I don't dream about much. I know that I can't accomplish what I want to do, I can't fulfill the one dream that's been with me my whole life- classic car ownership.
Card collecting dreams are easier to realize but there was one that I thought would be always out of reach...opening an entire case. I look at case prices and see that they are usually in the 4 digits. I can't do that. But then...Dave & Adam's had a big anniversary sale, and there was a case of this year's Revolution- $180. It was a lot of money to shell out in one go, but I did it...I may never have the opportunity again and I'd socked away $200 just in case a case ever came below that, which was my self-imposed threshold. The case arrived on May 7th, after I had done my card of the day...so every day this week, I am going to be doing a box out of the case.
Unfortunately for me, there's a reason it was so cheap...it's the retail version, which has only one parallel to choose from, the Chinese New Year, which is one per pack, and no inserts. I have zero chance to get any autographs, relics or serially numbered cards, which is kind of a let down...but I should complete the set, and get more than halfway to the Chinese New Year parallel, so there's that. Also, during this case, I should hit 90,000 different NBA cards. Actually, that should come tomorrow, when I'm writing this, but today when I'm scheduling this post for. After the first 4 boxes I'm 19 cards away.
Not be able to get anything numbered HAS put a damper on my enjoyment, but even so, I'm still absolutely thrilled about being able to do a case. And now, writing this when I'm halfway through, I am starting to appreciate it even more...with 4 boxes down I'm at only 82% of the 150 card set. I'm getting so many duplicates I'm not sure I will be able to complete it...the rookies are one per pack and I still need quite a few. In box #4 I pulled three duplicates of the Chinese New Year parallels as well. We'll see how it goes. If I can pull the Donovan Mitchell CNY I will probably work on completing the parallel via COMC but his is too expensive for me to buy as a single. So we'll see. Here's a couple of brief highlights, with more thoughts and scans to come after I've finished the case...
As is kind of usual for Panini, the veterans and rookies use a totally different design. The Ball is the first card from the set in my collection, and the Brook Lopez is my first card of his with the Lakers. The cards are incredibly bright any shiny- what looks like texture in the background is all different foils and reflective, sparkly stuff. They look much nicer in hand, and I'm going to see if I can get a photo to better capture that when I write up my post-case thoughts.
There are only two players in the set not yet in my collection, and after four boxes, I've seen only one of them.
Bogdan Bogdanovic has been long-awaited for making the jump to the NBA, having been drafted back in 2014. He is not related to Bojan Bogdanovic, who has been in the NBA since 2014-15, with the Nets, Wizards and Pacers, despite the very similar names. I found this card in the very first box I did. The one I have not seen yet is Suns rookie Mike James (the second or possibly third different Mike James in NBA history)
The Chinese New Year parallels, or CNY, fall one per pack, always the 4th of 5 cards in the pack, and every third pack is a rookie parallel. They have a different pattern and the foil is red, where as on base cards it's copper. (both pretty much scan black, though) They too look much brighter and impressive in person. It works best with bright colors and the Celtics green is my favorite look on this pattern.
Here's a rookie version:
While it shouldn't be too hard to tell the two versions apart, here's a side-by-side comparison of the two versions. Base is on the left, CNY on the right.
There's something like 9 more parallel patterns that are available in hobby, but I won't be getting any of them any time soon.
Now, the new thing I'm trying. I can't set up my card listing because right now I'm working on building models, and they use the same space. My skills have mysteriously returned after leaving just as mysteriously in 2010. So, I did the first three boxes with no paper listing. How was I going to keep track of the cards, when I was getting them?
So I made this chart...
I'm filling in the dates that I get the cards, as you can see if you click on it, I have done the first four boxes at the time of this screencap.
I really like the way this looks, even with only 4 different dates available to choose from. The base cards are in black on the left, the Chinese New Year parallels on the right. I didn't bother to label them because after this week I won't need the chart anymore. Or maybe I will...I like it so much I'm considering making matching charts for all of my collection. I've been keeping track of the dates I got (most) cards since 1998, but I don't have that backed up anywhere, until 2014 when I started entering that info into Excel. And even then, it's backed up only in the order that I got the cards, not by set. So if something happened to my paper listing, all that info currently would be lost. (It's already gotten wet once, although only a very small portion of it)
I need to think about it, though. Do I want to expand out to include the subject of the card? (Usually a person, but not always...further info like SN data? Go full out and list everything, including teams?). That would add a SIGNIFICANT amount of time to the work to get it all onto Excel. I have not decided yet how I will handle it.
Pages
- Home
- About Me
- How to make your scans look like the cards in hand
- My Completed Sets
- My 1 of 1s
- 2015 Elton Brand Chart
- Card Sets Missing from my collection
- People Missing from my collection
- Sets In My Collection
- A Pack to Be Named Later Contributions
- Complete List of People in my Card Collection
- NASCAR PPPP
- Cardboard History History of Cardboard Collection
- WANTLIST
Showing posts with label Robin Lopez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robin Lopez. Show all posts
Friday, May 11, 2018
Friday, March 31, 2017
March 2017 Trade Recap
March was kind of a slow month for me for trading, but I did get several completed, all of which were with members of the Trading Card Database.
First to arrive was with CluelessJoe, who sent along this Chucky Atkins autograph in exchange for, if you can believe it, a copy of this card. The info card was included in some NBA set- I no longer remember which one- and since he collects the Greats of the Game set extensively he had to have it. I told him I thought that it was a lopsided trade in my favor but he was happy with it.
I think it's the first 2000-01 Autographics card I've added to my collection since 2003 or 2004, so I was certainly happy with the trade!
