Saturday, July 16, 2016

Sacramento Kings Make the Past New Again

Essentially claiming Sacramento as my "home" town means I get to suffer through each bizarre Kings personnel decision after another until they drive their talented (and mercurial) big man away.

But until then, they have updated their logo, and that gives us something to talk about that isn't Mad Vivek and his Love of the Big-Man.

Personally, I think this was a safe move. They chose the '80s shape with the later color scheme, mostly:


I like it. I do like the blue and red better, but that's me. You get the crown, you get the basketball, you get the legacy, as this was ultimately inspired by the old Rochester Royals logo from the '50s...


Well, that may be a stretch to make that claim. The shape is ultimately there, but it wasn't until Cincinnati that the old Kings logo I grew up with in Sac came about:


Then they moved to KC and became the Kings, seeing as how there already was a Royals team. But they spent their first two years split between KC and Omaha.

Can you imagine an NBA franchise in today's world split between two cities nearly two hundred miles apart?


Anyway, here's a cool alternate for next season:


DC Comics Updates Logo with Rebirth Launch

DC Comics has commenced a company-wide relaunch called Rebirth. The company claims to be returning to their roots with many of the characters that they changed in the last few company-wide shakeups over the last five to ten years, and fans seem happy? Maybe? I'm not exactly sure how fans feel.

I know that the DCU Rebirth issue kicking off the event sold very well and was generally well received. It has gone into multiple printings.

Anyway, the company updated their logo again, and here the fans seem underwhelmed. I think it will grow on fans until they grow to really like it, at which point, in four or five years, DC will change it again. Fans had just grown to like the "flipped-page" logo. Go figure.

Sometimes changes are necessary, sometimes they're forced.

Here's a graphic of the many DC Comics logos over the years. The one labeled 1976 is the one with which I have the most collecting experience:


Monday, February 15, 2016

Rams Return to the Southland; Fans Debate Which Old School Color Scheme is Best

LA has a team again. My mother's team has returned. We're all just waiting for the official name to become "Los Angeles Rams of Inglewood." The home of Jules Winfield...

Anyway, the official logo has been circulating, and it's the same navy/gold look they used while in St. Loo, only it says Los Angeles. That makes a certain financial sense. They play for a season in the Coliseum wearing the (bad) navy and gold kits, sell a ton of merch, then make the switch and start selling more.

The question around these parts, as the Southland is still where the Caliboy Network is located, is which of the two main old school looks the Rams should focus on. The first:


The classic white and blue, similar in design to the Colts (against whom they're playing in this photo). I like it. I certainly like it more than their current navy and gold.

I just don't like it as much as the classic yellow and blue:


Now we're talking.

I've heard rumblings that the pattern will be: 1) Sell as much navy/gold gear as possible; 2) move to Inglewood, change back to blue/yellow; 3) use the blue/white as alternates and try and sell as much of that gear as possible.

The common thread between those scenarios seems to be...

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Pleasing Vintage NHL Logos

This is somewhat of a subjective list of logos, but so is most everything else on this site.

I find myself occasionally perusing Chris Creamer's Sportslogos.net site for older logos that are pleasing. This gives me a creating boost in an odd, tangential way: I like watching a logo's progression from utilitarian to pleasing to garish and (hopefully) back to pleasing. It helps me conceptualize timing in a manifested and branded way.

Examples of this idea (mentioned without logos) from baseball and basketball, respectively, could be the Blue Jays and Warriors.

Anyway, the following logos are the middle ones, the ones I find quite nice, in no particular order. Let's reminisce:


This is the original negative-space-using Hartford Whalers logo. Whaling as an industry was important for the growth of many a maritime nation, but today has become a lawless and gruesome practice, with many whaling vessels being attacked by vigilantes funded by the late Sam Simon.

For those reasons I appreciate the use of this logo to make fun of the Piper Maru, a notorious Japanese Cetacean Research Institute vessel (the CRI is a mostly state sanctioned whaling operation).

