Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a year-by-year list of Topps All-Star Rookie Teams. Note that players selected for a particular team appear in the following year's set release. So, a player named to the 2023 Topps All-Star Rookie team will have a trophy symbol on his 2024 Topps baseball card. †
In May 2021, a Wagner from a private collection sold for $3.75 million at auction, again setting a new sales record for the card. [13] In August 2022, a Wagner sold for $7.25 million, another record for the card. [14] In 2002, nearly 100 years after the original T206 cards were created, Topps rebooted the brand with Topps 206.
3 $6,122,052 $5,200,000 LeBron James: 2003 Upper Deck Exquisite Collection Rookie Patch Autographs #78 Serial numbered #07/23 BGS MT 9 April 26, 2021 PWCC Marketplace The sale was the highest ever for a basketball card at the time. [14] [15] There was a similar LeBron James card that sold for $1.845 million in May 2020. [16] 4 $5,172,246 $4,600,000
The 240-card set, quite large for the time, included current players, former stars, and prominent minor leaguers. Individual cards measured 2 + 3 ⁄ 8 by 2 + 7 ⁄ 8 inches (6.0 by 7.3 cm), which Goudey printed on 24-card sheets and distributed throughout the year. [20] The bulk of early National Baseball Hall of Fame inductees appear in this set.
After starting out with simple portraits, in 1954 Topps put two pictures on the front of the card – a hand-tinted 'color' close-up photo of the player's head, and the other a black-and-white full-length pose. The same basic format was used in 1955, this time with the full-length photo also hand-tinted.
[24] [25] [26] In April 2020, Michael Rubin—with the help of Fanatics employees around the world—launched the ALL IN Challenge, one of the largest digital fundraisers in history. [ 23 ] The celebrity and athlete driven ALL IN Challenge exploded on social media and raised $60 million to provide nearly 300 million meals for Feeding America ...
Topps brought back the gold cup symbol on the 1987 cards. In 2000, a special 10-card insert set of Topps All-Star Rookies was included in packs of the regular issue. Topps combined a list of All-Star names and holographic foil design to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Topps All-Star Rookie team.
The 1952 - 56 sets were varied in presentation, but each were the same size, 2 5/8" x 3 3/4". The '52, '53 and '54 sets were vertical, the '55 and '56 sets horizontal. In 1957, the 2 1/2 x 3 1/2" size card became standard. Also, the design changed dramatically and was now a photograph of the player and not a painting (particularly 1953).