Net54baseball.com Forums

Net54baseball.com Forums (http://www.net54baseball.com/index.php)
-   Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions (http://www.net54baseball.com/forumdisplay.php?f=2)
-   -   Will anyone be giving a blow-by-blow account from the National this year? (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=226385)

tedzan 08-14-2016 07:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by begsu1013 (Post 1571945)
usually easier to tell in hand as the stock is noticeably thinner,

but the go to indicator is the bolder black line that outlines pete's cap.


Bob Evans has the clue. The real Rose rookie does not have Rose's cap outlined. Both of these cards are counterfeits.

Therefore, my next question to any of you is......
If I were to submit this un-stamped "COUNTERFEIT" card to PSA or SGC (or etc.), will this card get a numerical grade ? ?


http://i1255.photobucket.com/albums/...rookies50x.jpg
http://i1255.photobucket.com/albums/...ookies50xb.jpg


TED Z
.

irv 08-14-2016 07:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tedzan (Post 1571984)
Bob Evans has the clue. The real Rose rookie does not have Rose's cap outlined. Both of these cards are counterfeits.

Therefore, my next question to any of you is......
If I were to submit this un-stamped "COUNTERFEIT" card to PSA or SGC (or etc.), will this card get a numerical grade ? ?


http://i1255.photobucket.com/albums/...rookies50x.jpg
http://i1255.photobucket.com/albums/...ookies50xb.jpg


TED Z
.

I still don't/can't see the difference. The print defect on the other card, as someone mentioned, was my guess as well. That "Bold black line" is near impossible to see if you didn't know what to look for, imo.

Curious, is that "bolder black line" the only thing that tells it apart from a real one, or are there other indicators as well?

ullmandds 08-14-2016 07:29 AM

thanks ted...and others...this is valuable info I did not know. the black line around petes head is pretty obvious when compared head to head...no other hints seem necessary.

Stonepony 08-14-2016 07:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irv (Post 1571991)
I still don't/can't see the difference. The print defect on the other card, as someone mentioned, was my guess as well. That "Bold black line" is near impossible to see if you didn't know what to look for, imo.

Curious, is that "bolder black line" the only thing that tells it apart from a real one, or are there other indicators as well?

BOTH cards shown are counterfeits. Compare caps against a real one.

irv 08-14-2016 07:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ullmandds (Post 1571994)
thanks ted...and others...this is valuable info I did not know. the black line around petes head is pretty obvious when compared head to head...no other hints seem necessary.

You either have better eyes than me or a better computer screen because I honestly can't see the differences? :confused:


Quote:

Originally Posted by Stonepony (Post 1571998)
BOTH cards shown are counterfeits. Compare caps against a real one.

Seriously? Now I am really confused!! :eek:

ullmandds 08-14-2016 07:54 AM

i think the real blow by blow was occurring in a suite at the trump plaza.

ullmandds 08-14-2016 07:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irv (Post 1572001)
You either have better eyes than me or a better computer screen because I honestly can't see the differences? :confused:




Seriously? Now I am really confused!! :eek:

Well I hope my eyes can see as I need them!!!!! google rose rookies and zoom in on the hat...it will become obvious.

Ted...being sly...was trying to trick us...and he certainly tricked me!!!

tedzan 08-14-2016 07:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irv (Post 1571991)
I still don't/can't see the difference. The print defect on the other card, as someone mentioned, was my guess as well. That "Bold black line" is near impossible to see if you didn't know what to look for, imo.

Curious, is that "bolder black line" the only thing that tells it apart from a real one, or are there other indicators as well?


Hi Dale

The outlined cap is a very subtle indicator. However, if you have an authentic Rose rookie to make an A - B comparison, it becomes obvious.

I sold my 1963 TOPPS set; therefore, I don't have a Rose rookie to display here. Perhaps some one on this forum will post their Rose rookie.


TED Z
.

bnorth 08-14-2016 02:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tedzan (Post 1571984)
Bob Evans has the clue. The real Rose rookie does not have Rose's cap outlined. Both of these cards are counterfeits.

Therefore, my next question to any of you is......
If I were to submit this un-stamped "COUNTERFEIT" card to PSA or SGC (or etc.), will this card get a numerical grade ? ?


http://i1255.photobucket.com/albums/...rookies50x.jpg
http://i1255.photobucket.com/albums/...ookies50xb.jpg


TED Z
.