The second trade was with new member Doe MG, which actually arrived the same time as the Atkins auto but I opened that one first. Doe actually has a blog, Now and Zen, which is a new blog that features the Cubs. She didn't have any basketball but sent along two baseball cards. Fine with me, any sports card I don't have before is always an acceptable trade. (most non-sport too!) One of the cards, which I have not scanned yet, is from 1990 Topps, my all-time favorite baseball design. But since the scanner I have plugged in now doesn't deal well with the old-school brown cardstock, I scanned the 1992 Upper Deck card instead. It's only my third card from the 800 card set.
My third and final trade was with Sahal694. It's not our first trade. He made a post stating that he was looking for rookie cards of three NBA players, which I happened to have two of, and was sure I had the third but I couldn't find it. I sent him off the two I could find, and a small stack of Phoenix Suns cards, and he sent me back three cards from this year's Prizm set and 13 cards from the 2017 Topps baseball set, my first time seeing them.
These were my first additions to this year's Prizm set since I got a blaster on Christmas. I only scanned one of the 2017 Topps cards, as they were all done on the Database already. I scanned the one with the player wearing green and yellow, my two favorite colors.
His Twitter handle is great, too.
I guess that's actually the Instagram logo...I don't use that format so I am not 100% sure.
9 of the 13 cards were of people not previously in my collection, and two of them were non-player cards, so that's a pretty good blind guess he made, as I didn't tell him who was in my collection. I actually like the design in hand a lot more than I thought I would from seeing it on the blogs. No, it's not perfect, but in hand it "feels right" if that makes any sense.
Overall, I took in 19 cards in trade this month, so while it was light, it was still a good month. I have a few more trades in progress but I don't think they will arrive before April does so they will count then.
First to arrive was with CluelessJoe, who sent along this Chucky Atkins autograph in exchange for, if you can believe it, a copy of this card. The info card was included in some NBA set- I no longer remember which one- and since he collects the Greats of the Game set extensively he had to have it. I told him I thought that it was a lopsided trade in my favor but he was happy with it.
I think it's the first 2000-01 Autographics card I've added to my collection since 2003 or 2004, so I was certainly happy with the trade!
The second trade was with new member Doe MG, which actually arrived the same time as the Atkins auto but I opened that one first. Doe actually has a blog, Now and Zen, which is a new blog that features the Cubs. She didn't have any basketball but sent along two baseball cards. Fine with me, any sports card I don't have before is always an acceptable trade. (most non-sport too!) One of the cards, which I have not scanned yet, is from 1990 Topps, my all-time favorite baseball design. But since the scanner I have plugged in now doesn't deal well with the old-school brown cardstock, I scanned the 1992 Upper Deck card instead. It's only my third card from the 800 card set.
My third and final trade was with Sahal694. It's not our first trade. He made a post stating that he was looking for rookie cards of three NBA players, which I happened to have two of, and was sure I had the third but I couldn't find it. I sent him off the two I could find, and a small stack of Phoenix Suns cards, and he sent me back three cards from this year's Prizm set and 13 cards from the 2017 Topps baseball set, my first time seeing them.
These were my first additions to this year's Prizm set since I got a blaster on Christmas. I only scanned one of the 2017 Topps cards, as they were all done on the Database already. I scanned the one with the player wearing green and yellow, my two favorite colors.
His Twitter handle is great, too.
I guess that's actually the Instagram logo...I don't use that format so I am not 100% sure.
9 of the 13 cards were of people not previously in my collection, and two of them were non-player cards, so that's a pretty good blind guess he made, as I didn't tell him who was in my collection. I actually like the design in hand a lot more than I thought I would from seeing it on the blogs. No, it's not perfect, but in hand it "feels right" if that makes any sense.
Overall, I took in 19 cards in trade this month, so while it was light, it was still a good month. I have a few more trades in progress but I don't think they will arrive before April does so they will count then.
Monday, June 20, 2016
NBA 2015-16 Season in Review
The NBA season ended tonight, and I'm really not happy. I have had a lousy day to begin with and then saw the team with 3 of my 5 favorite players in the NBA get beaten at home after the best season in NBA history. While I generally like the city of Cleveland and the state of Ohio, and were they not facing the Warriors I would have been rooting for them, (I've been a Cavs fan since they wore the black and blue jerseys in the 1990s) but this leaves me with a bad feeling towards the NBA- game 7 the Cavs won fairly, (Game 3 as well) but game 5 and 6 were rigged- no question. Considering how much revenue a Finals game 7 brings in, I'm truly surprised we don't see that more often. Fouls were called on the Warriors when they breathed on the Cavs in those two games, yet the Cavs were allowed to travel at will. At least in the first half that is true- by the second half, the Cavs had such a huge lead that they generally stopped getting everything handed to them on a silver platter, but it was too late to make a difference. Let's put it this way- I remember seeing the Tim Donahy games. Remember the Ref who threw games for gambling? That's the guy, I may have spelled his name wrong. But the games HE refereed were more honest than the first halves of game 5 and 6. Granted, the Warriors couldn't hit a shot for most of the finals. One of the best shooting teams EVER suddenly stopped being able to nail a basket, even open ones. I don't get it. The worst part is they didn't even need the help, they simply played better down the stretch. Instead of winning by 15 points they probably would have won by 8 to 10 in those two games.
It really stinks that the season ended on such a farcial bad note, because overall 2015-16 was one of the most fun seasons I can recall in a good long while. I'm one of the few people who prefer the regular season over the playoffs- and I am very much looking forward to 2016-17. (I've known for years that the playoffs are manipulated to boost revenues, but this year was the worst.). Usually it doesn't bother me- my Nets are almost never in contention this late in the season so I usually don't care who wins, as long as I get to watch more basketball.
