Free Updates

Let us tell you when new posts are added!

Email:

Navigation

Categories

Search

Archives

<November 2009>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
25262728293031
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293012345

More Links


# Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Upper Deck contest will award trip to Super Bowl
Posted by tuff

Upper Deck is offering a trip for two to this season's Super Bowl in Phoenix as the grand prize in its new “NFL TD Dance Challenge.”
 
Contestants must submit a videotaped representation of their best touchdown dance and subsequent celebration on or before Jan. 11 to http://upperdecksweepstakes.magnify.net/. Entries can be between 30 seconds and two minutes in length and good taste is encouraged. Complete rules are posted on the site, as well.

The company says "use of interesting scenery and unique dialog – 'touchdown rants' – will be additional parts" of the criteria it uses to judge winners. Upper Deck will prescreen each of the video entries as they are uploaded to the site and any that contain inappropriate gestures and/or language will not be posted for public viewing. A group comprised of Upper Deck employees will serve as the judging committee. 



Wednesday, December 19, 2007 9:35:48 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Another look at what could be Bonds' last HR
Posted by tuff

A while back I posted a story here about the whereabouts of Barry Bonds' 762nd home run baseball. It was the final home run he hit during the 2007 season, and now that he's been indicted, it's certainly possible that it could be the final HR of his career.

That distinction, of course, would make the 762 ball a very valuable keepsake. Bonds' 756th HR ball (the one that broke Hank Aaron's HR record) sold for more than $752,000 a few months ago, and most memorabilia experts agree that the final HR ball would be the most valuable since it represents the record that will be chased.

The problem is that Bonds hit his last HR of the year in early September, and few people expected it had the potential to be his last round tripper. When the ball was hit into the stands, there were no efforts made by stadium security to verify who caught the ball, and its unlikely Major League Baseball was marking the balls with any special notations to distinguish them from other balls used in the game. As a result, whoever caught the ball has a potentially valuable baseball -- and yet may not be able to cash in because they might not be able to prove they caught the ball.

Here's a video clip of Bonds' 762nd HR. What you'll want to watch closely is the side-angle, slow-motion replay of the fan who reaches over the wall to make the catch. Notice that as the HR ball goes into his glove, another ball pops out the front of his glove. At one point, you'll clearly be able to see a baseball on each side of his glove.

A fan who was sitting in the bleachers during the game, near the scrum for the HR ball, told me that the fan who first touched the ball had a batting practice ball in his glove. He claims the guy in the purple shirt who emerges from the scrum, holding up his glove, actually has the BP ball. The guy who first touches the ball actually held on to the HR ball, but if it didn't carry any special markings from MLB, it would be very difficult for anyone to authenticate it.



Tuesday, December 11, 2007 2:29:34 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Monday, December 10, 2007
Licensors not laughing at Upper Deck cards
Posted by tuff

Either Upper Deck was trying to have some fun at the expense of Topps, or it was trying to prove a point. Either way, Major League Baseball wasn't happy about it.
319a_1.JPG
Upper Deck's new Sweet Spot Baseball features at least two cards that are creating a buzz. One is a parody of Michael Eisner, who heads up the new ownership group at Topps. The caricature card depicts him as "Michael Buysner" and the back of the card says that Upper Deck "wishes him well -- in the candy business" (referring to the confection division at Topps).

The other Sweet Spot card is a Sweet Spot Signatures insert that features an asterisk instead of the traditional player autograph, and the notation "756" under the asterisk. The card is obviously a reference to Barry Bonds (coincidentally, a Topps spokesman) and his breaking of the career home-run record. So far, only one of these cards has surfaced on eBay.

Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association has final approval over everything that goes into card packs, so the licensors take it seriously when something slips into packs without their approval. The Eisner parody is probably harmless fun, but it's an unflattering portrait of one of MLB's other business partners and would not have otherwise been approved. MLB also doesn't want any more attention drawn to the allegations of Bonds and steroid use in connection with his record-setting home run.

So MLB has told Upper Deck to recall all unsold inventory of Sweet Spot Baseball. How much of the product will be returned is uncertain, since the controversy now increases demand. But it should send a signal to both companies to stop any future attempts at "surprise" publicity.

Earlier this year, you may recall Topps issued a card of Derek Jeter that featured digitally enhanced images of Mickey Mantle and President Bush. The card generated tremendous national media attention and resulted in a significant sales boost for Topps. It's assumed that card was created without the licensors approval (Topps initially claimed it was created by one of its artists as a joke and accidentally got into print, but later said they let the card through because they thought it added some fun to its product), in part because Jeter is an Upper Deck spokesman.

So either Upper Deck was trying to take a public jab at Eisner, who they locked horns with earlier this year in efforts to buy Topps, or they decided that if Topps can get away with publicity for its "error" cards, they can too. Either way, you can bet the baseball card licensors will do their best to discourage similar surprises in the future. 


Monday, December 10, 2007 10:07:57 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]