From personal experience if the card is a decent counterfeit PSA will slab it. From that same personal experience SGC will not. I have never had a Rose counterfeit in hand so can't comment on it.

irv 08-14-2016 05:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ullmandds (Post 1572005)
Well I hope my eyes can see as I need them!!!!! google rose rookies and zoom in on the hat...it will become obvious.

Ted...being sly...was trying to trick us...and he certainly tricked me!!!

I will try and do that.

Thanks. :)

Quote:

Originally Posted by tedzan (Post 1572008)
Hi Dale

The outlined cap is a very subtle indicator. However, if you have an authentic Rose rookie to make an A - B comparison, it becomes obvious.

I sold my 1963 TOPPS set; therefore, I don't have a Rose rookie to display here. Perhaps some one on this forum will post their Rose rookie.


TED Z
.

Thanks for the info! :)

Quote:

Originally Posted by bnorth (Post 1572157)
From personal experience if the card is a decent counterfeit PSA will slab it. From that same personal experience SGC will not. I have never had a Rose counterfeit in hand so can't comment on it.

I'm not surprised to hear that actually. :(

Steve D 08-14-2016 07:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irv (Post 1571874)
All the way back in 82? I had no idea this has been going on for this long?
What was a Rose card worth back then? I can't see it being worth the effort but obviously I am wrong.



I agree with that, and if that is the only clue, that counterfeit is really good, especially if it's a 1982 copy?


I don't remember the value in 1982, but I know that in 1984, the Rose RC was a $400+ card.

Steve

tedzan 08-14-2016 08:41 PM

In the Spring of 1982, the 1963 TOPPS Rose rookie was real "hot". It was selling for about $150.

At the 1982 National in St Louis, I acquired 8 of them (Ex to Ex/Mt). Then sold all 8 of them at the Willow Grove Show for $250 apiece.

By the Summer of 1983, these cards were selling in the $300 - $400 range (for Ex/Mt to near Mint).


TED Z
.

GasHouseGang 08-15-2016 12:25 AM

I went to the St. Louis National in 1982. But I can't remember if it was at that show, or later that they had figured out some of the Rose rookies being sold were fake. I remember it was widely reported later in SCD and you could buy one of the bogus cards with the word FAKE stamped on the back. The fake had become "famous" enough that collectors wanted it.

FourStrikes 08-15-2016 01:40 AM

I may be wrong, but...
 
at the 1991 (?) Anaheim, CA NSSC I believe promoter / co-promoter Jack Petruzzelli (R.I.P.) was one of the first to call B.S. er... pull the metaphorical trigger on the Rose rookie card scam...

from my personal recollection, Jack was a good dude, as well as an Anaheim or Fullerton PD / criminal investigator ???

thanks, JP!.

DS

Rich Klein 08-15-2016 07:13 AM

Jack did the work on discovering and cleaning up the mess from the fake Rose RC's but it was in the 1980's. I think circa 1982 or 3

Rich

tedzan 08-15-2016 09:06 AM


Hey guys,

I purchased these two Rose rookie counterfeits at the St Louis National in 1982. These fakes were detected at a California Show earlier that year.
The local police were contacted, they stamped the backs of them (as the card on the right); and, confiscated a lot of them. However, a number of
the fakes were already in circulation (as the un-stamped card on the left).

First, I acquired these 2 counterfeit fakes at the 1982 National so I could distinguish them from the real ones. Then I acquired 8 real Rose rookies
at the 1982 National.


TED Z
.

GasHouseGang 08-15-2016 09:55 AM

OK, that goes along with what thought I remembered, of seeing them at the 1982 National already stamped. Sometimes it's hard to remember what you've forgotten!

slipk1068 08-15-2016 05:54 PM

2 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by tedzan (Post 1572008)
I sold my 1963 TOPPS set; therefore, I don't have a Rose rookie to display here. Perhaps some one on this forum will post their Rose rookie.


TED Z
.

...

irv 08-15-2016 06:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irv (Post 1572001)
You either have better eyes than me or a better computer screen because I honestly can't see the differences? :confused:




Seriously? Now I am really confused!! :eek:

Quote:

Originally Posted by tedzan (Post 1572403)
Hey guys,

I purchased these two Rose rookie counterfeits at the St Louis National in 1982. These fakes were detected at a California Show earlier that year.
The local police were contacted, they stamped the backs of them (as the card on the right); and, confiscated a lot of them. However, a number of
the fakes were already in circulation (as the un-stamped card on the left).

First, I acquired these 2 counterfeit fakes at the 1982 National so I could distinguish them from the real ones. Then I acquired 8 real Rose rookies
at the 1982 National.


TED Z
.

