The Other Side of Cards: Behind the Scenes with Panini America’s Editorial Department

Three hundred characters, including spaces. That’s not a lot of room to sum up the entire career – much less even one meaningful highlight from the career -- of a professional athlete. In fact, by the time you get to the good part, you’re out of room. So how does the Panini America editorial team do it?

Three hundred characters, including spaces. That’s not a lot of room to sum up the entire career – much less even one meaningful highlight from the career — of a professional athlete. In fact, by the time you get to the good part, you’re out of room. So how does the Panini America editorial team do it?

For the record, the above passage includes 304 characters with spaces. So I failed, by four measly characters, my assignment this morning – which makes what the Panini America Editorial Department does on a daily basis even more impressive. What follows is a unique perspective on the art – and it is an art – of writing cardback copy, compliments of the best copywriters in the industry.

By Jeff Sullivan

Our blogmeister extraordinaire, Tracy Hackler, asked for a post from the Editorial Department entitled “Cardbacks for Dummies,” which more or less explains what it is that we do. So, three of us jotted down a few words lacking wisdom for the reading audience:

The task seems simple enough. Write 300 characters with spaces, more or less two or three sentences, on Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver A.J. Green.

Now try doing so 67 times. Yes, 67. That’s how many blocks of copy we’ve written for the No. 4 overall pick this past March. That doesn’t include combo, trio and quad cards, either. Those are always fun. Write about four players using that same character count. Find yourself running out of real estate before the first verb.

Still, there are few jobs cooler than sitting around writing and talking about sports all day. It’s also a chance to educate, especially the younger collectors. Who among us didn’t learn the bulk of our baseball knowledge as kids from the backs of cards? Statistics, too. Sure, this was before the Internet, but hopefully the experience is the same for this generation of youth.

Here are a few of my favorite cards from our staff the last few years:

Bill SharmanThere was nothing soft about Sharman. He is one of three men enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame as a player (1976) and a coach (2004), with Lenny Wilkens and John Wooden. A four-time champion with the Celtics as a player, he led the NBA in free-throw shooting seven times, including five straight years.

Blake GriffinTreating rims around the league like his personal jungle gyms, Griffin hung, swung and flung his way to NBA Rookie of the Year honors in 2010-11. While Orlando’s Dwight Howard (227) edged the Clippers phenom (214) for most regular-season jams, the rookie was crowned top dog at the Slam Dunk Contest.

Michael VickJack be nimble, Jack be quick, but Jack’s not quicker than Michael Vick. In 2006, Vick rushed for 1,039 yards, a single-season NFL record for quarterbacks. And in 2010, he joined Kordell Stewart (1997) as the only quarterbacks ever to throw for more than 20 touchdowns and rush for at least nine scores in the same season.

———————————————————————————————————————-

By Dave Ivey

Writing is by far the best part of the job. Proofreading is probably the worst. Editing falls somewhere in between. Combing through the copy on hundreds of card backs at a time, checking for accuracy, spelling, grammar, punctuation, style or any other mistakes that might get us fired is challenging work. It can also be mind-numbing. To relieve some of the boredom of editing, we keep track of the “helpful” suggestions made by Spellcheck for names it doesn’t recognize.

With our sincerest apologies, the leader in the clubhouse for the funniest suggestion thus far goes to former NBA star Wally Szczerbiak (suggested: scumbag). Joining him on the editorial department’s Mount Rushmore are Capitals left winger Alex Ovechkin (overcharging), Mavericks forward Dirk Nowitzki (howitzer) and the late comedian/actor Dom DeLuise (delouse).

Honorable mentions from the NBA include Andrea Bargnani (bargain), Manu Ginobili (ignoble), Shaquille (shackle) O’Neal, Mitch Kupchak (cupcake), Rony Seikaly (sickly), Dikembe Mutombo (tomboy), Dave DeBusschere (debauchery), Anfernee (inferno) Hardaway and Danny Ainge (singe).