Not only that, but card wise it is the best of the Panini era, or at the very least tied with 2012-13. While Panini still doesn't truly get it- ignoring at least 150 players each season- the designs were better than they had been since 2012-13, and perhaps even better. The only set this year I didn't care too much for was Threads. I loved this year's Hoops set, the joke that they called Complete- 330 out of 450 people is NOT complete in any way, shape or form- the cards themselves, though, I loved. The Donruss design is one of my favorites from the Panini era, and I have not even posted about my best pull from the set yet. I managed to pull a patch from a blaster, only the second patch I've pulled from the Panini era. I pulled an autograph out of the very first set of the year, and it was one I would not have been able to afford as a single, (Andrew Wiggins) so that was a pleasant surprise.
One other thing worth noting, one of my favorite commercial series for the NBA took place this season, State Farm's "The Hoopers". I hope they bring it back next year.
I did something I have never done before, and that was keep track of the games I watched. I had to watch at least a full quarter for it to count (usually), and here are my grand totals, provided I didn't make any mistakes, which is very much possible as I sometimes got a little behind and had to scroll through the box scores on basketball-reference to see which ones I remembered.
I plan to keep the chart for the 2016-17 season as well, and this year I will attempt to include Summer League games, which I didn't have the idea of making the Excel chart until the 2015-16 Summer Leagues were already over, so that information was lost.
I've already gotten a few cards that mention games I watched. In the past I usually was left wondering if it was a game I saw or not, when a specific one was mentioned. Now, I will know. I just got one this week, in fact my very first card out of my very first pack of Excalibur, #147 Anthony Davis, references a game I saw. I would probably not have remembered that otherwise. That sort of thing tends to all blur together in my head- I tend to remember if I ever saw a player play, not specific games.
As I will watch any team, at any time, (something I can do because my mom gets me League Pass as a birthday present every year) all 30 NBA teams appear multiple times on my chart. I don't know of a way to figure out exactly which teams I watched how many times, but I know the Warriors are the team I watched the most. Second would be probably the New York Knicks or Philadelphia 76ers, once they signed Elton in January. After that would probably be the Nets, and beyond that, I have no clue. I watch them all.
I think my favorite game that I watched this year was Kobe's final game where he scored 60. The Lakers have never been my favorite team, nor Kobe my favorite player, but that was just incredible to watch. It's the end of an era that is a little hard to fathom- the 1996-97 rookie class is the first one I truly got to experience so it has a special place in my memories. Kobe was the best player in the League for most of the past 20 years, until the injuries set in, and to see him get 60 in his final game was something truly special. It's not diminished in my eyes that the Jazz, who knew they would not make the playoffs, didn't really play defense and that most of the other Lakers made sure to funnel the ball to Kobe. That to me is a sign of respect, actually, one final moment in a career filled with incredible moments.
I know this is a really negative post, not the kind I usually make, but I am really an unhappy person (I hide it well) but I can't hide it tonight. I can't be the NBA-does-no-wrong guy that I usually am tonight. I even set aside the NBA cards and worked on hockey cards tonight.
With that said, the 2016-17 season truly gets under way this coming Thursday, when the NBA Draft takes place. I always enjoy the Draft, seeing all the new names entering the league and, hopefully, my card collection. The Summer League kicks off July 2nd so that's really not all that far away- it'll be here before too long, and then there's the Olympics. I LOVE the Olympics and will watch as much of them as I possibly can. (There will be several Olympic-themed posts in the not too distant future)
I can't wait.
Now, here's a look at all of the 2015-16 sets in my collection. I don't have Clear Vision yet and don't know when it will make it's way to my collection- I'm mostly done buying cards for a while, but that's a whole other topic.
It really stinks that the season ended on such a farcial bad note, because overall 2015-16 was one of the most fun seasons I can recall in a good long while. I'm one of the few people who prefer the regular season over the playoffs- and I am very much looking forward to 2016-17. (I've known for years that the playoffs are manipulated to boost revenues, but this year was the worst.). Usually it doesn't bother me- my Nets are almost never in contention this late in the season so I usually don't care who wins, as long as I get to watch more basketball.
Not only that, but card wise it is the best of the Panini era, or at the very least tied with 2012-13. While Panini still doesn't truly get it- ignoring at least 150 players each season- the designs were better than they had been since 2012-13, and perhaps even better. The only set this year I didn't care too much for was Threads. I loved this year's Hoops set, the joke that they called Complete- 330 out of 450 people is NOT complete in any way, shape or form- the cards themselves, though, I loved. The Donruss design is one of my favorites from the Panini era, and I have not even posted about my best pull from the set yet. I managed to pull a patch from a blaster, only the second patch I've pulled from the Panini era. I pulled an autograph out of the very first set of the year, and it was one I would not have been able to afford as a single, (Andrew Wiggins) so that was a pleasant surprise.
One other thing worth noting, one of my favorite commercial series for the NBA took place this season, State Farm's "The Hoopers". I hope they bring it back next year.
I did something I have never done before, and that was keep track of the games I watched. I had to watch at least a full quarter for it to count (usually), and here are my grand totals, provided I didn't make any mistakes, which is very much possible as I sometimes got a little behind and had to scroll through the box scores on basketball-reference to see which ones I remembered.
- 356 total games watched
- 252 regular season
- 71 playoffs
- 23 Pre-Season
- 7 D-League
- 3 All-Star (Plus the non-game stuff like the Slam Dunk competition, which is not counted)
I plan to keep the chart for the 2016-17 season as well, and this year I will attempt to include Summer League games, which I didn't have the idea of making the Excel chart until the 2015-16 Summer Leagues were already over, so that information was lost.
