06-29-2016, 06:24 AM
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Daryl
Member
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 3,315
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Quote:
Originally Posted by the 'stache
Just curious as to why?
That base Trout Chrome card I posted-there are less than 2,000 of them in existence-1,695 if Topps has stayed consistent with the number of base chrome autos that were issued in 2004 (and it should be consistent; all the other numbers remain constant but blue, which has increased from /150 to /250). The refractor auto has a printing of /500. The blue refractor auto is limited to /250. The gold is /50, the orange is /25, the red is /5, and there's a /1 superfractor out there. That means, in total, there are about 2,526 autographed true Mike Trout rookie cards with his certified auto.
For how popular he is, that's a pretty short print run for all of baseball fans and collectors to fight over.
The non-autographed cards don't typically command anywhere near that kind of a price. For instance, this Bryce Harper is considered one of his most desirable non-auto releases. A Beckett 9.5/10 goes for under $300, last I checked. An ungraded one goes for under $100, unless it's dead centered.
This one was selling for around $1,200 earlier this season with Harper's hot start. It's dropped back down to about $8-900, and this is an exceptionally high grade card with all 9.5 subs.
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If that's what you like to collect, more power to you, but listing print runs of modern inserts just proves that they are manufactured rarity.
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