2004 Upper Deck Sweet Spot
I must admit ? I have a sweet tooth.
OK?OK?A sweet tooth for Sweet Spot baseball.
I mean, with an average of one Sweet Spot Signature autograph per box, it?s hard not to. Perhaps I need to seek some medical attention for this fancy of mine.
Or maybe I need to run to my local hobby shop and pick up another box of Sweet Spot baseball cards by Upper Deck.
This year, Upper Deck upped the ante, so to speak, by including at least one certified autograph per hobby box.
And, on top of that, an average of two game-used memorabilia cards per box. There are also numerous serial-numbered insert sets to boot, including the trademark ?Sweet Beginnings? rookie cards and a plethora of serial-numbered parallels.
We were lucky enough to score two hobby boxes (thanks to Don Williams at Upper Deck for these) and pulled some fascinating cardboard, including Sweet Spot Signature Leather autographs of Tim Hudson, Gary Sheffield and a rare ?red and blue? stitch parallel autograph of Scott Podsednik, serial-numbered to just 45 copies.
The best pull of the lot, however, was a dual-patch card of Pedro Martinez/Gary Sheffield, serial-numbered to just 60 copies. The patches were multi-colored, by the way.
All tolled, we thoroughly enjoyed the 2004 Upper Deck Sweet Spot baseball offering. The box price is affordable ($90-100) and the advertised average of one autograph per box is enticing, to say the least.
I highly recommend 2004 Upper Deck Sweet Spot for those of you that have a sweet tooth for baseball cards.
Enjoy.
OK?OK?A sweet tooth for Sweet Spot baseball.
I mean, with an average of one Sweet Spot Signature autograph per box, it?s hard not to. Perhaps I need to seek some medical attention for this fancy of mine.
Or maybe I need to run to my local hobby shop and pick up another box of Sweet Spot baseball cards by Upper Deck.
This year, Upper Deck upped the ante, so to speak, by including at least one certified autograph per hobby box.
And, on top of that, an average of two game-used memorabilia cards per box. There are also numerous serial-numbered insert sets to boot, including the trademark ?Sweet Beginnings? rookie cards and a plethora of serial-numbered parallels.
We were lucky enough to score two hobby boxes (thanks to Don Williams at Upper Deck for these) and pulled some fascinating cardboard, including Sweet Spot Signature Leather autographs of Tim Hudson, Gary Sheffield and a rare ?red and blue? stitch parallel autograph of Scott Podsednik, serial-numbered to just 45 copies.
The best pull of the lot, however, was a dual-patch card of Pedro Martinez/Gary Sheffield, serial-numbered to just 60 copies. The patches were multi-colored, by the way.
All tolled, we thoroughly enjoyed the 2004 Upper Deck Sweet Spot baseball offering. The box price is affordable ($90-100) and the advertised average of one autograph per box is enticing, to say the least.
I highly recommend 2004 Upper Deck Sweet Spot for those of you that have a sweet tooth for baseball cards.
Enjoy.
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