Upper Deck created one of the most iconic baseball rookie cards with the release of the 1989 Star Rookie of Ken Griffey Jr. Upper Deck's existence as a baseball card company ran concurrently with ...
First off, Rest in Peace, Ryno, one of the greatest ever to play the game and gone way too soon. Second, this card is pretty much Exhibit A for the greatness of the 1993 Upper Deck set. It's pretty ...
I was ten years old and obsessed with baseball card collecting in 1989 when Upper Deck debuted a new set of baseball cards. Up to that point there were three card companies: Topps, Donruss, and Fleer.
The most famous card in the history of pictures on cardboard is the T206 Honus Wagner, so rare that one of them sold for more than $2 million last year. The most well-known card of the modern era is ...
Earlier this week, I asked my Twitter family to help me choose the worst sets of the Junk Wax Era, which I’m loosely defining as 1987-1993. It was a fun project, with lots of great input from my ...
There were literally thousands of different baseball card sets produced over the course of the 20th century. Some, ...
That's not a Joba Chamberlain reference there -- it's the latest concoction in the baseball card world from Carlsbad, Calif.-based Upper Deck. It has put actual insects into baseball cards. Last ...
On any list of the most iconic baseball cards of all time, you will find the smiling face of a young George Kenneth Griffey, with a bat resting on his left shoulder and an airbrushed Mariners hat ...
Upper Deck will pay Major League Baseball Properties a substantial but undisclosed amount of money for issuing three card sets since last year without a license, according to the settlement of a ...
Major League Baseball sued the Upper Deck baseball card company about a month ago for releasing baseball cards with team logos and stuff without having a license to do so. The case settled yesterday.
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