Updating for 2024 – Hall of Famers in Topps sets

28 01 2024

Quite the week!  My guy Jim Harbaugh had to come out and put Tuesday’s news to the stereotypical “yesterday’s news” – but on Tuesday night we got 3 new members of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

A couple Hall of Famers in this pic…

Last year for this post I said “Todd Helton likely will be up next, along with 1 or 2 new guys and maybe Billy Wagner”.  Well, it was 2 new guys but not Wagner.  I think he’ll get his enshrinement next year, though it is his last chance from the BBWAA.

Adrian Beltre (1st year), Todd Helton (7th) and Joe Mauer (1st) were elected by the Baseball Writers.  They are joining Jim Leyland (Eras Committee) in the election ceremonies in Cooperstown on July 21st.

Background! (obligatory info)

The number of Hall of Famers in a given set has always been something that intrigued me.  I count the number of Hall of Famers for every new set I start, and post about it in my overview.  So, since there are now 3 new Hall of Famers to account for, I need to go back and update those posts.  In showing this stuff below, I will show the cumulative total as well.

First, some reminders.  I include all Hall of Famers from the set.  That includes someone like Johnny Bench who had a Turn Back the Clock card in the 1990 set.  I also include managers who were Hall of Fame players (Frank Robinson in 1984 Topps, or my personal favorite – Yogi Berra as an Astro coach on their 1987 Topps team leader card).  I also include player cards of guys who made the Hall of Fame as a manager (i.e., 1969 Topps Bobby Cox).  If you have a bronze plaque in Cooperstown and you’re in the set, I’m including you.  Also – note that all 4 of these guys have cards after 2004, but that’s as far as I’ve gotten in this Lifetime Topps project!  Hopefully I change that this year!

  • For this particular class – Leyland was first hired as the Pirates manager in 1986.  So his first regular Topps card (I’ll do Topps Traded/Update in a different post) was in 1987.  He managed there through 1996, then managed the Marlins and Rockies – but Topps stopped doing managers from 1993 to 2001 so he didn’t have any cards until after 2004 (which is is far as I’ve gone on this project to date).
  • Helton is the player who goes back the furthest.  His first regular Topps card (again – not counting Traded for this post) was 1996.  He wasn’t in 1997, but is back for good after that.  So Helton is an addition for 1996 and 1998-2004 below.
  • Beltre’s first card was in the Prospects subset of 1998, so he is an addition from 1998 to 2004 below.  He would match Roy Halladay and David Ortiz as the latest first base Topps card of a Hall of Famer, except…
  • That will get surpassed by his fellow classmate!  Joe Mauer was a late addition to the 2002 Topps Draft Picks subset as the #1 overall draft selection in the 2001 MLB Draft.  He is the 4th #1 overall pick to make the Hall of Fame (Griffey, Chipper, Baines), and he will impact 2002-2004 below.

One more thing – Leyland’s addition puts 1993 in a tie with 1983 for the most Hall of Famers in the list below.  My guess is an earlier set has more, but I’m not completely sure.

Without any further ado, here we go!

1980 Topps – 45 Hall of Famers

Johnny Bench, Bert Blyleven, George Brett, Rod Carew, Steve Carlton, Gary Carter, Andre Dawson, Dennis Eckersley, Rollie Fingers, Carlton Fisk, Goose Gossage, Rickey Henderson, Reggie Jackson, Fergie Jenkins, Jim Kaat, Willie McCovey, Paul Molitor, Joe Morgan, Jack Morris, Eddie Murray, Jim Palmer, Phil Niekro, Tony Perez, Gaylord Perry, Jim Rice, Nolan Ryan, Mike Schmidt, Tom Seaver, Ted Simmons, Ozzie Smith, Willie Stargell, Bruce Sutter, Don Sutton, Alan Trammell, Dave Winfield, Carl Yastrzemski, Robin Yount, Earl Weaver (manager), Tommy LaSorda (manager), Dick Williams (manager), Sparky Anderson (manager), Joe Torre (manager), Bobby Cox (manager), Tony LaRussa (manager), Lou Brock (HL)

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1981 Topps – 46 Hall of Famers

Gone (-2):  McCovey and Brock were gone after retiring

New (+3):  Whitey Herzog got a manager card when he was hired by St. Louis.  Rock Raines and Harold Baines got cards in the 1981 set as part of the Future Stars triple player cards.

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1982 Topps – 40 Hall of Famers

Gone (-8):  There was no manager subset in 1982, which accounts for the big drop – Weaver, LaSorda, Williams, Herzog, Anderson, Torre, Cox and LaRussa aren’t in this set.

New (+2):  Cal Ripken Jr. and Lee Smith both have rookie cards in this set.

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1983 Topps – 51 Hall of Famers

Gone (-1):  Willie Stargell retired and had his last card in 1982 (-1).

