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Question about PSA/JSA "Guarantees"
*The comments below do not apply to established autograph dealers
------------- How often do we encounter an unauthenticated autographed item where the seller "guarantees" it will pass a major 3rd party authentication? Yet, how often do we come across a seller who not only offers a full refund on the item itself if it fails to pass the mustard, but also offers to reimburse the buyer of his/her out of pocket expenses to submit said item to PSA/JSA? As a future seller of a number of vintage unauthenticated signatures, I'm just trying to figure out my best plan of action: 1. Spend the out of pocket expense to submit everything to PSA/JSA 2. Back my confidence in the item by offering to reimburse the buyer of both the sale price and authentication fees they spend, only to have it kicked back? 3. Make no such claims of authenticity since no one, in theory, can make an absolute 100% guarantee (short of witnessing it being signed in person or being the person who signed it themselves). I am leaning toward #2 to give bidders a bit more confidence when bidding, but in reality, it seems like it would only come across as a halfhearted attempt. Really, I'm just a random stranger who says he will offer a full refund including fees. What legitimate proof can I offer a bidder? Thanks and sorry for the mild ramble. Chris |
dont handcuff yourself like that. you are exposing yourself to the whim and fancy of psa and jsa if you do that. if an autograph that you know is 100 percent legit fails these services because they dont know the autograph, or that they just rolled out of the wrong side of the bed this morning, you are out a lot of cash, and it's not your fault. i would guaranee the authenticity of the autograph yourself, but a jsa or psa fail does not trigger your guarantee, rather real evidence that it is a fake autograph should trigger you guarantee.
josportsinc.com has a good guarantee disclaimer. http://josportsinc.com/catalog/autograph.html people i know have been burnt so many times by promising an item to pass psa or jsa, only to see these services get it wrong that we just throw up our hands now and say no way. |
Were you there when the autographs were obtained? If not, how do you or anyone else "guarantee" that they are authentic. If you are continuing to auction these items on eBay, take lots of pictures... including really close up ones, give really good descriptions and explain the provenance of the piece the best that you can. Unless you missed the boat (i.e. a facsimile that you mistook for the real thing) and don't describe something correctly, let the consumer be the judge and bear the responsibility of the authenticity. If you read Net54 for any length of time, you will see that just from pictures autograph guys make determinations about authenticity on a regular basis.
Jeff |
Okay, good advice from both. Thanks. I'm still torn between taking the auction house route or sticking with Ebay.
Although I am committed to spending the time to take plenty of pictures/scans and provide a good description for each item (without explicitly "guaranteeing" anything), I obviously want to avoid any drama from a disgruntled buyer if a signed item turns out not to be authentic. Fortunately, the provenance is rock solid, so hopefully that will be enough to give bidders enough info to draw their own conclusions. |
Here is my take as a seldom autograph seller. A seller needs to stand by the authenticity of an item. You should have a return policy so that the buyer can inspect the item in hand. If you want to give the buyer enough time within that policy to send an item to a third party, than do so, but never offer to cover their expenses for that.
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I sell a lot of low-end stuff on ebay. I offer a guarantee on the cost of the item. I tend to respect the people here more than PSA or JSA, but they are the popular choices. I had one item (a Soriano ball) get caught between dueling authenticators. I truly feel it was good, but I refunded the buyer because I want them to be happy. I don't think you need to worry about paying the buyer's fees as long as you are up front about it.
Ken PS: You have Richard Simon right here, why not see how much he'll charge you? |
I am not a seller but I am a buyer and I have had numerous exchanges with sellers regarding this topic. I am by no means an expert and I rarely trust my own eye to know if a particular autograph is authentic or not for the simple fact I just don't have the knowledge or experience.
My only pience of advice is be ware of offering buyers a refund if an item fails authentication. There are many stories out there of a buyer claming an item fails authentication because they'll switch your genuine item/autograph for a known fake. The buyer then submits the fake, it fails authentication, and they ask for their money back while sending you the fake back and keeping your original authentic item. In my mind it comes down to the difference in the final sale price that can be realized by having an item authenticated. If your selling a $50 autograph, its not worth having authenticated. If you're selling one that can be valued at several hundred dollars, then it could pay to spend $50-$75 to have it authenticated and realize the gain in a higher final sale price. |
DO NOT offer to refund fees unless you can somehow limit the exposure. If you have business insurance you might be able to do something there but probably not worth the cost.
