Topps’ Ultra Premium offering, Tier One Baseball, returns
this year with the same configuration as last year. Not everyone gets the
chance to open one of these types of boxes so we gave you the opportunity last
year to open our box of Tier One... virtually. If you didn’t get a chance to do this virtual box break, use this link to get to it before you continue this review.
If you look at our post “How we review and classify cards,”
by definition, collectors who go for an Ultra Premium box of cards should
understand “these are "High Risk, High Reward" cards” and “not every
box will be a winner.” After
viewing a healthy amount of case breaks, the biggest hits of Tier One seem to
be falling about 1 every 6 boxes, with one large case hit per 12 boxes, a nice
ratio for ultra premium cards.
Bat knobs and cut signatures once again will rule the day
from a secondary market perspective, some pulling in mid four figures. Some of
the other cards can be picked up in the after market for a few dollars and that
is how the ‘high risk, high reward’ equation comes into play. So when you bust, you can bust big, at
least from a monetary value standpoint.
Still, this is well within reason for an Ultra Premium product. What
seems to be on the rise this year are redemptions which limits the shelf life
of this year’s Tier One to mid 2016.
But all in all, this is a great quick hit of a product, allowing those
normally out of the price range of an Ultra Premium product to get in and those
with deeper pockets to bust cases to spread the risk.
Each box of Tier One Baseball contains 3 cards, two
autographs and one relic card.
Every fourth box contains an extra relic hit for a total of 4 cards.
Here are the cards we found in our box.