New (+12):  The manager subset came back, which led to 9 new cards of Hall of Famers – Weaver, LaSorda, Williams, Sparky, Herzog, Cox, Torre, LaRussa and Frank Robinson.  Additionally, Wade Boggs, Ryne Sandberg and Tony Gwynn entered the fray.

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1984 Topps – 49 Hall of Famers

Gone (-2):  Earl Weaver had retired after the 1982 season, with no new Hall of Fame blood in this set.  Jim Kaat retired after 1983, so he could have had a card in this set but Topps didn’t include him.

Bench, Perry and Yastrzemski were only included in a subset card.

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1985 Topps – 45 Hall of Famers

Gone (-6):  Robinson was gone after his stint as the Giants manager was over, while Bench, Yaz, Perry, Palmer and Jenkins had also had their last player cards.

New (+2):  Kirby Puckett’s rookie card is in this set, and Yogi Berra had a card for his second (and controversial) stint as Yankee manager (+2).  When I started this blog, Puckett was the most recent rookie card of any Hall of Famer!

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1986 Topps – 45 Hall of Famers

Gone (-3):  Torre was fired as Braves manager in 1984 and wasn’t gone until this set.  Berra was fired as well, and Joe Morgan retired.

New (+3):  Earl Weaver was back as the O’s manager, and we had a Turn Back the Clock subset that got Willie Mays and Frank Robinson into the mix.

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1987 Topps – 44 Hall of Famers

Gone (-6):  Cox was no longer the Blue Jay skipper at this point, and Carew, Fingers and Tony Perez all retired. Robinson and Mays were gone from the TBC subset….

New (+5):  But Clemente and Yastrzemski replaced them.  Barry Larkin had his first card in this set, and Yogi Berra had the awesome TL card as coach of the Astros!  And Jim Leyland got his first Topps card as the new Pirates skipper.

  • The induction of Leyland increased this number by 1

1988 Topps – 43 Hall of Famers

Gone (-7):  Mr. October, Lefty and Tom Terrific and Earl Weaver all retired at this point.  Clemente, Yaz and Berra were gone from subsets .  

New (+)6:  Maddux, Glavine and McGriff had their first base Topps cards, and the subsets were a wash due to 3 new Cardinals – Bob Gibson and Stan Musial from the TBC subset, and Red Schoendienst being featured on the Cards Team Leader card.  

Phil Niekro made it only on the Record Breaker subset with his brother in this set.

  • The induction of Leyland increased this number by 1

1989 Topps – 45 Hall of Famers

Gone (-7):  Sutton, Simmons, Niekro (RB), Williams (mgr), Schoendienst (TL), Musial (TBC), Gibson (TBC)

New (+9):  Roberto Alomar RC, Randy Johnson RC, Craig Biggio RC, John Smoltz RC, Hank Aaron (TBC), Brock (TBC), Gil Hodges (TBC), Tony Oliva (TBC) Frank Robinson (back as a manager)

  • The induction of Leyland increased this number by 1

1990 Topps – 45 Hall of Famers

Gone (-6):  2 relievers exited the set – Bruce Sutter and Goose Gossage (who would be back), and 4 guys from the TBC set.

New (+6)  Frank Thomas and Larry Walker had RC’s in the set, while Griffey Jr. and Edgar Martinez had their first regular Topps cards. Koufax and Bench were added to the TBC subset (Mike Schmidt had his only card in the TBC subset this year, but he had cards leading up to 1990 so this isn’t a change).

  • The induction of Leyland increased this number by 1

1991 Topps – 43 Hall of Famers

Gone (-5):  Rice (retired), Herzog (retired), Schmidt, Bench, Koufax (the TBC set had ended its 5-year run)

New (+3):  Torre and Cox, both of whom got back in the managing saddle.  Chipper Jones had his first card via the 1st Round Draft Pick subset.

  • The induction of Leyland increased this number by 1

1992 Topps – 47 Hall of Famers

Gone (-1):  Robinson (fired as Oriole manager)

New (+5):  Gossage (back after a stint in Japan).  Pudge and Bagwell are in this set – true rookies were in the Traded set from 1991, but for both these guys this is their first base Topps card.  Thome and Mussina are also in this set – they had cards in other products (not Topps Traded) in previous years, so this isn’t their rookie card.

  • The induction of Leyland increased this number by 1

1993 Topps – 51 Hall of Famers

Gone (-1):  Gossage (retired for good this time)

New (+5):  Tony Perez (Reds manager), Pedro Martinez (first Topps card), Mike Piazza (first Topps card – Prospects card), Trevor Hoffman (first Topps card – Marlins card), Derek Jeter (RC)

  • The induction of Leyland increased this number by 1

1994 Topps – 41 Hall of Famers (a mass exodus!)

Gone (-11):  Topps did away with manager cards in 1994, which meant no cards for Torre, LaRussa, Cox, Sparky, Perez, LaSorda and Leyland.  Additionally, Blyleven, Carter and Fisk all retired. Jack Morris didn’t have a card despite pitching in both 1993 and 1994.  He did have a card in 1994 Topps Traded, and some cards in a few 1995 sets.

