For much of the past 70 years, that brand name has elicited a primary association: trading cards, particularly baseball cards. In what feels like cruel irony, New York City-based The Topps Co. Inc.
If you’re a fan of baseball -- and there’s a very good chance you are if you’re reading this article -- there’s a very good chance that at some point in your life, you collected baseball cards.
Aug. 20 (UPI) --Topps, which has been synonymous with baseball trading cards since the 1950s, ended plans Friday to go public with a merger after Major League Baseball and its players' union signed a ...
Conor Donahue says 1987 was the first year he remembers going to the store by himself to buy a 40 cent pack of Topps baseball cards. Donahue, now an adult and the vice president of publicity for the ...
Topps, the industry-leader for baseball cards for 70 years, will soon no longer have the rights to print Major League Baseball cards. The league and the players’ union made a deal with Fanatics Inc.
Take me out to the ballgame, where Topps cards are being sold. Buy me some Mickeys and Jackies, too. I don't care 'bout what you have to do! Let me root, root, root for the rarest. If they don't sell, ...
Sports cards will be in heavy focus in 2022 as big changes loom at year's end. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images) The sports card market was flipped on its axis ...