2006 Just Minors Black Edition #51 Jarrod Saltalamacchia /50
As a dime box connoisseur, I pride myself on soaking in every last detail possible.
For most of my discount bin digs, I absolutely have to look through every single card available. A phenomenon I've discussed before, it's a major reason why my card show trips tend to last for a good three or four hours. (At the least.)
I'm not sure if the rest of the collecting community is as obsessive as I am with such a thing. Maybe it's just me, but I can't bear to think what kind of gems I'd be leaving behind. That's why I have to look through all of it.
But, hey. Nobody's perfect.
Even after hours of digging, I still tend to miss quite a few things from time to time.
Take Mr. Saltalamacchia there, for instance. I scored that particular card of his from last month's trip to the local flea market.
"Salty" is the basis for one of my many player collections. At the time, I simply thought it'd be cool to land one of his minor league issues.
Without much of a second thought, I threw it into my purchase pile.
Later that night, a good six or seven hours after I'd returned home from my flea market binge, I decided to give my finds a good comb through.
After a while, I came across the very "Salty" card you see above. Interested to soak in some of his minor league stats, I flipped it over.
That's when I found a major detail I'd missed the first time.
My eyes instantly shot to the gaping oversight.
See that little foil sticker on the bottom-left hand corner?
I didn't. Not at first, anyways. That's when I made quite the discovery, in that the stamping reads as follows...
47/50.
Somehow, I'd stumbled upon an extremely scarce minor league issue of one of the game's better backstops. Only 49 other copies of this particular card exist.
In the entire world.
And I scored mine for a dime.
Apparently, all the cards from Just's "Black Edition" sets were limited to 50 copies in 2006. Frankly, I didn't think minor league checklists even had parallels.
As a kid, school teachers always seemed to hammer the idea of proofreading into our heads. Proofread this, proofread that. Proofread everything.
Unwittingly, I guess I've continued that lesson into my collecting travels. Without proofreading my cardboard, I'd be missing out on a lot of the little intricacies that make this hobby so awesome.
Who knows?
Without a little proofreading, maybe I would've never noticed that my dime box "Salty" was one of just fifty in the whole wide world.
I guess my teachers were right. They taught me a valuable lesson. In fact, it's one that I'd like to implore all of you to live by.
Always, always proofread.
Especially when it comes to cardboard.
1 comment:
Yes, but did you make sure they spelled Saltalamacchia right each time on the card? Get back to work, proofreader!
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