I have two cases where PSA and JSA deemed "not genuine" high $ signatures that I obtained in person and witnessed the signing myself. |
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It is just a shame. |
I haven't sold a lot on ebay in a while, but when I did, I handled it this way.
I offered a 2wk money back guarantee for any reason and a lifetime one on authenticity. I used to put a link in my auction to the quick opinion service for buyers to use if they wanted. I sent a clear receipt with my name, address, and phone. That's it. I would not offer to cover anyone's authentication costs as the decision to send it someone for their opinion is their's, not yours. |
Decisions, decisions...
I really don't want to offer a "lifetime" guarantee; not because I don't believe in the item, but because I am not a business owner and not a professional autograph dealer. Long after the lot is liquidated and I am out of the vintage autograph selling "business", I don't want to be on the hook for a refund. It seems like way too many things can go wrong months/years down the road. I almost want to sell the items strictly "as is" with excellent photos and will make it abundantly clear that I cannot be 100% certain of any autograph. I may take the advice to PM Richard Simon and see what he might charge to review the items. Many thanks to all. Very glad to be a member of this community. Chris |
How about offering the Ebay buyer the option to get a quick opinion from PSA? It costs only $7.49 no matter how much the full authentication costs. I use the service a lot myself on personal purchases. The beauty is, the turnaround time is usually no more than a day, and you will get the result before the buyer pays and before you ship. It saves a lot of hassle either way. On high dollar items, I would pay for it myself and post the quick opinion in the listing. Its a cheap way to get a PSA cert without the official one.
Some of my best pickups were using PSA quick opinion. The auction prices are depressed for items without an official cert and there are a lot of bargains from individual personal collections. |
Chris,
I totally understand what you are saying about lifetime guarantee. You certainly can sell them without it, but you might have to set your sights lower regarding end sale amounts. The more reassured the buyers are, the higher they will bid. When I am looking at buying an autograph, this is how I evaluate it. 1) The sellers refund policy. Do they stand behind their own knowledge? 2) My own knowledge and comfort level with the signer, item, history. 3) The reputation of the seller. Not just feedback, but are they well known and reputable. 4) Any paperwork/certification that comes with the item. Any autograph that I am looking to bid on, that has an "as-is" seller policy will get either no bid or a much lower bid from me. This is a real red flag of something being wrong. Why I feel this way is that everyone can be fooled. Even an honest, hard working, and experienced seller can make a mistake. What I want is the comfort of knowing that I will be made whole by the seller, in that event, because he/she wants me to be satisfied. When I purchased the HOF yrbk I listed in the July pick up thread, I did so without seeing it. I asked Jim Stinson to scan the sigs so i could see them. He replied that it would take him forever to do so and not to worry because I could always return it if I was unhappy. This was exactly what I wanted to hear. Good Luck with whatever you decide to do. Best, Mark |
That's true. You can tell the visitors that they can get a PSA quick opinion if they wish. Just saying that will instill some confidence and it points out that the are able to get a second opinion if they chose.
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For $7.49 it is not their most visible authenticators, those authenticators cannot even keep up with the items that need a real cert. |
You can also offer a much shorter period for returns, but one that allows for a TPA to render an opinion. 90 days seems to be a number I've seen a bit, and I think that is fair for a non-dealer.
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Yes, I'm quite familiar with the Quick Opinion option as well. I never thought about posting the results in the auction, but that's a great idea.