I've already gotten a few cards that mention games I watched. In the past I usually was left wondering if it was a game I saw or not, when a specific one was mentioned. Now, I will know. I just got one this week, in fact my very first card out of my very first pack of Excalibur, #147 Anthony Davis, references a game I saw. I would probably not have remembered that otherwise. That sort of thing tends to all blur together in my head- I tend to remember if I ever saw a player play, not specific games.
As I will watch any team, at any time, (something I can do because my mom gets me League Pass as a birthday present every year) all 30 NBA teams appear multiple times on my chart. I don't know of a way to figure out exactly which teams I watched how many times, but I know the Warriors are the team I watched the most. Second would be probably the New York Knicks or Philadelphia 76ers, once they signed Elton in January. After that would probably be the Nets, and beyond that, I have no clue. I watch them all.
I think my favorite game that I watched this year was Kobe's final game where he scored 60. The Lakers have never been my favorite team, nor Kobe my favorite player, but that was just incredible to watch. It's the end of an era that is a little hard to fathom- the 1996-97 rookie class is the first one I truly got to experience so it has a special place in my memories. Kobe was the best player in the League for most of the past 20 years, until the injuries set in, and to see him get 60 in his final game was something truly special. It's not diminished in my eyes that the Jazz, who knew they would not make the playoffs, didn't really play defense and that most of the other Lakers made sure to funnel the ball to Kobe. That to me is a sign of respect, actually, one final moment in a career filled with incredible moments.
I know this is a really negative post, not the kind I usually make, but I am really an unhappy person (I hide it well) but I can't hide it tonight. I can't be the NBA-does-no-wrong guy that I usually am tonight. I even set aside the NBA cards and worked on hockey cards tonight.
With that said, the 2016-17 season truly gets under way this coming Thursday, when the NBA Draft takes place. I always enjoy the Draft, seeing all the new names entering the league and, hopefully, my card collection. The Summer League kicks off July 2nd so that's really not all that far away- it'll be here before too long, and then there's the Olympics. I LOVE the Olympics and will watch as much of them as I possibly can. (There will be several Olympic-themed posts in the not too distant future)
I can't wait.
Now, here's a look at all of the 2015-16 sets in my collection. I don't have Clear Vision yet and don't know when it will make it's way to my collection- I'm mostly done buying cards for a while, but that's a whole other topic.
![]() |
Absolute Basketball |
![]() |
Complete- first set to show photos taken during 2015-16 |
![]() |
Donruss- first set to show action photos of the rookies |
![]() |
Gold Standard |
![]() |
Hoops - a set I actually completed! |
![]() |
Limited- this is the third time I've posted this card. Only one I've got. |
![]() |
Panini Excalibur- the newest set, just came out this month. |
![]() |
Panini Prizm |
![]() |
Panini Threads |
![]() |
Prestige |
![]() |
Revolution |
![]() |
Select. This is a Prizm, I don't have a base card in my collection. |
![]() |
Totally Certified |
Monday, October 26, 2015
Box Break Review: 2015-16 Hoops
The new NBA season is here, as the first card release has hit and my mom gave me a box of it as a late birthday present- really made me happy! Originally it was scheduled to come out on the 14th, but they pushed it back to the 21st. She got the box to me on the 22nd.
I really like the Hoops brand- it's always my favorite set of the season, mostly due to the fact that it includes the most players, although it still ignores at least 100. For some reason Panini refuses to make any sets larger than 300 cards. This is my only real complaint about the set, which otherwise is perfect.
The design this year is nice, it features a white border but not the traditional border shape. It sure makes it easy to scan them, which I like- I scanned my entire box in 3 days worth of effort. (I wanted to get it fully scanned before I posted about it). A couple of oddities about the set- a large portion of the cards were taken with the Cavaliers as the opponent. I didn't do any math on it, and indeed I don't have all the cards, but it seems like about 1/3rd of them have the Cavs in the background. Another thing to note, not necessarily an oddity, is that a lot of images are taken looking up at the players- clearly from the photographers you see sitting along the baseline at every game. That isn't a bad thing although it does give some unexpected angles- and some interesting shots of the arena you don't see too often, which I will show below. Photography as a whole is excellent.
Parallels are much harder to get this year, which is a shame as they look better than ever. I got only 1 Green, 3 Gold, 4 Red Back, 2 Silver and 1 Artist Proof. The Green and Gold are my favorites, the Red Back is kind of pointless- I would really rather they got rid of them and gave us more Gold and/or Green. Blue and Red are retail exclusive, and Black are 1/1 so I did not get any of those.
They are packed 13 cards per pack, but marked 12 as they apparently don't count the one-per-pack Panini Dunk info card. They were the only duplicates to be found in the entire box, which is a nice thing. Panini doesn't really have a good track record of not giving you multiple duplicates in a box but this is the second year in a row for Hoops where that was the case. In each pack you get one Rookie and one non-base card, which is either a parallel or an insert.
I know I always go on about base cards, and how great they are, and how I don't chase hits...but I pulled a really great hit from this box and I think I will lead off with that one. It's the best "hit" I've had in the NBA since 2003 when I pulled Kobe Bryant's autograph...
You get two autographs in each hobby box of Hoops on average. Relics appear to be retail exclusive.
My first autograph out of the box...was this one!
