A few days ago Fuji was kind enough to mention my last post here on his weekly blog recap series This Week in Blogging. There was just one slight typo in his post:
No worries, though. Happens all the time. If I had a nickel for every typo I found in my NHL all-time series during and after publishing each post... here's how many nickels I'd have.
I'm home from work today due to a blizzard slamming the northeast so let's run with this. Let's talk about 1983.
The first thing that comes to my mind when someone mentions this year is the Cold War. It's one of my favorite topics in American history; I just found it frightening and fascinating how two superpowers could come so close to destroying each other - and the world - with nuclear weapons. Probably because I was far too young to experience the events at the time. Tensions between the US and USSR had been high since the early 1960s but things really came to a head in '83.
President Ronald Reagan announced a new missile defense program called SDI, or "Star Wars" which would theoretically target Russian nukes from space.
The Day After debuted in November 1983. It was a chilling depiction of nuclear catastrophe which aired on broadcast TV just days after the Able Archer incident.
Able Archer was the code name of a training exercise - a WarGame if you will - that many in the Kremlin believed was the real deal. (No, this was not related to Reagan's quip that "We begin bombing in five minutes.") Fun times!
On a lighter note, 1983 trading cards are scarcely represented in my collection.
I have 12 cards from the 1983 Topps football set: nine Packers, Renaldo Nehemiah, Andra Franklin, and Doug Williams - the original TB12.
I have 16 cards from the 1983 Fleer set, including six Red Sox and some singles I picked up for my All-Time Teams binder. I also grabbed some from the online dime box that were meant for a fellow blogger - but he filled those needs before I had them in hand.
1983 (and 1984) Donruss singles felt like a rare treat to me as a young collector in the late '80s - something that surfaced about as frequently as an insert card a decade later.
As for the '83 Topps set.. I have just 22 cards in my collection, one of the three lowest totals of '80s Topps sets. This makes some sense to me based on the year I was born and the year I started collecting. Here's my card count:
- 1980 Topps - 19 cards
- 1981 Topps - 24 cards
- 1982 Topps - 21 cards
- 1983 Topps - 22 cards
- 1984 Topps - 48 cards
- 1985 Topps - 26 cards
- 1986 Topps - 69 cards
- (the rest are complete.)
What doesn't make sense to me is that 1983 Topps is probably one of my three favorite issues of the decade. I like it a lot more than 1986 Topps, but that was the first flagship set I saw as a kid. Also I don't have any rookie cards of Ryne Sandberg, Wade Boggs, or Tony Gwynn - mostly because I've always figured they're so plentiful that I never saw the need to prioritize them :/
Do you have any favorite sports cards or memories from 1983? Do you have any memories of Cold War tensions at that time? I'd be very interested to hear some of your stories!
Night Owl... you up?
Btw, New Girl is a lousy speller. She left a post-it for me to call a gentleman named Schmidt and she spelled his name 'Schmitt'. As anyone who follows baseball knows, that's not how you spell 'Schmidt'.
![]() |
| K-I-N-G. Schmidt. Got it? |
Thanks for reading!
~








0 Yorumlar