I actually got what I thought to be an excellent deal on a Dodgers Pictorial History book (75+ signatures including Koufax/Drysdale) using Quick Opinion. Truth be told, we're not even talking about high end items. The best of the remaining autographs are a 1951 WS Program signed by Douglas MacArthur, another '51 WS program signed by most of the NY Giants executives/management (Stoneham, Feeney, Durocher, Brannick, etc...), and a mid-late 50's Lowe & Campbell baseball signed by Dizzy and Daffy Dean. Scans to follow as soon as I find the time... |
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is steve grad looking at QO for 7.95 a shot? like Richard says, I don't think so. so who is giving this 'qualified' opinion if the A team isn't exactly impressing me? the c team, the d team, a guy who wants to make the d team? ask joe o, he won't say. A vintage muhammad ali signature with the less common 'A frame" capital A came back not authentic during a quick opinion, because the guy looking at it wasnt familiar with that variation. that's how good they are. |
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We've got a mish-mash of issues here:
1. Is it genuine? Unfortunately, it is all subjective and speculative unless you were standing there when the item got signed. In court we call it hearsay evidence; I heard from someone else that something happened. 2. Is it certified and what does that mean? People pay for the cert as a substitute for knowledge because no one can be sure of anything they haven't witnessed. It is an expert [hopefully] opinion but many experts are for sale. In litigation we call the process of finding an expert who will say what your client needs him to say "whore-shopping." It is worthless unless the expert happens to have a cachet in the collecting community. Anyone bought a GAI-certed item lately?? And don't even get me started on the odious "auction LOA" that some auctioneers now use. Talk about a popcorn fart--the small print gives you a set time to pay for the privilege of allowing the TPA to certify the item that you are ostensibly buying certified--if it doesn't pass them the 2nd time you don't pay for the submission, but if it does pass you pay the cost for the upgrade to the full LOA. What a great deal, just fills me with confidence. I know the TPA that already did a cursory review of the item will go over it again with a fine tooth comb to ferret out the truth rather than rubber stamping it so as to collect another fee. Sure, and I have a bridge in Brooklyn too, for sale cheap. When you get one of those worthless slips of paper and it is past the deadline, woe unto you--the TPA will solemnly inform you that the auction LOA has expired and you will have to pay the full recert fee regardless of outcome. 3. As a seller is it worth having a TPA opine? Depends. There is a misperception in the collecting base as to what a seller is purchasing with a TPA cert. As a seller I am not buying an iron-clad guarantee it is authentic--truly, that doesn't matter to me since it is just inventory I am moving. I am buying freedom from having to warrant anything when I purchase a TPA opinion. As long as I have the item in one of their slabs with the cert on it--that is critical for the sales effort--I know I can resell it risk-free to me at auction or on Ebay [if it is one of their "blessed" TPAs]. What will a buyer do, say it isn't a PSA/DNA certified item? Now, that freedom comes at considerable expense. If I am selling a common signed card for $9.99, no way do I waste the money--I will refund the occasional bitchy buyer. If I am selling something a lot higher priced, however, I will hold my nose and use the TPA service. 4. As a seller should you cover the buyer's fee for TPA? Not if you want to stay in business. Those TPA fees are very expensive and will eat you alive. Offer to cover those and your business life expectancy will be about the same as a mosquito. And last, my buyer's perspective: I try to do my homework and buy based on what I see and learn rather than a TPA opinion. That said, I recently purchased a Marciano signed PC with a guarantee from a local seller [I only buy unslabbed from locals so I can readily sue them to enforce a guarantee if needed]. I sent it to PSA/DNA [cost me $$$] and it got dinged. I got my money back but I also ate the TPA fee. I will never, ever do that again--I cannot afford to eat cert fees like that. What that means, in my way of collecting, is that there is no more middle ground for me as a collector. Assuming it looks good to me to begin with, I will either buy a slabbed/certed item or I will pay a rock-bottom price for a raw item on the assumption that it is worth the gamble and with the understanding that I will have to shell out to get a TPA cert on it so I can sell it. The "middle ground" [decent item, reasonable price] is dead to me. And no, I don't particularly care about the sterling reputation of the seller of the item because if I ever want to resell it that person isn't there, it is just me, and I better have a TPA cert or I will be treated as the lowball seller of dodgy raw items. FWIW, my advice for the OP is to consign the items to an auctioneer who will do the TPA for free or provide its own COA and let them take all the risks. Without a TPA cert you will be treated as the typical Ebay scam artist and see low prices on your items because that, unfortunately, is where the market has gone for the weekend warrior type. |
Well stated and great post, Adam!
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Adam - you have stated "I will either buy a slabbed/certed item" in your post.