Uh! So my eyes weren't playing tricks on me! :D

Griffins 08-15-2016 07:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irv (Post 1571874)
All the way back in 82? I had no idea this has been going on for this long?
What was a Rose card worth back then? I can't see it being worth the effort but obviously I am wrong.



I agree with that, and if that is the only clue, that counterfeit is really good, especially if it's a 1982 copy?

At the Anaheim show in '75 (precursor to the National) there was a huge scandal with a group of '59 Fleer #68's that came in that were fake. They looked pretty good and got by many but Irv Lerner wasn't fooled and blew the whistle. The promoters told the seller he wasn't allowed to sell them and I think he ended up walking out. Ended up making front page in SCD. I remember at the time the old time dealers thought that the hobby had too much money in it when a card was faked, and lamented how bad things were getting.

irv 08-15-2016 07:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griffins (Post 1572636)
At the Anaheim show in '75 (precursor to the National) there was a huge scandal with a group of '59 Fleer #68's that came in that were fake. They looked pretty good and got by many but Irv Lerner wasn't fooled and blew the whistle. The promoters told the seller he wasn't allowed to sell them and I think he ended up walking out. Ended up making front page in SCD. I remember at the time the old time dealers thought that the hobby had too much money in it when a card was faked, and lamented how bad things were getting.

Thanks for sharing that information.

I really didn't think, based on the tech that was available back then, that people would be making counterfeit cards in order to make money.

I was surprised, however, to hear what some of the Rose RC's were worth even way back then, so I can understand it, now, why it goes way back like it does.

begsu1013 08-15-2016 07:36 PM

.

MW1 08-15-2016 08:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 1571698)
Tony, I would be more than happy to scan if I knew how to. My PC skills are still sorely lacking. But wait... the fact that you and several knowledgeable people have never seen a counterfeit one before gives me faint hope that SGC got it wrong and mine just might be ok. Perhaps PSA or BVG might express a favorable verdict. Or I might just tuck it into my Cobb collection, believe it to be real and say to hell with the grading cos. Just before I submitted the card to SGC, I was sitting behind the cases with a bunch of fellow old geezers swapping baseball card lies at the LOTG table. One of the gentlemen there, probably a Net54 guy whose name I never got, apparently an expert on early baseball PC's, took a look at it for a long time, wasn't happy with a couple minor things but said he thought it might have a chance.

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/yCFB2akLh4s" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Steve D 08-15-2016 08:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irv (Post 1572649)
Thanks for sharing that information.

I really didn't think, based on the tech that was available back then, that people would be making counterfeit cards in order to make money.

I was surprised, however, to hear what some of the Rose RC's were worth even way back then, so I can understand it, now, why it goes way back like it does.

The counterfeiting of cards was beginning to become more of a problem in the 1980s. Another big card that was counterfeited was the 1984 Donruss Don Mattingly. At it's peak, I believe it was around $150 or so.

In fact, that is why it was such big news when Upper Deck came out in 1989 with the hologram on the backs of their cards, as a deterrent to counterfeiting.

Steve

irv 08-16-2016 04:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve D (Post 1572679)
The counterfeiting of cards was beginning to become more of a problem in the 1980s. Another big card that was counterfeited was the 1984 Donruss Don Mattingly. At it's peak, I believe it was around $150 or so.

In fact, that is why it was such big news when Upper Deck came out in 1989 with the hologram on the backs of their cards, as a deterrent to counterfeiting.

Steve

Great information.

Although I wasn't collecting anywhere near then like I am now, I always thought the Hologram was just to "pretty" up the card some. :o

bnorth 08-16-2016 05:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve D (Post 1572679)
The counterfeiting of cards was beginning to become more of a problem in the 1980s. Another big card that was counterfeited was the 1984 Donruss Don Mattingly. At it's peak, I believe it was around $150 or so.

In fact, that is why it was such big news when Upper Deck came out in 1989 with the hologram on the backs of their cards, as a deterrent to counterfeiting.

Steve

I thought UD used the hologram so only they could counterfeit their cards.:eek:

Yoda 08-16-2016 12:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MW1 (Post 1572673)
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/yCFB2akLh4s" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Michael, bingo, you got me. But, my God, I hope I didn't look or sound like Jim Carey when sitting at the SGC booth waiting for Scott to render judgement on my Wolverine Cobb. Have you ever seen a counterfeit specimen? Can't believe mine is the only one in existence. Why would anybody go to the effort of producing just one complete with little signature marks? So, see, there is still a chance!


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 11:48 PM.