This is a card I could not afford to buy as a single had I not pulled it! Wiggins is considered the best talent to come into the NBA since LeBron James, and he is the defending Rookie of the Year (Not that you can really win that again). The T-Wolves have a bright future with him, Karl-Anthony Towns (who, despite being on the packaging, I did not get a single card of) and others, although it's expected that they will not do all that well in 2015-16, a couple of years down the road, they are expected to be contenders. I was pretty shocked when I got this one- autographs come out of the packs backwards, and when I realized it was an autograph, I closed my eyes so I wouldn't see who it was until I turned it over- and what I shock I got! My other autograph came out of the very last pack I opened- and it was the first card I have of Branden Dawson, a rookie of the Clippers, who did not get a card in the base set. He is one of several rookies who are included in the autograph checklists but not in the base set.
Now, here's a look at some base cards.
#244, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, was the first card out of the box. It's the only one I noticed that the photo is slightly blurry on- an issue Panini has had sometimes- this year's set is an improvement.
#4- Langston Galloway. He joined the Knicks on a 10-day contract last season and ended up earning a starting spot before the end of the 10-day contract, something I can't recall ever happening before. This is my first card of him.
#88 Sideshow Bob, I mean, Robin Lopez. Seriously, he's got a Sideshow Bob thing going on here. Am I right?
(Note-I am a fan of both Lopez brothers in the NBA)
#233 Wesley Johnson. The new Clippers uniform makes it's debut. The home jersey, shown, is not bad, but the road jersey is the worst in NBA history.
#148 Russell Westbrook. Some of the photography in this set is really from interesting angles, like this one. This is probably my favorite Westbrook card in my collection now.
#16 Mike Muscala. His third year in the NBA, but my first card of him.
I don't think the Celtics are Panini's favorite team- three of their projected starters for 2015-16 are not in the set. (Jae Crowder, Kelly Olynyk, David Lee- although Lee and Olynyk are in some of the inserts, with Lee's inclusion as part of the Championship subset of Road to the Finals only)
#204- Dellavedova played his way into the card set during the finals for sure, after Kyrie Irving went down with a broken knee. He was not included in 2014-15 sets.
Couldn't beat this guy though, who, with Elton Brand's retirement, is now my favorite player in the League. (Card #248)
I think my favorite card from the base set, though, is this one- a fairly obscure player, it is only my 2nd card of him-
#252, Lance Thomas. What a cool shot that is. Framed with him perfectly centered, with the rim at the top and the scoreboard above his head. The banners hanging in the background, perfect! (As an aside, Optimum, which owns the Knicks franchise/MSG, is the company we use for our internet- the logo is fully shown on Cleanthony Early's card, which I like- seeing the ads in the background is fun for me, especially on older cards- which, someday, this will be- reminding me of times past...and isn't that why we collect?)
The rookies this year, in Panini's 5th with the Hoops brand, are done using a different design, which is a first. (Although Panini didn't bother to include any rookies in the lockout shortened 2011-12 so it's only the 4th year of them)
I always enjoy getting the first rookie cards of the year, but with them one-per pack this year I am missing more rookies than veterans by a wide margin. I'm hoping an upcoming retail blaster box purchase will get me the rest of them, but I know it won't- I have not completed any of the Hoops sets in the Panini era yet. Anyway...
#299 Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, my first rookie of the season. How cool that it is a player for my long-time favorite team?
#294 Emmanuel Mudiay. I expect he will be Rookie of the Year this year, although there are several that have a real good shot.
Like this guy, Jahlil Okafor, card #280. Note that both the Nuggets and the 76ers have new jerseys this season, making their card debut on the rookies. Also with new jerseys this year are the Clippers, as previously noted, the Hawks, Bucks, and I think I'm forgetting one or maybe even two.
#291 Larry Nance Jr. &
#287 Jerian Grant are the only two second-generation players I'm aware of in this year's rookie class, although there is a chance that I don't know on some common names- there are multiple players with the last names of Jackson, Johnson, Martin, Russell, Anderson and Brown - all of which appear in this year's rookie class, so there may be more second generation players I am not yet aware of. Grant is the son of Harvey Grant, nephew of Horace Grant and brother to current 76ers player Jerami Grant. I hope I don't need to tell you who Larry Nance Jr. is the son of. ;)
#296 Sam Dekker. Who, apparently, is going to be known mostly for the photo of him mowing the lawn shirtless that his mom posted on Twitter after the draft- it's what the text is about on the back of the card!
Speaking of, the backs of the cards are the same for both veterans and rookies. Unlike previous years of Panini's stewardship of Hoops, they don't include full stats, only going back to 2010-11 for veterans. That's disappointing, but not enough to change my enjoyment of the set.
The back is totally black and white, which makes it really easy to scan, something I appreciate. The text and name are huge, while the stats are tiny- I noticed after spending three days scanning these and nothing but these, they were actually starting to give me a headache, trying to read the tiny stats. They are easier to read in hand than in scan, which doesn't make any sense as the scan is larger. Go figure, right?
Now, let's move onto the parallels and inserts, beginning with the parallels.
First up, most common, is the Red Back. The front of the cards are the exact same as the base cards, but instead of being black and white, the backs are red and white. These really don't need to exist. Or at least make the foil on the card front red or something. Serially number them, or make them interesting...otherwise, meh. I pulled 4 of them from my box, and they are Hobby exclusive, I believe- this is the 3rd year they have done them, and the last two years were Hobby Exclusive, so I expect they are again this year.
I pulled three Gold parallels from the box. They are spectacular, but they don't scan well.
#281 Frank Kaminsky. They are really nice in person, the scan just does not do it justice. Yes, it's important enough to say twice. I am going to be chasing these gold cards for years. This was the only Kaminsky card I pulled.
The Silver parallels are serially numbered to 299, which is right center in the bottom of the picture. They are actually holofoil, but my scanner picks them up as white. They also look better in person.