Don't you think the seller has bumped up his price to cover his cost of the slabbed/certed item? You are paying for the cert/slab, just not directly to the TPA. |
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it's a secret, they don't want people to know. if people knew, they would probably be shocked to find out some guy they most likely never heard of that's probably not listed on their website and has ? hobby credentials has power to knock their item off of ebay. I use 'most likely' and 'probably' also because again, like Richard said, no one knows, which is the way they want it. |
Nice post Adam!
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but see i like the ungraded decent item, decent price. it is a marciano and it is ungraded, and at a decent price. i love that. others will stay away but if i know its good i will get it and i dont care if psa says its bad. i already know its good. i once bought a marciano signed album page on ebay, it was uncerted, and the photo was a little blurry and a little far away, but i knew it was good, i bought it for 200, it was as good as gold. if psa, or jsa, or the man on the moon ever said no good. i dont care. i ended up selling it for 400 ungraded, with my own guarantee, which was the prevailing going price for marciano, (even WITH a TPA cert, they sell for about 400 bucks). the cert costs about 100 bucks when you factor in shipping both ways. I didn't pay that 100 dollars, and still sold it for the going rate. WHY? Because there are people out there who know marciano's signature and dont need the tpa cert either, and my lifetime guarantee is a real guarantee, not like psa's no guarantee. when psa said no good to the marciano, how did you know it was a bad marciano? did you ask a boxing signature expert? psa has no boxing signature expert. they have slabbed several wife signed sonny liston autographs as real sonny liston autographs, and jsa has certed wife signed liston autographs as well, and psa and jsa have both given thumbs down to authentic sonny liston autographs, one of them which belonged to me. I didn't throw it away just because they said no good, by the way. Half my collection could be no good according to them, but i know it was all good, so their opinion means what to me since they get boxing wrong so often? nothing. You don't need to play the psa or jsa game, it just costs money you don't need to spend. fighttoys.com sets up at the boxing hof convention every year, and does well selling at the memorabilia show, and none of his items has psa or jsa certification. but he offers a lifetime guarantee and honors it. Full disclosure, I am friends with him by the way, Mark Ogren. he doesn't need psa or jsa either. it's a waste of money because they aren't known for boxing at all, what they ARE known for, I don't know. |
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I like having the protected slabs, could care less about authenticity because I don't sell. Nice if you drop them you don't need to worry about it flying out of a top loader or whatever or move around too much (depending on card etc). And unfortunately, re-sell value with a sticker goes waaaaay up (depending on item).
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Tends to make me mad as hell when it happens, but it does happen. Had one within the past couple weeks as a matter of fact. Mike |
Wow, my head is spinning from all this insight!
Since the overall lot only has a few autographed items (< 10), I'm now leaning toward finding a single buyer or consign to an auction house who will provide certs from a TPA. As for the bulk of the lot, authentication is not a concern (programs, pennants, etc...). Even so, I'm not looking forward to all the scanning. |
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you only think they sell for a premium, they don't, and too many people have the 'i have to play ball' mentality, that allows psa and jsa to get away with what they get away with and not provide true customer service and an accurate opinion. they have too many customers 'playing ball' that they can do whatever they want and the customers come back for more. |
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you only think they sell for a premium, they don't, and too many people have the 'i have to play ball' mentality, that allows psa and jsa to get away with what they get away with and not provide true customer service and an accurate opinion. they have too many customers 'playing ball' that they can do whatever they want and the customers come back for more, many of them even admitting they don't like it and think these companies leave a lot to be desired. The companies get away with it because the customers let them. If people withheld their dollars until they got their act together, they would have to change, but customers don't, so we just get a lot more of the same and it will be that way forever unless people wake up. I have sold hundreds and hundreds of boxing autographs at good prices and I didn't pay for the non-expert opinion of these companies. disclosure: I have sent a grand total of two autographs to jsa a few years ago when i didn't know any better, and I realized no extra profit and actually a loss on an item because I got the same price that I would have gotten without authentication, and I couldn't recoup my authentication fee by an increase in sale price. |
