Baseball card of Jeter shows President Bush, Mickey Mantle
Baseball card of Jeter shows President Bush, Mickey Mantle
Posted 2/27/2007 2:12 PM ET
NEW YORK (AP) — As President Bush smiled and waved from the stands and Mickey Mantle looked on from the dugout, Derek Jeter swung his bat.
Talk about pressure.
The game never happened, of course. It was just someone's idea of a visual gag — pulled off in a recent Topps baseball card through digital manipulation.
"We saw it in the final proof and we could have axed it," Topps spokesman Clay Luraschi told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "But we decided to let it run, we wanted to print it. We thought it was hilarious."
The card will be changed when Topps issues a complete set at midseason, Luraschi said.
Jeter said he had not seen the card.
"I don't know anything about it," the All-Star shortstop said after New York's workout Tuesday in Tampa "I can't tell you anything."
Luraschi did not identify the person at Topps who made the alteration on Jeter's card, No. 40 in the set. Luraschi said that fixing it before it was released would have caused shipping delays.
It's not the first card to have silly errors or odd prints, said T.S. O'Connell, the editor of Sports Collector's Digest.
"For collectors, there's a real giggle factor for something like this," he told the Daily News.
The Daily News put the story on its front page Tuesday and Newsday also reported it.
The Jeter card could join other famed oddball cards, like the 1969 Topps of Aurelio Rodriguez. That card featured a photo of a bat boy instead of the infielder.
Another collector said the joke would raise the price of the card, which currently goes for $2 on eBay.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Posted 2/27/2007 2:12 PM ET
Copyright 2007 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.
Posted 2/27/2007 2:12 PM ET
NEW YORK (AP) — As President Bush smiled and waved from the stands and Mickey Mantle looked on from the dugout, Derek Jeter swung his bat.
Talk about pressure.
The game never happened, of course. It was just someone's idea of a visual gag — pulled off in a recent Topps baseball card through digital manipulation.
"We saw it in the final proof and we could have axed it," Topps spokesman Clay Luraschi told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "But we decided to let it run, we wanted to print it. We thought it was hilarious."
The card will be changed when Topps issues a complete set at midseason, Luraschi said.
Jeter said he had not seen the card.
"I don't know anything about it," the All-Star shortstop said after New York's workout Tuesday in Tampa "I can't tell you anything."
Luraschi did not identify the person at Topps who made the alteration on Jeter's card, No. 40 in the set. Luraschi said that fixing it before it was released would have caused shipping delays.
It's not the first card to have silly errors or odd prints, said T.S. O'Connell, the editor of Sports Collector's Digest.
"For collectors, there's a real giggle factor for something like this," he told the Daily News.
The Daily News put the story on its front page Tuesday and Newsday also reported it.
The Jeter card could join other famed oddball cards, like the 1969 Topps of Aurelio Rodriguez. That card featured a photo of a bat boy instead of the infielder.
Another collector said the joke would raise the price of the card, which currently goes for $2 on eBay.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Posted 2/27/2007 2:12 PM ET
Copyright 2007 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.
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