I pulled two of these from my box. Oddly enough, I pulled Dwyane Wade's silver card from both 2014-15 and 2015-16 Hoops. I didn't do a hobby box of 2013-14 or earlier.
Serially numbered to 99, Artist Proof is the second-hardest parallel to pull, only to the Artist Proof Black which is 1/1, which I did not get. They are also on holofoil, and look pretty much just like the Silver with the exception of the gold foil Hoops 15-16 logo and Artist Proof stamp. It's hard to see, but this card is SN70/99. The / between the numbers is just barely on the stripe on his pants.
Also falling one per box, is the green parallel. These are really great- I can't decide if the Green or Gold is my favorite. These are 1-per-box, but I wish they were easier to get. I will be chasing these for years as well. Neither Green or Gold are serially numbered. Each of the square designs refracts light at a different pace, I guess would be the best way to describe it. Seeing these in person is so much better than scans.
Now, the inserts. New this year is that most of the inserts are printed on foil board. My scanner makes foil board light up and look white, but they are really nice looking in person.
I showed the Wiggins autograph above, but here is the Dawson one. There are two autographs per box, and also there is a parallel numbered to 25, which I did not pull this year- I pulled one last year.
As of right now, this and the SN25 Red Hot Signatures parallel are the only cards in existence for him.
Road to the Finals is a great insert. A 100 card set, every game of the Playoffs gets a card, and most of the Champion Warriors, including Steve Kerr, get a card. (Surprisingly, Festus Ezeli was totally ignored by the set- even the Champion subset of this insert!) I pulled 4 cards from this insert, including one of the second round cards which is SN999. The first round is SN2015, going down to the Finals cards which are SN99.
I actually pulled this one from my very first pack of the set. Zaza Pachulia, seen guarding Noah here, is not included in the set. He's now with the Mavericks.
This insert concept debuted last year and I really like it.
The hardest insert to find falls at one in every 480 packs, and that is Kobe's All-Rookie Team. I managed to pull one!
It happened to be my first card of Trey Lyles as well. In this card, the only holofoil is his name and the Hoops logo/team bar.
The Team Leaders subset highlights a player from each team who led that team in some statistical category.
I happened to pull an Artist Proof parallel as well, SN43/99. this came out of my second pack.
A cool new concept this year is the Triple-Double insert. Every single Triple-Double during the 2014-15 season gets a card, which leads to an unusual 46 card insert set. (Playoffs not included). I like the fact that they actually issued it to the team the player was with at the time, not where the player is now. Rondo was traded to the Mavericks during last season and now is a member of the Kings, but he put up his Triple Doubles as a member of the Celtics. Panini really did a good job with this insert- unfortunately, it's also one-per-box. This is also the only card in my collection showing the Celtics' sleeved alternate jersey, I believe.
Bird's Eye View moves from the apparently defunct Panini Flagship over to Hoops, and expands from 10 to 25 cards, all on holofoil. I really liked the Bird's Eye View insert in 2013-14 Panini, and I'm glad it's back. I pulled two of them.
Dreams is a 10-card insert showing Rookies. It is printed on holofoil, and once again, I pulled only one of them.
High Flyers is another holofoil insert and includes retired players as well as current players- obviously, as this image of Scottie Pippen dates to roughly 1997.
And finally, the one-per-pack Panini Dunk card. As I don't have a smart phone, these aren't too helpful to me. They were, however, the only duplicates, of which I am quite happy.
Overall, I rate this set very highly. I ended up with 262 of the 300 base cards, and I like the set enough that I will be chasing some retail versions of the set-hopefully I will be able to get some of the retail exclusive inserts and parallels, and finish off the base set. Relic cards are retail exclusive, aside from the Blue and Red parallels. Sometimes Panini makes the rookie cards less short printed in retail as well...time will tell. I am sure a future Hot off the Scanner Tray post will have some updates, unless I decide to give the eventual retail purchase it's own post.
My only real complaint is that so many players are ignored. If every team carried only 14 players, which is the norm- there are 420 players in the league at one time. If every team carried 15, as is the NBA allowed maximum, there are 450. For some reason Panini won't go over 300 which is very frustrating to me; there are players who have not gotten cards in years.
They are also hurting their bottom line, because if the set was larger with more players I would be willing to buy more than one box in the attempt to get said cards of other players. Just one set a year- the flagship, this one-should cover every player in the NBA. It's all I'm asking.
I have been trying to talk them into a series 2, but they ignore me. I'm not going to stop trying.
If you want to see all of the cards I got, I have an album created specifically for the box break on my Website.
I really like the Hoops brand- it's always my favorite set of the season, mostly due to the fact that it includes the most players, although it still ignores at least 100. For some reason Panini refuses to make any sets larger than 300 cards. This is my only real complaint about the set, which otherwise is perfect.
The design this year is nice, it features a white border but not the traditional border shape. It sure makes it easy to scan them, which I like- I scanned my entire box in 3 days worth of effort. (I wanted to get it fully scanned before I posted about it). A couple of oddities about the set- a large portion of the cards were taken with the Cavaliers as the opponent. I didn't do any math on it, and indeed I don't have all the cards, but it seems like about 1/3rd of them have the Cavs in the background. Another thing to note, not necessarily an oddity, is that a lot of images are taken looking up at the players- clearly from the photographers you see sitting along the baseline at every game. That isn't a bad thing although it does give some unexpected angles- and some interesting shots of the arena you don't see too often, which I will show below. Photography as a whole is excellent.
Parallels are much harder to get this year, which is a shame as they look better than ever. I got only 1 Green, 3 Gold, 4 Red Back, 2 Silver and 1 Artist Proof. The Green and Gold are my favorites, the Red Back is kind of pointless- I would really rather they got rid of them and gave us more Gold and/or Green. Blue and Red are retail exclusive, and Black are 1/1 so I did not get any of those.