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Richard, of course the seller has bumped his price to cover the TPA fee. I don't care about that because I am not merely paying for the TPA fee, I am paying [and I acknowledge that I am paying] a "risk premium" to eliminate the risk of a TPA rejection on a raw item. It is all about fungibility for me. I only pay what I am willing to pay and I only buy what my eyes tell me is good based on my studies BUT if I ever want to resell profitably without relying on an AH, I need the TPA blessing on the item. I'm gonna say a dirty word: "investment". I am not just a collector. Card are too damn expensive and I am not wealthy enough to treat the Hobby as a hobby. Everything I buy [except for memorabilia of my cousins] I purchase with an eye on the investment potential and resale value, albeit with a long holding period and/or some risks involved. That's one reason why my book only lists actual transaction prices rather than projected prices except where clearly stated as an opinion as to what I think something should cost; I don't want to be accused of pumping and dumping my own stuff. Everything I own [except for memorabiia of my cousins] is for sale--for the right price I will even help you carry it to your car. That said, I gotta be sure everything I own can be moved, sometimes on short notice, because my main business ebbs and flows. I'm also gonna say a nice word: "aesthetics". I happen to like how cards look slabbed, and I sometimes get them slabbed for display purposes. I like the way they line up in holders, like a museum display for my own private hall of fame. Like these: http://photos.imageevent.com/exhibit...0PSA%20DNA.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/exhibit...0PSA%20DNA.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/exhibit...0PSA%20DNA.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/exhibit...0PSA%20DNA.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/exhibit...0PSA%20DNA.jpg |
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But isn't the ultimate goal to purchase an authentic autograph? Does the Holyfield look legitimate or does it more resemble the common forged version next to it?
http://www.fighttoys.com/Holyfield,E...01%20%20SR.jpghttp://www.fighttoys.com/Holyfield,E...1a%20%20SR.jpghttp://www.fighttoys.com/Holyfield,E...%208b%20SR.jpg Does it even come close to resembling these examples of Holyfields vintage autograph? Would you rather have the Holyfield signed card above or the one below? http://www.fighttoys.com/Holyfield,E...2b%20%20SR.jpghttp://www.fighttoys.com/Holyfield,E...20SR%20(b).JPGhttp://www.fighttoys.com/Holyfield,E...4-17c%20SR.jpg http://www.fighttoys.com/Holyfield,E...20SR%20(c).jpghttp://www.fighttoys.com/Holyfield,E...2027b%20SR.jpg Why guarantee an item will pass a third party authenticator when the TPA doesn't even guarantee there opinion? |
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And what would it mean for a TPA to "guarantee" their opinion, anyway? If an item can be shown to be bunk, not by another person's opinion but actually proven to be a forgery a la laser copies, impossibly dated material, etc, then the TPAs should refund the cost of authentication. They aren't and shouldn't be responsible for the selling price of any item. It is an opinion, not an insurance policy. |
Truth is a slippery thing, Travis. Did you see any of the autographs you are labeling fake and real signed in person? If so, which ones? If not, with all due respect, your opinion as to everything you did not see signed is just an opinion, same as any TPA opinion is just an opinion. Unless I want to collect only what I personally saw signed, I have to rely on opinions. Since all we are really dealing in most of the time is opinion, whether an item "really really" was signed or not is unknowable and as such is entirely irrelevant to the market. Buyers like the TPA opinions. Buyers respect TPA opinions. Buyers pay for the TPA opinions. They don't care about my opinion. Or yours, unless you are a TPA issuing a LOA. If I market that Holyfield signed card raw I might get someone to take a risk for $10. In the slab I can get a multiple of that all day, every day. Is the one in the slab forged or real? I didn't see it signed, so I don't know. But if PSA is willing to slab it, as a seller I really don't care.
Try this one on for atypical signatures: Look at the Lennox Lewis in the PSA/DNA holder. How can we explain its lack of resemblance to the one below that I got myself at a promotional appearance for the Klitschko fight? PSA version: http://photos.imageevent.com/exhibit...0PSA%20DNA.jpg Card I got signed personally: http://photos.imageevent.com/exhibit...size/Lewis.jpg I can sell or trade the PSA version all day long; mine isn't worth a plugged nickel, though I enjoy it immensely since it reminds of me meeting the champ. |
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Mark Ogren Schenectady, NY |
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Anyone who collects or trades in signatures ultimately is trading in opinions, not facts. I know some folks don't like to admit that, but it is the inescapable truth. |
Quote from Adam in post 39:"I didn't see it signed, so I don't know (if it is real). But if PSA is willing to slab it, as a seller I really don't care."