Anyway, this logo is quite fetching. I always found it interesting that this franchise represented the only major league team in any of the four major North American sports that resided in Connecticut. The team has since moved to Raleigh, North Carolina, a city of roughly the same metropolitan area population size, and taken the name Carolina Hurricanes.


Now in Dallas and called simply the Stars, this Minnesota North Stars logo has yet to be updated for the '90s. It retains the simple charm that many logos from that era had before the '90s came along and italicized and metallicized nearly all known logos.

Like the Whalers before, the 90s version of the North Stars (pre-move) was metallicized and italicized.


This team never got the metallic or italic makeover. This is a slightly updated version of the Quebec Nordiques logo. I'm not sure why the igloo-and-hockey-stick logo speaks to me as strongly as it does. Like the two teams before, the Nordiques moved from the riverside Quebec City (and the furthest north major league franchise on the continent) to Denver and became the Avalanche.


I always liked this logo. I don't know why. Oddly enough based on the previous three logos, Edmonton still has their team and beyond tweaking the colors, hasn't changed the logo since the team's inception in the WHA during the 70s. They've even changed the name (from "Alberta Oilers" to "Edmonton Oilers") while leaving this logo intact. Maybe I'm not the only one it speaks to...

This is that rare find: the vintage logo that is still in active duty.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Has It Been That Long?

When I was a kid we moved from California's Bay Area to Sacramento, a few months before the Kings made the move from KC to Sacramento. Essentially, we both made it to Sac at the same time. I've since left, but my brothers still live there, and I enjoy my visits.

I also still occasionally root for them. I mean, of course I root for the Kings, but they have given precious little to root for since the refs helped the Lakers back in the 2002 playoffs. As of now, June of 2015, it's easier to root for the Warriors as the de-facto Northern California basketball team.

Anyway, I came across the anniversary patch the Kings wore this season, fondly remembered the script work markings, and then found some of the other anniversary patches.

The first:


From the mid 2000s, after the sputtering of a possible dynasty, after Peja and C-Webb, Bibby and Vlade, the 20th anniversary logo had the current purple and black logo mixed with red and blue from the original Sac color scheme. Not great, not awful. Like the Kings...

The next one, the quarter-century mark, sees a nice doctored up skyline of our capitol city, with both the dome and the I-Street bridge:


And then the last one, the one that started me down a short rabbit hole. I'm not sure why, but I prefer this script lettering to the block one they use as a primary, and while I prefer blue and red to black and purple, that's mostly because I'm biased towards blue:


I would certainly rock this Boogie shirt:


It has the script while also using the black and purple. See? Not so bad...

Here's to hoping Vivek figures his shit out and becomes the owner we know he wants to be.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Mariners Take Cue from Own Past

I do like what the Mariners have done with an alternate home kit this season. Here is their normal home uniforms:


And here are the alternates about which I speak:


They've taken their current design but tweaked the color scheme to coincide with the beautiful gold-and-blue color scheme that was popularized with Ken Griffey's debut:


I'm an admitted sucker for blues and golds, and for the Pacific Northwest in general. I do think these alternates work. I also like their short-season Single-A affiliate Everett Aquasox homage to the Red-Sox for an alternate logo as well:

Everett is getting away with some stuff here, like the Mariners 80's Trident "M" as the "E":


And the entire bufotenin toad connection...love the twacked out eyes...

Monday, April 28, 2014

Basketball Circles and Landmarks

It has been nearly a year since I've been back to this blog...

In any case, today I'm highlighting two circular alternates from two separate NBA franchises. The criteria: Unbroken circle; no letters; identifiable landmark.

The circles:



Bay Bridge and Washington Monument; the connection between Oakland and San Francisco and the main obelisk in DC...

I like these two unbroken circular logos...

Isn't that Washington alternate worlds better than their name? What do I know, they've got a helluva team at the moment. Good for them...

The Dubs I'm a fan of for sure...