2018 Topps
Total Cards: 700
Rating: 7.7 (119 votes)
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- Release Dates:
- Series 1 - Jan 31, 2018
- Series 2 - Jun 13, 2018
Set Links
- Overview
- Checklist
- Teams
- Errors / Variations
- Hall of Famers
- Rookies
- Inserts and Related Sets
- Comments
- Packaging
- Pricing
- Sell Sheets / Ads
- Trivia
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- Collection Summary
Set Links
Overview | Checklist | Teams | Errors / Variations | Hall of Famers | Rookies | Inserts and Related Sets | Comments | Packaging | Pricing | Sell Sheets / Ads | Trivia | Videos | Forum | External Links | Change Log | Contributors | Glossary | Gallery | Card Rankings | Collection Summary
2018 Topps
User Comments |
These are the first cards I ever bought or ever opened. When I was 12 (2003) I inherited my fathers baseball cards and baseball memorabilia. A lot of it was sold to help pay for things around the house. broken water heater, new septic pump and other things thru the years but we always kept the cards. I’d go thru and organize and look up in the old becket books and cross them off. I got older and put them away and never thought much about them. Then my wife got pregnant and we were so completely broke and I went thru the old cards again, we made some money and had a healthy baby. Going thru them me and her and my stepdaughter, we all kind of caught the fever. Not long after the baby came we bought a blaster box of 2018 Topps series 1 and this year we been into it more than ever. Love this hobby | ||
I had just recently got into card collecting and 2018 Topps was the first real set I started to collect this year. At first there was noting better then going to your local store getting a pack of cards and opening them up to see what new awesome cards may be in there from this set.
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Well, I've finally gone through enough of this set to give a full review.
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I think this is the best Topps set has had lookswise in a few years now | ||
Variation Codes:
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This was the set that turned me away from Topps baseball cards. After completing every Topps+Traded/Update set from 1968-present, including the majority of all the sets from 1951-1967, I became fed up with the direction of modern baseball cards. The incomplete statistics on the back marked a 2nd year in a row, indicating that Topps didn't learn their lesson about respecting the longevity of a player's career. It marks almost 10 years since managers/coaches were removed from base sets, which could have included former players like Don Mattingly, Ryne Sandberg, Paul Molitor, Terry Francona, Bud Black, Ron Gardenhire, A.J. Hinch, Ned Yost, Mike Scioscia, Craig Counsell, Aaron Boone, Clint Hurdle, Bruce Bochy, Mike Matheny, and Dave Martinez. If age and longevity are no longer a valued part of Topps baseball, then there's no place for a middle-aged fogey like me neither. I've been selling off all of my modern sets in reverse chronological order beginning with 2018. |