The second you open the pack you become the customer. It is better to work for the lottery than to pay into the lottery. Getting hits in packs is gambling.
If I'm not mistaken, Robert Parish's RC was 1977-1978. He was with the Golden State Warriors. The 81-82 set was a good bit more "traditional" than the 81-81 set. The only thing out of the ordinary that I can think of in the 81-82 set is that it had East and West packs. Looks like your are East packs from what you pulled.
Packs were made, This year was issued by region,East,Mid West,West,you had cards from more than one region in the same pack, that isnt possible they were not issued that way.
@@robgrogg2546 the cards that are regional have it marked with the card number.cards 1-66 are national and have no east,mid west or west with the number,regional cards are 67-110 for each region. so there are 3 variations ie 67 east 67 mid west 67 west.
What is the biggest red flag for a 're pack'...I have bought packs that was 40 years old and could have swore under closer inspection after i got them home that they were re packed because of how the wax wrapper was stuck on itself on the backs,but then i would open them and pull a nice rookie or 2nd year card. 🤷♂️
@@robgrogg2546 Yes i see what you mean. I'm a big hockey fan,and i opened a pack of 1980 Topps NHL cards. I was hoping to get a RAY BOURQUE rookie. Long story short,i had suspected the pack was re-heated and re packaged because i could see a thumb print on the back of the pack after i opened it...anyway i got down to the very last card in the pack (which was the card that touched the bubble gum) and it turned out to be a RAY BOURQUE rookie. It also had no gum mark on the back of the card at all. I'm not sure what this story proves or disproves,but just wanted to share my experience from that particular time. I would think if it was re packaged,no way would they include a star rookie from a hall of famer in it. 🤷♂️
@@dwade6322 I think one of the biggest hints is the glue. Wax packs that old should be barely held together, instead of the glue still being so strong that you have to literally rip it.