They are packed 13 cards per pack, but marked 12 as they apparently don't count the one-per-pack Panini Dunk info card. They were the only duplicates to be found in the entire box, which is a nice thing. Panini doesn't really have a good track record of not giving you multiple duplicates in a box but this is the second year in a row for Hoops where that was the case. In each pack you get one Rookie and one non-base card, which is either a parallel or an insert.
I know I always go on about base cards, and how great they are, and how I don't chase hits...but I pulled a really great hit from this box and I think I will lead off with that one. It's the best "hit" I've had in the NBA since 2003 when I pulled Kobe Bryant's autograph...
You get two autographs in each hobby box of Hoops on average. Relics appear to be retail exclusive.
My first autograph out of the box...was this one!
This is a card I could not afford to buy as a single had I not pulled it! Wiggins is considered the best talent to come into the NBA since LeBron James, and he is the defending Rookie of the Year (Not that you can really win that again). The T-Wolves have a bright future with him, Karl-Anthony Towns (who, despite being on the packaging, I did not get a single card of) and others, although it's expected that they will not do all that well in 2015-16, a couple of years down the road, they are expected to be contenders. I was pretty shocked when I got this one- autographs come out of the packs backwards, and when I realized it was an autograph, I closed my eyes so I wouldn't see who it was until I turned it over- and what I shock I got! My other autograph came out of the very last pack I opened- and it was the first card I have of Branden Dawson, a rookie of the Clippers, who did not get a card in the base set. He is one of several rookies who are included in the autograph checklists but not in the base set.
Now, here's a look at some base cards.
#244, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, was the first card out of the box. It's the only one I noticed that the photo is slightly blurry on- an issue Panini has had sometimes- this year's set is an improvement.
#4- Langston Galloway. He joined the Knicks on a 10-day contract last season and ended up earning a starting spot before the end of the 10-day contract, something I can't recall ever happening before. This is my first card of him.
#88 Sideshow Bob, I mean, Robin Lopez. Seriously, he's got a Sideshow Bob thing going on here. Am I right?
![]() |
2003 Artbox Simpsons Film Cardz #12 |
#233 Wesley Johnson. The new Clippers uniform makes it's debut. The home jersey, shown, is not bad, but the road jersey is the worst in NBA history.
#148 Russell Westbrook. Some of the photography in this set is really from interesting angles, like this one. This is probably my favorite Westbrook card in my collection now.
#16 Mike Muscala. His third year in the NBA, but my first card of him.
I don't think the Celtics are Panini's favorite team- three of their projected starters for 2015-16 are not in the set. (Jae Crowder, Kelly Olynyk, David Lee- although Lee and Olynyk are in some of the inserts, with Lee's inclusion as part of the Championship subset of Road to the Finals only)
#204- Dellavedova played his way into the card set during the finals for sure, after Kyrie Irving went down with a broken knee. He was not included in 2014-15 sets.
Couldn't beat this guy though, who, with Elton Brand's retirement, is now my favorite player in the League. (Card #248)
I think my favorite card from the base set, though, is this one- a fairly obscure player, it is only my 2nd card of him-
#252, Lance Thomas. What a cool shot that is. Framed with him perfectly centered, with the rim at the top and the scoreboard above his head. The banners hanging in the background, perfect! (As an aside, Optimum, which owns the Knicks franchise/MSG, is the company we use for our internet- the logo is fully shown on Cleanthony Early's card, which I like- seeing the ads in the background is fun for me, especially on older cards- which, someday, this will be- reminding me of times past...and isn't that why we collect?)
The rookies this year, in Panini's 5th with the Hoops brand, are done using a different design, which is a first. (Although Panini didn't bother to include any rookies in the lockout shortened 2011-12 so it's only the 4th year of them)
I always enjoy getting the first rookie cards of the year, but with them one-per pack this year I am missing more rookies than veterans by a wide margin. I'm hoping an upcoming retail blaster box purchase will get me the rest of them, but I know it won't- I have not completed any of the Hoops sets in the Panini era yet. Anyway...
#299 Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, my first rookie of the season. How cool that it is a player for my long-time favorite team?
#294 Emmanuel Mudiay. I expect he will be Rookie of the Year this year, although there are several that have a real good shot.
Like this guy, Jahlil Okafor, card #280. Note that both the Nuggets and the 76ers have new jerseys this season, making their card debut on the rookies. Also with new jerseys this year are the Clippers, as previously noted, the Hawks, Bucks, and I think I'm forgetting one or maybe even two.
#291 Larry Nance Jr. &
#287 Jerian Grant are the only two second-generation players I'm aware of in this year's rookie class, although there is a chance that I don't know on some common names- there are multiple players with the last names of Jackson, Johnson, Martin, Russell, Anderson and Brown - all of which appear in this year's rookie class, so there may be more second generation players I am not yet aware of. Grant is the son of Harvey Grant, nephew of Horace Grant and brother to current 76ers player Jerami Grant. I hope I don't need to tell you who Larry Nance Jr. is the son of. ;)
#296 Sam Dekker. Who, apparently, is going to be known mostly for the photo of him mowing the lawn shirtless that his mom posted on Twitter after the draft- it's what the text is about on the back of the card!
Speaking of, the backs of the cards are the same for both veterans and rookies. Unlike previous years of Panini's stewardship of Hoops, they don't include full stats, only going back to 2010-11 for veterans. That's disappointing, but not enough to change my enjoyment of the set.
