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TACO BELL BASEBALL CARDS 2023

Taco Bell to Release Baseball Card Promotion for 2023 Season

Fast food giant Taco Bell is no stranger to unconventional promotions and marketing stunts designed to capture consumers’ attention. This year, they are taking collectors by storm with the announcement of their 2023 baseball card promotion.

After the success of their NBA Top Shot-inspired NFT series earlier this year, Taco Bell’s marketing team was brainstorming new ideas to engage sports fans during the baseball season. Someone had the idea of doing traditional physical baseball cards that could be collected, traded, and shown off like those from decades past. They wanted to put a unique Taco Bell twist on the concept.

The plan is for Taco Bell to produce a full 350-card series spanning all 30 Major League Baseball teams for the upcoming 2023 season. There will be base cards featuring current stars and prospects, as well as parallel and insert sets with various themes. Each pack will contain 5 randomly assorted cards and retail for $1.99 each.

To drive rapid distribution, packs will be available exclusively at all US Taco Bell locations starting on Opening Day – March 30, 2023. The promotion is slated to run through the end of the regular season in early October. Taco Bell estimates producing over 100 million total packs to satisfy demand.

While the standard card designs will focus on stats, photos, and accomplishments, Taco Bell is promising some truly unique inserts that baseball collectors have never seen before. A few examples that have been previewed include:

Taco Sliders – Featuring side-by-side photos of players next to their Taco Bell order. Some examples shown were Shohei Ohtani next to a Crunchwrap Supreme and Mookie Betts pictured with a Beefy 5-Layer Burrito.

Steal Your Face – Modeled after Topps’ iconic Star Wars steal shot parallels, these will depict players literally stealing Taco Bell mascots or menu items like a seventh inning steak.

Nacho Average Joe – Highlighting lesser known players with potential to break out, in a style riffing on Topps’ Base Rookies.

Crave Creation – Allowing fans to design their own imaginary Taco Bell food item and pairing it with a player predicted to have a big season. Submissions with the best combos may end up as 1-of-1 parallel cards.

In addition to the standard team distribution through packs, Taco Bell will sell curated “box breaks” on their website starting at $19.99 each. These contain a random assortment of 30 cards but guarantee at least one super rare parallel or hit card inserted.

To add another layer of excitement for collectors, Taco Bell is making the full checklist and statistics on the back of each card digital-only. By scanning a QR code with the Taco Bell mobile app, fans can access bios, game logs, sabermetrics, and more extensive career data. This dynamic element allows for updates throughout the season.

While some purists may scoff at a corporate tie-in card series, early feedback from the hobby community has been overwhelmingly positive. Many see Taco Bell embracing the spirit of oddball vintage promotions like In The Mood For Food baseballs from the 1960s. Their commitment to unique parallels and 1-of-1 cards gives collectors a real incentive to rip packs.

Industry observers predict the Taco Bell MLB card promotion could be the biggest in terms of overall units produced and distribution of any in history. Some have even speculated it may help grow baseball card collecting among younger demographics not normally associated with the hobby. Only time will tell, but it’s clear the brand understands how to leverage sports passion points to drive engagement like no other. Come Opening Day, be ready for Taco Bell and baseball cards to be everywhere once again.

TACO BELL BASEBALL CARDS

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Taco Bell made several attempts to get into the baseball card business as a way to promote the brand and drive restaurant traffic. While their initiatives never amounted to a longstanding baseball card series, they demonstrated Taco Bell’s creativity in brand partnerships and generating excitement for customers.

Taco Bell’s first foray into baseball cards came in 1988 with the “Original Taco Maker” program. As part of a nationwide television and store marketing campaign, Taco Bell distributed 330 million free baseball cards along with kids’ meals in restaurant locations across the United States. The cards featured illustrations of MLB stars like Barry Bonds, Cal Ripken Jr., and Ozzie Smith posed in humorous scenarios related to tacos and other Mexican cuisine.

Some cards depicted players grilling up fajitas in the backyard or chomping down chalupas at the plate. The promotion was a major success, generating enthusiasm among baseball and fast food fans alike. However, Taco Bell made no plans for an ongoing baseball card series at the time. The Original Taco Maker cards served their purpose of publicizing the chain’s new branding and menu items but were not designed for collecting.

In 1992, Taco Bell took their baseball card ambitions to a new level with the Taco Bell All-Star Baseball Card Set. Produced in partnership with the Topps Company, this higher-quality 78-card set featured MLB stars of the day in traditional studio photography with stats and biographies on the back. A hologram sticker on each pack front advertised the Taco Bell branding.

Fans could find the cards in specially marked packages of Taco Bell products like tacos, burritos, chalupas, soft tacos, and more. The rare “Home Run” cards could be redeemed for food prizes by mailing to Taco Bell. Beyond driving restaurant sales, the promotion aimed to compete more directly with established sportscard brands by cultivating an avid collector base.

Distribution was initially limited to the U.S. Southwest due to production delays, frustrating demand elsewhere. But fans responded enthusiastically to the sharp photography and creative card designs within the product’s region. The cards showcased players’ accomplishments through colorful graphics and highlighted Taco Bell’s baseball fandom. While too little too late for a full nationwide rollout, the mostly regional 1992 set proved Taco Bell could produce quality sports merchandise.

The brand took another stab at cards in 1995 with a shortened promotional run of the “Taco Bell Home Team Baseball” series focused on five MLB clubs – the California Angels, Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati Reds, Houston Astros, and San Diego Padres. Produced by Pacific Trading Cards, this 50-card set presented basic stats and mugshot photos of each team’s roster.

Distribution beyond point-of-purchase at select restaurants and concession stands was limited. The Home Team cards lacked the fanfare, rarity incentives, and broad availability of the original 1992 Topps deal, diminishing their collecting potential. By this point, fickle sports fans had moved on from the novelty of Taco Bell branded baseball merchandise.

Since discontinuing its baseball card lines in the mid-1990s, Taco Bell has largely stayed out of the collectibles industry. Periodic promotions have incorporated MLB sponsors, uniforms, or stadium experiences but nothing directly showcasing players through cards. Some speculate licensing deals for ongoing annual series were too costly.

The brand has instead focused promotional energy on digital coupons, social media sweepstakes, and experiential retail partnerships. Among vintage collectors, the quirky 1980s and early 90s Taco Bell issues retain novelty value for integrating two distinctly American pastimes of baseball and fast food.

While short-lived, Taco Bell’s forays into the baseball card market pushed boundaries for non-sports companies venturing into the traditionally licensed sportscard domain. Their creative designs, fanfare launches, and extensive distribution evidenced the brand’s passion for elevating the restaurant experience beyond tacos alone. For a time, Taco Bell launched MLB collectors down new product avenues while fulfilling its mission of customer engagement. Even decades later, that spirit of creativity lives on in the chain’s promotions.