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Okay, so I should go with GAI, then?
Sorry, couldn't resist. Such an entertaining/informative thread...only wish I had something more to contribute other than the OP. |
TPAs are like US dollars. With our debt problems in this country, a dollar is probably not worth a dollar. You're better off holding gold or loonies or kronas. However, the last time I checked, I couldn't fill my enlarged belly at McDonald's with kronas. Therefore, the ol mighty dollar is still king.
On another note, Richard mentioned how "the hobby" is being ruined. I think there needs to be a clarification. The autograph market and autograph hobby are distinctly different. amazon entered the memorabilia business because they said the $4 billion market was to hard to ignore. What portion of that do you attribute to hobbyists? I would guess less than 5% of that. The rest buy autographs for the art/display factor or recreation factor. They are not that concerned about value. I compare them to people who buy prints on cruise ships. They are not art collectors and the pieces they buy are for aesthetics, not collector value. The hobbyists are very well informed. They know what they want, how to detect fakes, and know who they can buy from. Richard does a stellar job servicing the hobby. However, more generalist dealers serve the entire market, which includes the rest of the 95%. those are the people who request/demand and see value in tpa's. |
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Your example is colorful but it assumes facts not in evidence, as they say in my profession. I did not say that I do not care if something is fake. If I believe something is fake I certainly would not sell it; arguing against that straw man is a misrepresentation of my views. My point was and is that in the absence of evidence I can understand--like a card made after a player's death with a signature or a preprint mistakenly labeled as genuine--if I do not know the answer and if I hired an expert to opine for me, I will not contradict the expert's opinion with my own guess and I therefore am not concerned with whether an objectively unknowable fact is true. I hire a professional whose work is accepted in the market and I rely on that professional's expertise, just as someone hires me to explain the nuances of a commercial lease. The entire autograph business is based on opinions rather than facts, and when nobody knows the ultimate fact [whether the person really held and signed the item], it becomes irrelevant. Anyone who collects or sells autographs has a very simple choice: collect only what you get yourself in person or through trusted associates and friends or rely on [presumably] expert opinions including your own as to what you are buying. But if you decide to collect or sell anything not signed in your presence, then let's not continue to pretend that establishing the authenticity of such items is objective in nature. It can't be objective given the lack of hard facts and by definition you are relying on an expert's opinion. Now, if you want to accuse me of hiding behind the opinions of professional experts, OK, you got me. I plead guilty to doing the same thing with sports memorabilia that I do with my car, my computer, my plumbing, etc. |
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there is so much wrong with everything you said i cant even start. |
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Jeff |
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http://www.fighttoys.com/Holyfield,E...20lot%20SR.jpg Quote:
Mark Ogren Schenectady, NY |
i also take offense to the statement that you just sell, and you dont care, as long as psa slabs it. I also take offense to the statement that no one cares about my opinion or mark ogren's opinion because we are not an official tpa.
we get asked all the time if PSA or JSA certed autographs are actually real or not when it concerns boxing. we have sold hundreds upon hundreds of real boxing autographs to discerning collectors who are interested in getting a real autograph, not just a certed one. The autographs we have sold dont have a third party tpa - psa or jsa cert with it the vast, vast majority of the time and we sell them for market value to people all over the world. so to say that psa or jsa is the only word that matters and who cares if it is real, is irresponsible. psa and jsa kept certing geraldine liston signed "sonny liston" autographs as real, both encapsulating them and issuing full loa's for them, even though BCN newsletter had shown those to be wife signed for many years, psa and jsa kept certing them until people like myself and mark showed the auction houses and the tpa's that they were no good. now if you got one in tomorrow and you knew it was a wife signed liston, i suppose you could list it on ebay and sell it as a real liston and you wouldnt care. i do care because i have to sleep at night. If i wanted to , i didnt have to alert psa and jsa and the auction houses, i could simply buy geraldine liston signed "sonny liston" autographs for cheap and submit them to psa and jsa and get the certs and flip them for 800 dollars apiece. I would be rich. Playing the game I guess some people don't care. They want the cert and no autograph is real or fake, there is no truth in autographs, it's only what you can get certed. That's pathetic. We have seen psa and jsa make hundreds of errors