The back is totally black and white, which makes it really easy to scan, something I appreciate. The text and name are huge, while the stats are tiny- I noticed after spending three days scanning these and nothing but these, they were actually starting to give me a headache, trying to read the tiny stats. They are easier to read in hand than in scan, which doesn't make any sense as the scan is larger. Go figure, right?
Now, let's move onto the parallels and inserts, beginning with the parallels.
First up, most common, is the Red Back. The front of the cards are the exact same as the base cards, but instead of being black and white, the backs are red and white. These really don't need to exist. Or at least make the foil on the card front red or something. Serially number them, or make them interesting...otherwise, meh. I pulled 4 of them from my box, and they are Hobby exclusive, I believe- this is the 3rd year they have done them, and the last two years were Hobby Exclusive, so I expect they are again this year.
I pulled three Gold parallels from the box. They are spectacular, but they don't scan well.
#281 Frank Kaminsky. They are really nice in person, the scan just does not do it justice. Yes, it's important enough to say twice. I am going to be chasing these gold cards for years. This was the only Kaminsky card I pulled.
The Silver parallels are serially numbered to 299, which is right center in the bottom of the picture. They are actually holofoil, but my scanner picks them up as white. They also look better in person.
I pulled two of these from my box. Oddly enough, I pulled Dwyane Wade's silver card from both 2014-15 and 2015-16 Hoops. I didn't do a hobby box of 2013-14 or earlier.
Serially numbered to 99, Artist Proof is the second-hardest parallel to pull, only to the Artist Proof Black which is 1/1, which I did not get. They are also on holofoil, and look pretty much just like the Silver with the exception of the gold foil Hoops 15-16 logo and Artist Proof stamp. It's hard to see, but this card is SN70/99. The / between the numbers is just barely on the stripe on his pants.
Also falling one per box, is the green parallel. These are really great- I can't decide if the Green or Gold is my favorite. These are 1-per-box, but I wish they were easier to get. I will be chasing these for years as well. Neither Green or Gold are serially numbered. Each of the square designs refracts light at a different pace, I guess would be the best way to describe it. Seeing these in person is so much better than scans.
Now, the inserts. New this year is that most of the inserts are printed on foil board. My scanner makes foil board light up and look white, but they are really nice looking in person.
I showed the Wiggins autograph above, but here is the Dawson one. There are two autographs per box, and also there is a parallel numbered to 25, which I did not pull this year- I pulled one last year.
As of right now, this and the SN25 Red Hot Signatures parallel are the only cards in existence for him.
Road to the Finals is a great insert. A 100 card set, every game of the Playoffs gets a card, and most of the Champion Warriors, including Steve Kerr, get a card. (Surprisingly, Festus Ezeli was totally ignored by the set- even the Champion subset of this insert!) I pulled 4 cards from this insert, including one of the second round cards which is SN999. The first round is SN2015, going down to the Finals cards which are SN99.
I actually pulled this one from my very first pack of the set. Zaza Pachulia, seen guarding Noah here, is not included in the set. He's now with the Mavericks.
This insert concept debuted last year and I really like it.
The hardest insert to find falls at one in every 480 packs, and that is Kobe's All-Rookie Team. I managed to pull one!
It happened to be my first card of Trey Lyles as well. In this card, the only holofoil is his name and the Hoops logo/team bar.
The Team Leaders subset highlights a player from each team who led that team in some statistical category.
I happened to pull an Artist Proof parallel as well, SN43/99. this came out of my second pack.
A cool new concept this year is the Triple-Double insert. Every single Triple-Double during the 2014-15 season gets a card, which leads to an unusual 46 card insert set. (Playoffs not included). I like the fact that they actually issued it to the team the player was with at the time, not where the player is now. Rondo was traded to the Mavericks during last season and now is a member of the Kings, but he put up his Triple Doubles as a member of the Celtics. Panini really did a good job with this insert- unfortunately, it's also one-per-box. This is also the only card in my collection showing the Celtics' sleeved alternate jersey, I believe.
Bird's Eye View moves from the apparently defunct Panini Flagship over to Hoops, and expands from 10 to 25 cards, all on holofoil. I really liked the Bird's Eye View insert in 2013-14 Panini, and I'm glad it's back. I pulled two of them.
Dreams is a 10-card insert showing Rookies. It is printed on holofoil, and once again, I pulled only one of them.
High Flyers is another holofoil insert and includes retired players as well as current players- obviously, as this image of Scottie Pippen dates to roughly 1997.
And finally, the one-per-pack Panini Dunk card. As I don't have a smart phone, these aren't too helpful to me. They were, however, the only duplicates, of which I am quite happy.
Overall, I rate this set very highly. I ended up with 262 of the 300 base cards, and I like the set enough that I will be chasing some retail versions of the set-hopefully I will be able to get some of the retail exclusive inserts and parallels, and finish off the base set. Relic cards are retail exclusive, aside from the Blue and Red parallels. Sometimes Panini makes the rookie cards less short printed in retail as well...time will tell. I am sure a future Hot off the Scanner Tray post will have some updates, unless I decide to give the eventual retail purchase it's own post.
My only real complaint is that so many players are ignored. If every team carried only 14 players, which is the norm- there are 420 players in the league at one time. If every team carried 15, as is the NBA allowed maximum, there are 450. For some reason Panini won't go over 300 which is very frustrating to me; there are players who have not gotten cards in years.
They are also hurting their bottom line, because if the set was larger with more players I would be willing to buy more than one box in the attempt to get said cards of other players. Just one set a year- the flagship, this one-should cover every player in the NBA. It's all I'm asking.
I have been trying to talk them into a series 2, but they ignore me. I'm not going to stop trying.
If you want to see all of the cards I got, I have an album created specifically for the box break on my Website.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)