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Fair question.
It's very difficult to buy ungraded star cards in decent condition because dealers with nice cards price them at graded prices or higher (because everyone thinks their cards are better than they are). I can't stand paying for the grade, but it is what the hobby has deteriorated to. That is why I have not bought much in 2024. Quote:
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Maybe when you think fraud is not fraud, you think not fraud is fraud?:eek:
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I bought this piece in an SGC slab. For proof, here is the unique card in its original slab: https://sports.ha.com/itm/boxing-car...a/7120-81299.s. I bought it as a complement to my master set build, as a unique 1 of a kind card supplement. Buying it raw is not an option, as this is the only Slavin/Hall partial strip that is known to exist. As I'm keeping it with my Mayo set, I broke it out of the slab. It lives in a cardboard box with my other 19th century pugilists. How have I committed fraud by doing this? Who have I defrauded? Who is the victim? If not criminal fraud but still ethically wrong, how was it wrong to do this? Can we get above a 60 IQ here? |
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Mastroenteritis
The mental and bodily agita making you want to puke that comes each time you encounter someone pretending Bill Mastro isn’t what he is, an out-and-out crook. |
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Indeed Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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+1 Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
BM - “The card it it looks like a football “
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...6ed71629ab.jpg sorry if the image appears a lil bit Crook-ed Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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Ah yes how could we forget the folks over at Petty Suspicious Authenticators aka Professionally Suspicious Authenticators Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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Here is an interesting one $2,060 sold for last night...for a PSA 3
100% bank on this card being cracked worked wrinkle and crease removed boom 8 holder. Happens all the time with zero disclosure....it's sad but true. If you have a great looking eye appeal card with something minor and a auction house lists and documents the write up as such you will do very well. This auction proves that. https://collectauctions.net/1957_Top...LOT56423.aspx# |
I hope Bill is working on a book, and telling it straight; the good, the bad, and the ugly. I can't think of anyone who has experienced more of the hobby's history firsthand, not to mention how much of it he made himself, it would have to be a fascinating read.
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Yes, this card has excellent eye appeal.
Look at the bottom of the card (edge & corners - both sides). That’s why it was graded a 3. If anything, the auction description was overly positive to the point of being laughable. PSA allows a minor crease for 4s. I’m sure whoever bought this card will get quite a surprise in-hand if purchased solely for thinking a PSA 5.5 is possible let alone an 8. Now the question I have is if the PSA grader even cross-referenced this card while grading to their own standards. Who knows anymore as I think it’s an easy 4 on a bad day. Quote:
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100%. Upon inspection, the flaws w/ this card stand out.
Whoever spent $2k, I wish them good luck. That is “near mint” price territory Quote:
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The Brookie Rookie Crowd.
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http://imagehost.vendio.com/a/204295...IFECTA_NEW.JPG |
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Rich |
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“Buy the card, not the holder!!” |
Alright, I finally finished watching this video. It's definitely not what I call an interview! In an interview, you ask questions and then shut up and listen! This was more like a conversation. It kinda' felt like I was watching a late night talk show, where the host will talk just as much as the person he is interviewing. Over all, I enjoyed it. But yes, I wanted to smack Brian Gray a few times! :D
I do agree with Hank that Mastro should be writing a book about his time in the hobby. He met so many big guys and made so many big deals before this whole Wagner thing. He even said that his grandma found a Wagner! So, it would definitely be a great read! |
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Is this really the case with this specific card? What would the value of the card be if it had not been trimmed? |
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Obviously, to the vast majority of buyers, cards are only worth whatever their current state suggests because most buyers aren't looking to improve cards. But even if just 1% of the bidders in an auction are looking for cards to improve, that would be enough for those improveable cards to be sold at their potential, as opposed to at whatever their current state suggests. A very common example of this fact is that every time you see a 1986 Fleer Sticker Michael Jordan card listed at auction with the (ST) qualifier, because it has wax on the back, it always sells for much more money than its grade suggests it should be worth. A PSA 8 (ST) is going to sell for something close to what a PSA 8 without the qualifier would go for. Recently, PSA stopped adding the qualifiers, so you'll find them as straight PSA 6s instead, but the effect is the same. These will sell closer to what PSA 7s and 8s go for than they will what PSA 6s sell for. The reason is obvious. It's because the buyers know they can crack the cards out, wipe off the wax from the back with a pair of pantyhose and resubmit it for a higher grade. The same is true for any card with improvable flaws, whatever those may be. It is what it is. But it's definitely true whether we like it or not. In the limit, all cards that can be improved will be improved. It's inescapable. |
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Bill Mastro Interview
Bill Mastro was a frequent advertiser in my monthly sports collector's journal: The Sports Trader, along about years 1968 and 1969. I never received a single complaint on his dealings with collectors at that time. I think he was very young at the time.
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