『From Rookie to Farewell: Every Mickey Mantle Base Card Has a Story! - Ep. 3.26』のカバーアート

From Rookie to Farewell: Every Mickey Mantle Base Card Has a Story! - Ep. 3.26

From Rookie to Farewell: Every Mickey Mantle Base Card Has a Story! - Ep. 3.26

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The Complete Mickey Mantle Base Card Story: Looking at All 21 Base Cards Over 19 Seasons!Mickey Mantle had 21 base cards across an 18-year career. Twenty-one little rectangles of cardboard that tell the story of the greatest switch-hitter who ever lived — from a wide-eyed rookie in 1951 to a legend saying goodbye in 1969.Today we’re going card by card through all of them. Bowman, Topps, oil paintings, TV-set borders, wood grain, ocean-dumped rarities — it’s all here. And every single one has a story worth knowing.1951 Bowman — The True RookieThis is the last card depicting a fully healthy Mickey Mantle. He tore his ACL in Game 2 of the 1951 World Series and played the remaining 17 years of his career without a fully intact ACL — and still became one of the greatest players who ever lived.1952 Topps — The Mona LisaLegend has it that Topps couldn’t sell the high-number series, so they loaded boxes onto a barge and dumped them into the ocean — taking cards of Mantle, Willie Mays, Jackie Robinson, Roy Campanella, and the Eddie Mathews rookie card down with them. The scarcity that created is a big reason this card is worth more than Mantle’s actual rookie.1952 Bowman — The Consolation PrizeImagine cracking a pack, pulling a 1952 Mickey Mantle — and realizing it’s not the Topps. That’s the collector’s equivalent of pulling a Griffey Jr. rookie and finding out it’s the Topps Traded instead of the Upper Deck. Times a million.1953 Topps — The $25 MasterpieceMany collectors consider this Mantle’s best-looking card. Every image in this set was an individual oil painting commissioned from New Jersey artist Gerry Dvorak — who charged Topps just $25 per painting.1953 Bowman — Color Comes FirstContrary to popular belief, the first color photographs on baseball cards didn’t appear in 1957 Topps. They were right here, in 1953 Bowman — four full years earlier. PSA considers it among the most beautiful sets of the modern era.1954 Bowman — The Contract YearMantle was locked into a Bowman-only contract, meaning if you wanted a Mantle card in 1953 or 1954, Bowman was your only option. Topps fans had to wait.1955 Bowman — The TV SetBowman framed this card to look like a television set — and if you look closely at the bottom of the frame, it says “Color TV.” Interesting, given that color TVs had only just reached consumer markets in 1954 and wouldn’t go mainstream for another decade.1956 Topps — Topps Takes OverTopps purchased Bowman in January 1956, ending the card wars for good. This is Mantle’s first Topps card in three years — and the first Topps card where he’s actually smiling.1957 Topps — The Card That Set the StandardThis set standardized the 2½” × 3½” card size. The same dimensions every trading card still uses today, more than 65 years later.1958 Topps — The Only Time It HappenedThis is the only year that Mantle, Ted Williams, and Stan Musial all appeared in the same Topps set together. It never happened before, and it never happened again.1959 Topps — The Red BorderSometimes the fact is simple: that red border just works. Compared to the yellow background on the 1958 card, this one pops in a way that makes it one of the most visually satisfying Mantle cards of the decade.1960 Topps — Circus TentMantle’s last landscape-format card features a beautiful main photo — and then an inset that cuts off the top of his bat and hides his feet behind the Yankees logo, all against a coral background. It’s a lot.1961 Topps — Six Cards DeepThe 1961 Topps set contains more Mickey Mantle cards than any other — six in total, including base, league leader, All-Star, and two separate home run highlight cards. Topps knew what they had.1962 Topps — The Wood GrainThe iconic wood-grain border became so beloved that Topps brought it back exactly 25 years later in 1987 — creating another iconic set for a whole new generation of collectors. We’re still waiting on 2012.1963 Topps — Already a LegendThe back of this card notes that Mantle already ranked seventh all-time in home runs. He was 31 years old. He had six seasons left to play. Worth thinking about the next time you watch Shohei Ohtani, who is that same age right now in 2026.1964 Topps — The Accessible OneThe bold team names across the top divide collectors, but there’s an upside: this set isn’t particularly condition-sensitive, making it one of the more budget-friendly ways to land a Mantle card in solid shape.1965 Topps — First Homer in the DomeMantle played in the exhibition game that inaugurated the Astrodome — the world’s first domed stadium — and hit the very first home run ever struck inside that building, on April 9, 1965.1966 Topps — Just the OneThis was the first time since 1956 that Mantle appeared on just a single card in an entire Topps set. No All-Star card, no league leaders, no combo. Just this one.1967 Topps — Wrong Position, Right StoryThe card lists him ...
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