New (+1):  Hank Aaron (tribute)

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1995 Topps – 36 Hall of Famers (further depleted!)

Gone (-6):  Brett, Ryan and Yount (all retired for good).  Sandberg (retired temporarily).  Dawson (left out of the set, though he is in ’95 Traded).  Aaron (tribute).

New (+1):  Babe Ruth (tribute)

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1996 Topps – 39 Hall of Famers (an actual increase!)

Gone (-3):  Winfield (retired), Trammell (not included despite playing both 1995 and 1996), Ruth (tribute)

New (+6):  Mickey Mantle (tribute), Dawson (back after ’95 snub), Sandberg (back in baseball after a year-plus hiatus), Vladimir Guerrero & Scott Rolen (via the prospect subset), Todd Helton (via the Draft Picks subset)

  • The induction of Helton increased this number by 1

1997 Topps – 35 Hall of Famers

Gone (-6):  Dawson, Puckett, Ozzie Smith (retired), Mantle (tribute), Lee Smith, Helton (in the Minors). Topps didn’t include Lee Smith in the flagship set after 1996 despite him pitching for 2 teams in 1996 and pitching in 25 games in 1997.

New (+2):  Jackie Robinson (tribute), Mariano Rivera (first Topps card)

  • No adds from the 2024 class

1998 Topps – 35 Hall of Famers

Gone (-5):  Murray, Sandberg (retired), Robinson (tribute), Henderson (snubbed – he even has an insert card in the product), Raines (also snubbed).

New (+5):  Roberto Clemente (tribute), Roy Halladay, David Ortiz, Adrian Beltre (all first Topps cards via the prospects set), Helton (back with a regular card).

  • The induction of Helton & Beltre increased this number by 2

1999 Topps – 33 Hall of Famers

Gone (-4):  Molitor, Eckersley (retired), Clemente (tribute), Baines (snubbed)

New (+2):  Nolan Ryan (tribute), Henderson (back after snub)

  • The induction of Helton & Beltre increased this number by 2

2000 Topps – 34 Hall of Famers

Gone (-2):  Nolan Ryan (tribute), David Ortiz (missing as he played mostly in the minors in 1999)

New (+3):  Hank Aaron (tribute), Raines & Baines (back with regular cards!)

  • The induction of Helton & Beltre increased this number by 2

2001 Topps – 43 Hall of Famers

Gone (-2):  Wade Boggs (retired), Tim Raines (temporarily retired – but this was his last base Topps card)

New (+11):  Ortiz was back for good in 2001.  The manager subset was back, which meant new cards for Torre, Cox and LaRussa.  There was also a Golden Moments subset, which had new cards of Bill Mazeroski, Reggie Jackson, Jackie Robinson, Roberto Clemente, Nolan Ryan, Lou Brock and Carlton Fisk.

Hank Aaron’s Tribute card was gone in 2001, but he was still in the Golden Moments subset.

  • The induction of Helton & Beltre increased this number by 2

2002 Topps – 34 Hall of Famers

Gone (-11):  Cal Ripken & Harold Baines retired, and the Golden Moments subset was gone, which meant those cards of Mazeroski, Jackson, Robinson, Clemente, Ryan, Brock, Fisk and Aaron were gone.  Roy Halladay does not have any 2002 Topps cards except for Topps 206 – so there must have been some sort of contract dispute over his likeness that was resolved in time for 2003.

New (+2):  Tony Perez managed the Marlins at the end of 2002, and got a manager card in this set for it.  Joe Mauer was included as a 2002 Draft Picks card – he was clearly a late addition as he’s the only Draft Pick subset that’s included in the numbering of the regular cards outside of the consecutive Draft Picks subsets.

  • The induction of Helton, Beltre & Mauer increased this number by 3

2003 Topps – 34 Hall of Famers

Gone (-2):  Tony Gwynn had retired in 2001, but still got a 2002 card.  He was gone from the set in 2003.  Perez was no longer a manager, so his card was gone as well.

New (+2):  Frank Robinson became the Expos manager in 2002, and got a card in this set.  Halladay was back in good graces with the card folks in Philly in 2003.

  • The induction of Helton, Beltre & Mauer increased this number by 3

2004 Topps – 34 Hall of Famers

Gone (-1):  Rickey Henderson retired.

New (+1):  Mike Schmidt was included in a subset card along with Jim Thome.

  • The induction of Helton, Beltre & Mauer increased this number by 3.

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