo 3779
94. Willie Davis 3778
95. Tim Raines 3771
96. Jesse Burkett HOF 3759
97. Mickey Vernon 3741
98. Jim Bottomley HOF 3737
99. Dale Murphy 3733
100. Edgar Martinez 3718
*** TOTAL BASES - Active Leaders ***
Rank Player (age) Total Bases
1. Barry Bonds (40) 5584
2. Rafael Palmeiro (40) 5388
3. Sammy Sosa (36) 4511
4. Ken Griffey (35) 4414
5. Craig Biggio (39) 4283
6. Jeff Bagwell (37) 4213
7. Gary Sheffield (36) 4153
8. Steve Finley (40) 3966
9. Frank Thomas (37) 3949
10. Luis Gonzalez (37) 3783
11. Juan Gonzalez (35) 3676
12. Manny Ramirez (33) 3668
13. Jeff Kent (37) 3621
14. Ruben Sierra (39) 3610
15. Alex Rodriguez (29) 3576
16. Bernie Williams (36) 3573
17. Julio Franco (46) 3533
18. John Olerud (36) 3530
19. Ivan Rodriguez (33) 3503
20. Mike Piazza (36) 3440
21. B.J. Surhoff 3414
22. Jim Thome (34) 3327
23. Moises Alou (38) 3241
24. Chipper Jones (33) 3213
25. Vinny Castilla (37) 3161
26. Robin Ventura (37) 3133
27. Carlos Delgado (33) 3089
28. Shawn Green (32) 3081
29. Garret Anderson (33) 3062
30. Kenny Lofton (38) 3041

1963 FleerThe 1963 Fleer Baseball 67 card set was an attempt by the Fleer Company to break the Topps monopoly on Bubble Gum Cards. In an attempt to get around Topps exclusive agreement with MLB, the 1963 Fleer Baseball Cards were issued with cookies instead of bubble gum.The 1963 Fleer Baseball Cards were intended to be issued in multiple series, but Fleer was run out of business shortly after the first series was released when Topps sued Fleer. Due to either the deep pockets of Topps or the lack of sales - Fleer quickly gave up and never issued another baseball card. The 1963 Fleer Cards are attractive and are packed with stars !!! Along with the stars the two scare 1963 Fleer Short Prints, #46 Joe Adcock and the checklist card make this a fun set to complete. Another interesting feature of this set is card #43, the Maury Wills Rookie card. Wills, the 1962 N.L. MVP had a huge disagreement with Topps when Topps didn't thing Wills was worthy enough in 1961 to have a baseball card. Wills did not allow Topps to make his card till 1967 although he was pictured on a special 1960 World Series card featuring Luis Aparicio stealing 2nd base. Wills is pictured trying to make the tag. Other top cards in the 1963 Fleer set are: Brooks Robinson, Willie Mays, Carl Yastrzemski, Sandy Koufax, Roberto Clemente, Don Drysdale and Warren Spahn. |

1970 Chemtoy SuperballsChemtoy and MLB teamed up in 1970 to offer a set of major league baseball player "superballs". The 285 "superball" set has 12 from each AL & NL team except Minn., Chicago and Oakland with 11 and is packed with HALL-OF-FAMERS !!! Each "superball" has the player's photo inside the ball. On the back is the player's name, team name, position and a Chemtoy inventory number.This is one of the more interesting collectibles from the late 1960's, early 1970's and highly sought after by Team and player collectors. |

HARTLAND STATUESHartland produced it's first baseball statues back in the early 60's. Sports Collectibles Digest stated that the 1960's Mickey Mantle Hartland is the single most popular plastic sports statue ever produced ! In 1988 Hartland created their 25th Anniversary Editions which, except for some very minor details, were identical to the original.Hartland partnered with America's leading hobby-periodical publisher, Krause Publications, to create the SCD Authentic series offering the original 18 as you've never seen them with each statue dramatically different from prior releases. They are amazingly beautiful and exquisitely detailed in their road uniforms with painted pinstripes and wood grained bats making them a unique collectible opportunity for both veteran collectors and Hartland newcomers alike. Limited to only 2,500 pieces each, these statues are BRAND NEW, MINT and in THEIR ORIGINAL BOXES !!! |

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