concerning these boxing autographs and you either fall into two camps. You are interested in finding out if the autograph is real or not, or you want money you think the tpa's can provide by get any autograph certed, whether you know they are real or not, or really care. I will go with accuracy and with the truth, and the money will always follow a competant dealer that offers good autographs with experience in boxing autographs to back it up. Other can pay psa or jsa and spin the wheel. Mark is right, a knowledgable collector and real boxing fan who knows their autographs will not purchase a bad boxing autograph even if it is in a psa or jsa holder with a full LOA. if it takes someone who doesnt know boxing autographs who buys it because it is psa or jsa. Again, is that something to be proud of, that someone who doesn't know but is trusting psa or jsa fell for an autograph that isn't any good? I could have been rich many times over taking advantage of the loopholes knowing what psa or jsa would pass concerning boxing autographs and exploiting their inexperience in boxing. But I am not rich, because I put accuracy first. A bad boxing autograph that is encapsulated in a psa or jsa holder stays that way forever, which is sickening and something I hate to see, because we have seen almost every HOF boxer from Sullivan to Tyson in a bad holder or with a bad full LOA. And it infects the hobby forever when they don't know the autograph but give it the LOA or encapsulation anyway. |
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I just wanted to be clear, i know there are people who dont specialize in autographs, so they dont what what to do, so they trust psa or jsa, which is the two companies they know others will trust too, and they can participate in the marketplace such as auctions and ebay and they can buy and sell without hassle. The point i am trying to make is that it is an entire market that is not based on the truth of whether or not an autograph is real or not, especially concerning boxing, but it is a market based on popularity of the cert. and if thats what people are worried about, then they must realize they are participating in something that is not accuracy based, but popularity based. that's all i am trying to say. I think many people are so confused as to whether an autograph can accurately be figured out, that they have thrown their hands up and decided to go with what is popular, that is they have decided that they will let psa and jsa decide for everybody what is real or not, and if it gets the cert, it's real, and if it gets rejected, it is fake. i can tell you point blank that thinking like that is incredibly flawed, shortsighted, and wrong. psa and jsa have wrongly authenticated as real the following autographs secretarial signed john l sullivan letter wife signed bob fitzsimmons letter manager signed bob fitzsimmons letter hotel registry ghost signed by james corbett, tom sharkey, and james jeffries james corbett 1892 inscribed cut Jack Johnson "signed" boxing card manufactured only after Johnson's death manager signed jack dempsey autographed photo 11 bad max schmeling signed photos consigned to one auction and only pulled after they were alerted that the major tpa didnt quite hit the mark on that one. secretarial signed jack sharkey signed photo bad primo carnera signed photo many, many, many bad joe Louis signed photos and album pages, too many to count, this is truly their low point. and i mean a LOT of them. bad luis firpo signed photo but it got the cert anyway. numerous wife signed sonny liston signed album pages while rejected authentic signed liston autographs. An autographed album page they encapsulated and certified as Rocky Marciano that is an autograph of Rocky Graziano. Rocky Marciano preprinted or stamped autographed photo. Many, many many bad Muhammad Ali signatures both secretarial, autopen and just plain bad signatures on all types of photos, and pages. And we are talking a lot, in one instance 75 ali autographed photos were certed in a row with consecutive cert numbers. this is a type of ali autographed photo they won't cert anymore, but it didnt stop 75 consecutive ones to get the cert. Do they know Ali? Mike Tyson preprinted 8 x 10 photo where the autograph is IN the photo, not on top of it. So does this convince you yet, or what? And these are only the ones that show up on ebay and online for sale. not considering the zillions of certed boxing autographs that just go in someones collection that we can't see. You can just play the game and go with the cert, it's called cert shopping, or you can find out if it is actually a genuine boxing autograph or not. Your choice. Many choose the cert shopping for monetary reasons. I understand why they choose it ($$$) but not why it makes them true boxing autograph collectors and dealers. One compay told me directly that they need help in boxing. why would they say that if they were "world experts" as they claim to be? That means the best in the world? Who knows boxing autographs and believes that statement? no one. |
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Of the few autographs pieces in my collection, I am not certain that they are all real but I think that they look good and that is enough for me. On the other hand, I am not considering any time soon, spending 1,000's of dollars adding autographs to my collection. Jeff |
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