“We’ve lost Dale Earnhardt.”
Those words from Mike Helton, 25 years ago today, still haunt me.
I was late for work that day (I was a college kid working part time at Walmart), but I had to see the end of the race. Then it happened. I waited for word that Dale Earnhardt was okay so that I could head to word. I was even later than I thought I’d be because those words never came. It was at work that Don, who was the door greeter (remember those?) told me it’d been announced that he died. I was dumbfounded. It didn’t seem real.
It hit me that it was real when some asshole came to check out with me, every Dale Earnhardt diecast in his cart, and said “If I can’t 10x my money on these I’m bringing them back” and then laughed about it. If not for knowing I needed that job to get by, that dude would have received a rage-fueled ass whipping that he’d still think about from time to time.
He wasn’t “my guy.” When I got into NASCAR in the mid-90s, Earnhardt was the guy that all the rednecks cheered for and I was not a redneck. So I didn’t like him. But over the next handful of years he grew on me and had become one of my favorites, even after edging out “my guy” for the 1998 Daytona 500. Hindsight is always 20/20 and I’m happy he got that win.
The first 1/1 is a Press Pass, post career 1/1. Happy to have it, but it's not from my NASCAR fandom years so I'm not as in love with it as perhaps I should be. On the other hand, I am much more happy about the "Team Pinnacle" plate. It's driving-era and it's Pinnacle. I love me some Pinnacle to this day. It blows my mind that the dufex technology they used can't seem to be duplicated today.
The third card is a card I wanted for years. However, only one came available before this one and they wanted a stupid price. About a year ago, my copy came available. One of the corners has a ding. The signature on the card isn't very bold. Those two "imperfections" are the reason I have it. If not for those, I never could have afforded it. It's serial numbered out of 50, celebrates NASCAR's 50th season and depicts Earnhardt's celebration after winning the 1998 Daytona 500. Absolute grail card for me.
The fourth card is easily the most sentimental card for me. It is both the first Earnhardt autograph I obtained, and I consider it a gift from my wife. She isn't big on buying cards for me. When she does, it's typically blaster boxes at Christmas and I've let her know the things I'd be interested in. She also despises gift cards as gifts. However, she gave me an ebay gift card one Christmas and I put it toward this card. She doesn't buy me many cards (which I'm okay with), she doesn't usually give gift cards...and combining those two things make this a special card to me.
The final card doesn't look impressive and I acknowledge that. However, it is an EXTREMELY scarce and desirable card. I believe what I saw in the past was that the estimated print run is less than 25. Be that as it may, you will rarely find a copy of this card available. I lucked into it a few years ago in a Facebook NASCAR group. The seller had a partial set he wanted to sell, but didn't want to separate the lot. About a year later he relented, reached out to me and after sleeping on it overnight pulled the trigger. I've never regretted it.
The card below it is Upper Deck, die cut, a "checkered flag" parallel and /100. What more could you do to make the card better? I have no clue.
The one vertical card is a Press Pass "Golden" parallel numbered to 50. While that makes it desirable enough, it's also copy number three - Earnhardt's (most well known) car number.
If you made it this far, thanks for checking it out and reading all my rambling!






.jpg)
Nice collection, and makes for a nice tribute to one of the greatest.
ReplyDeleteThank you, that is very kind. The Earnhardt part of my collection is one of my favorites. I could have posted hundreds more but nobody needs to fall asleep at the computer while looking at my post.
DeleteWonderful cards of an amazing racer. There's a lot of history behind some very special cards here; I didn't realize the first relic cards came from racing. Very cool. He will always be remembered by fans everywhere. Your tribute to him is great.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the kind words. I'm planning to get rid of most of my base Earnhardts, but can only bring myself to do it because I do have and enjoy the "bigger" cards.
DeleteRacing has never been my thing, but even so, I can still remember being very surprised to hear of his passing on the news that night. And again, even though I know very little about the sport, or its cards, this seems like a really good collection of one person's items to me.
ReplyDeleteThank you for still checking out the post and commenting, I really do appreciate it. I think my biggest struggle as a blogger is that I don't collect baseball. Most blogs are baseball centric and it feels like baseball collectors for some reason seem to think if it's anything other than baseball, it's not worth acknowledging.
DeleteReally nice collection!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm pretty sure I still have cards for you in my "stuff for others" box. Perhaps getting back into blogging will motivate me to send it out sometime soon-ish.
DeleteLike Jon (hey Jon!), I've never really been into racing, but I remember finding out about Earnhardt's death while at the Mall of America, just because we happened upon a tribute to him. I certainly knew he he was, and we were all very shocked by the news.
ReplyDeleteAnd on the note of tributes, this post is a great tribute, and that's a heck of a collection too!