Showing posts with label 1968 Bazooka Baseball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1968 Bazooka Baseball. Show all posts

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Little Boxes

Well a trip to 1970-71 was planned today pilgrims, but as usual an investigation of one era has led to a different path.  That's OK, the fun part is in the journey!

One of the odd things about Topps is that their Bazooka issues from 1959-71 are given short shrift in the guides.  Prices for these cards suffer as they had to be cut from the boxes holding the pink stuff.  It's too bad because the photography on many of the cards is equal to or better than that on the regular issue Topps cards. From 1960 through 1967, Topps used a standardized back panel featuring three cards per box.  The set lengths would vary but always fall between 36 and 48 cards per year.  Many designs were similar and the better players had cards from year to year that require the use of a guide to determine specific vintage but it was a remarkably consistent run.  Then in 1968 the entire formula for issuing these sets changed.

I won't go all the way back to 1960 as I plan to look at the eight year run in detail someday, but want to examine the design of the boxes and sets through 1969 and will start with 1966, for reasons that will become clear in a moment.  I love the panels and boxes and this '66 is a prime example of how great these looked:


 I had to steal that from the 707 Sportscards site but take a look under Kranepool.  You will note the absence of any indicia under the card.  Now take a look at this 1967 panel:

 

Under Bob Gibson there is a production or project code.  This is to be expected as Topps started using these in 1966 but that '67 box has a code from 1966:


That means the production commenced in 1966, even though the product was sold in 1967.  I would imagine the bigger and more expensive products were shipped earlier than the standard nickel packs as they would be warehoused somewhere for a bit before being shipped off to supermarkets and groceries, which were the main retail outlets for the Bazooka party boxes, as they are referred to in the trade.

That 1967 box was then end of the three card baseball panels until they were revived in 1971.  As we saw last time out, the '68 Box was different and had a Tipps From The Topps panel that took over the back of the box, with two very narrow baseball cards on each side panel.  Topps must have been reaacting to perceived competition in order to give the purchaser more bang for the buck:






The flap show a 1967 production code (the last digit in the sequence signifies year):



1969 (and 1970) brought us some vintage ballplayers but in the same basic configuration as 1968:



Those old timers look like the 1963 All Time Greats Bazooka inserts but I have not yet compared pictures to see if they were identical.  Baseball celebrated its (alleged) 100th birthday in 1969 so I guess everyone was waxing nostalgic.  That production code by the way indicates 1968. The set is always referred to as a 1969-70 issue and I am not sure if it was reissued in 1970 or just continued to be sold without any updating at all.  That is something I want to look at in conjunction with the two 1971 baseball sets and will be the focus next time.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Tipp Topp

Every once in a while I am surprised by a new entry to what I call the Master Topps List.  I keep a record of each set issued by the company from 1948-80 and since about 1999 maybe every couple of years a new entry is made to the list (I have been keeping track since 1989 or thereabouts, in case you were wondering just how far back this obsession goes).  Faithful reader and sometime-troubadour Matt Glidden sent along a question the other day that led to a fresh entry in the database.


Tipps From The Topps is a well known Bazooka box back panel, or package design set but I had never seen one without a ballplayer's picture in the leftmost panel.  Here is how the Playing Shortstop panel looked on the back of a 1968 Bazooka box, as originally issued:


There are fifteen panels in the original set but the later set is described as having only twelve subjects.  I'm not sure of the set count for the non-photo issue nor which topics may have been pulled for the re-release so it's an open question as to its actual length and composition.  A booklet of the Tipps was also issued at some point:


A promotional page in the back of the booklet infers the booklet may have been distributed by MacGregor Sporting Goods but that is unconfirmed.  MacGregor had a history of offering tips booklets of different sorts through ads in Boys Life magazine so I think this is a fairly solid lead as to the booklet's origin.  The interior pages of the booklet, which feature all 15 Tipps, are in black and white:

 
As for our photo-less Tipps panels, the year of issue would seem to be in the early 1970's; I would say 1970 or '71.  I'll get into it more next time but there is some reason to believe Topps scratched their scheduled Bazooka back panel set in 1970 (it would have been a return to the three card panels of yore) and there is also a photo-less football issue in 1971 called A Children's Guide To TV Football, probably issued as a result of Monday Night Football being a hit in the ratings:



The vagaries of the 1970 and '71 Bazooka baseball box backs will be looked at shortly, so stay tuned kids!