Favorites from the NHL include Commissioner Gary Bettman (Batman), Patric Hornqvist (horniest), Milan Hejduk (hijack), Miikka Kiprusoff (kissoff), Tomas Holmstrom (hailstorm), Alexander Vasyunov (Casanova) and Mark Schiefele (scuffle). The NFL gives us Tony Romo (Romeo), Anquan Boldin (balding), Mike Holmgren (homegrown), Wayne Chrebet (sherbet), Jordan Shipley (shapely), Lane Kiffin (coffin) and Chuck Bednarik (beatnik).

This list wouldn’t be complete without former NHL defenseman Teppo Numminen, whose Finnish name prompted two perfect suggestions from Spellcheck: typo nominee.

———————————————————————————————————————-

By Bryan Petray

One of the most challenging parts of writing card backs for Panini America is staying positive. Coming into the industry with a newspaper journalism background and a minor in political science in college, being critical has always been part of my writing voice.

Even if a player has struggled an entire season, it’s important to remember as a writer that this player still has leagues of fans out there. When they see their player’s card, turn it over and read the copy on the back, they don’t want to be reminded of that player’s bad games. The good news is, there’s always something positive to write about. Sometimes it takes more than a little extra effort to find it, but it’s there. Our job is to find it and turn it into a mini work of sports literary art.

One of the best examples, just from today, is Philip Rivers. Today I wrote his 2011 National Treasures Football common card. Rivers has a huge fan base. He’s a classy player and a great competitor. Last year he was an easy write.

Here’s a quarterback who was missing his top two targets in 2009 for most of the season — Vincent Jackson was in a holdout (we can’t write about that either) and Antonio Gates was out most of the season with an injury. Rivers was still a stud. He had a ton of great performances, overcame obstacles and was still prolific (the Chargers had seven different receivers with 100-yard games: Antonio Gates, Vincent Jackson, Patrick Crayton, Seyi Ajirontutu, Legedu Naanee and Malcom Floyd). He was an MVP candidate in my book. I must have written a dozen of his cards and they were all seemingly effortless.

So let’s fast forward to Week 11 of 2011.  Wow. Different story.

Here’s my thought process: We want to be as recent as possible, so let’s look over his 2011 game log.

The Chargers started 4-1, and Rivers was good, but not great. Six touchdowns and seven interceptions in five games. Consider heading into 2011 that Rivers was among the all-time leaders in quarterback rating. So let’s move along to after the 4-1 start. The Chargers lost six straight and Rivers throws 10 touchdowns and 10 interceptions. Ouch. Not many positives in there – especially on the level of Rivers.

The challenge at hand is: How do I write a positive card about a struggling superstar in the middle of a six-game losing streak who has already caught enough negative press from his hometown media?

I chose to go with his Week 9 game against the Packers. Sure he threw three interceptions, which had a big impact on the outcome of the game. But he did throw for 385 yards and four touchdowns against the world champions. It’s not his best work, but it’s what we have.

I felt relatively good about my selection, but it just goes to show it’s not always easy. Also keep in mind, we’ll be writing a lot more in the coming weeks, so here’s one writer that’s rooting for Rivers to turn it around.

Share

13 Replies to “The Other Side of Cards: Behind the Scenes with Panini America’s Editorial Department”

  1. What a fantastic article! My entire Tim Hudson collection started by reading the back of one of his second year cards so this is truly special to me! Thanks for putting this together Tracy!

  2. Wow. I have always wanted to know how you guys came up with card backs. All of these jobs sound awesome. Any career in trading cards rocks. You can only get these kind of behind the scenes right here at Panini America. Right here on the Knights Lance. Thanks everyone at panini.

  3. Great article. Thanks for posting.

    I too would like to see (and hear) from some of the designers.

    From concept to completion, the entire process is one that I am extremely interested in.

    Thanks again!

  4. Great article! I write card backs for one of the non-sports companies (Dexter, The Tudors) and it’s always tough to narrow down an episode into a card or two. Nice to see how much thought goes into these! Didn’t Marty Turco write some backs for someone a few years ago?

Leave a Reply to Ryan Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *