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Mia Hamm RC in Goldin Auctions
34K. There are no words but geez that's remarkable. Wonder if my 9 is worth anything?
https://goldinauctions.com/1992_SI_f...-LOT94223.aspx Not to mention 440K for the card of some kid. https://goldinauctions.com/2019_20_T...-LOT92917.aspx |
I for one am very happy to see this! The greats of all time deserve recognition whether it be Pele, Maradona, Messi or someone like Mia Hamm, who was absolutely the cream of the crop in her time. Sometimes that recognition is in the form of a high selling trading card. Doesn't hurt that I'm a huge fan of the USWNT as well :)
Bill |
A “Gem Mint” perforated card? :eek:
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Great job by Ken and Goldin auctions! That provides a preview about what rookie cards of Diana Taurasi, Sue Bird, Candace Parker and Brianna Stewart should be worth.
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And Serena, etc.
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The first round of those "rare" rookies always win in terms of hammer prices. Look at the first 50 lots of the recent Goldin auction.... lot of "pass", i guess many consignors expect too much but market has been leveling off.
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I had to look up the population of that Mia Hamm card when I saw how crazy the price was going. That card is a population one.
I was also watching the Lewis Hamilton Topps Formula 1 cards in yesterday's Goldin auction. Formula 1 cards, especially the 2020 Topps' release, have been on fire in recent months. Several of the Hamilton cards sold significantly lower than they have been going for in the same grade on eBay. Long term, I think Lewis Hamilton is another big winner investment wise. |
This was as far as I dipped my toe in this area but I am glad I did. I really enjoy this card:
https://live.staticflickr.com/7890/3...987e429a_z.jpg |
I'm sitting in my chair until the music stops
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Brian |
You have to really question this, who is paying $34k for THAT card? I would like to meet them. Have some other items for them.
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If that is a 1/1 PSA 10 of the rookie card of arguably the greatest woman soccer player ever then it may turn out to be a bargain. If you are a women’s soccer fan that card will mean a lot more to you than one of the many T206 Cobbs.
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Peter, Time to cash out while the getting is good. Take the money and run. If Billy Joe would, you should too. |
Why do they even grade perforated cards?
Blow the picture up to its largest size... The perforation "teeth" are all fuzzy, there's a deep scratch to the her left thigh and another to the right of her left foot, as well as a bunch of scattered white dots on the card's surface. I just don't see it... a couple hundred bucks maybe, but there are at least a million other things I'd buy for that kind of moolah. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, I suppose. |
For me, it's inflation gone to hell in a hand-basket. My rule has been, I'm not paying more than 5k for a baseball card. There are other hobbies. I'm looking at them now. The guy's a foos-ball player. table soccer, right? He spins those dials...450K You can by a Church's Chicken with a lease expiring for that money.
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I have 25 Bob Horner Kelloggs cards, those should be worth more than anything. Like 25 million dollars. He hit 4 homers in a game. Much more awesome than Mia Hamm, or the German game boy soccer guy.
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I wonder who made those Goldin banners, final prizes are all messed up. LOL
No one ever checks before they made them live?? that MIA HAMM card only sold for $34.440 Not quite sure what currency that was.... with a '.' and not ',' LOL |
In defense of the 2019 Bundesliga card, those are pretty rare as most LCS's didn't order them and they average about $3000 per was box now... Pretty sick... The racing cards are catching up as the same story...
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Goldin just made the change but still wrong.. Oh well.. |
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Bill |
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Baseball and other sport cards have been collected primarily in Canada and the US for well over a century, with most male youths exposed to varying degrees at some point. This has allowed "the market" to grow and prosper, with valuation following once demand was created. There has never been a LARGE market outside North America for sports cards, but all of sudden, countries with absolutely zero history of collecting cards, and people that have never been exposed are feverishly collecting out of thin air? In large numbers?? Really?? What history of collecting is there for soccer or NASCAR cards that people are currently spending huge sums of money on them? They went from almost no value to priceless overnight?? It makes no sense, hence it's NOT primarily collectors, but those just trying to make money off the hobby buying these and inflating the values.... nothing more. |
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All due respect to Mia Hamm but I don’t think there is a good reason to spend 34K on a perforated kids magazine card.
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North American market
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Personally, I don't think the Hamm card is ultimately that rare (I believe S.I. circulation is around 950,000) and as mentioned PSA grading of S.I. for kids is even more inconsistent than their general grading. So that particular price seems way out of line. But women's sports and interest in women's sports is taking off. The supply for RC's of future HOFers and all-time greats like Diana Taurasi, Sue Bird, Breanna Stewart, Megan Rapinoe, Serena Williams, Flo-Jo, Simone Biles etc. is very limited compared to what the demand ultimately could end up being. |
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Some folks get their bobbies mixed up and others get their boobies mixed up.:eek::eek::eek::D |
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With all due respect, it's impossible... common sense says it's investors and speculators.... and almost zero "collectors". |
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It sprouted because people (all around the world) see a Tom Brady card selling for $2 million+, and wonder why there can't also be a liquid market for dominant and recognizable athletes in the worldwide sports arena. I love the NFL and have almost zero interest in soccer, but to be honest, nobody gives a rat's ass about the NFL, outside the U.S.. It's strictly a regional sport. No more popular around the world then Rugby or Cricket. .............and also, people outside the U.S., have been producing and collecting an untold number of cards for just as long as we have. They just hadn't com-modified it quite to the level as we have since the 80's. But as far as pure "collecting" goes....the Brits were preserving their cards in albums and pages pages, pumping out card catalogues, and enjoying them for their aesthetic value, looooonnnng before we were. It's why lots of 20's and 30's sets from that part of the world can still be found in tip top condition today. The Germans were also huge card producers/collectors. |
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NASCAR in akin to American football in that is it primarily popular in only one country in the world; Formula 1 is akin to soccer in that its appeal is international. Every F1 race draws as many viewers as the NFL's Super Bowl. Fprmula 1 drivers are superstars in Europe and South America and Asia. Go look at all the $5,000+ Hamilton cards that have sold on eBay just in the short time since the Topps F1 cards have been released. His top autograph cards are well into five figures. His Topps 1/1 cards will be six figures, IMO, if they go to auction. Formula 1 has also been experiencing a surge in U.S. interest due to the Netflix series covering the sport. There is not any precedent for a mainstream, international Formula 1 set like what Topps has out right now. |
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All people can say is how popular these sports are, which has always been the case to different people in different parts of the world... but the SPORT card market in any non North American locale has never been popular until now. Also as mentioned, it's true the English were feverish card producers and collectors, but primarily not of SPORTS cards.... that has never been the case. |
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As far as retired or deceased drivers go, Ayrton Senna and Michael Schumacher blow away Jackie Stewart in terms of prices. |
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With this current Topps release, every driver on the roster has autograph cards in the set. There was no option at all when it came to getting an autographed Michael Schumacher or Ayrton Senna card unless a collector had the foresight and luck decades ago. |
Isn’t this the same Lewis Hamilton who tried to trademark the name ‘Hamilton’, then sued Hamilton Watch Co. over it?
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Sorry man, that's not true at all. They made tons of sports cards. Just not American Sports Cards...........from the Big 4 American Sports anyways. Plenty of Sports Cards of Americans who participated in more International Sports. |
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Hamm was so good, she ruined Garciaparra.
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There is a difference between "producing" and "collecting". What are the VALUES of those boxing, golf, etc cards produced by the English traditionally? Peanuts. Especially compared to cards produced in North America. Why? Because so few collect them. This isn't complicated.... IF there were many British collectors, the values over time would have increased, just like sports cards in North America. But almost no one there collectors or cares, hence low values for vintage English "sports" cards. It's illogical for there to be a huge plethora of British card collectors, but despite this, the prices on vintage British sports cards stay extremely modest? ..... to the point it appears that no one collects them? |
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Now, would I pay $34K for the Mia Hamm SI card? No, but I don't have the monetary means nor the interest in that specific card. Just like any auction, all it takes is two interested parties and the bidding goes from there. It's all about supply and demand, so you could insert [Wagner, Mantle, Gretzky, Jordan, Trout, Brady, Pokemon] and build the same argument. $5.2MM for 1952 Mantle or $3.25MM for T206 Wagner is simply the same economic and emotional situation playing out, albeit at a completely different price level. True, the value of soccer and some of these other sports cards are peanuts compared to "North American cards", but I can assure you they are catching up quickly. Bloomer, Meredith, Dean, Matthews, Puskas, Pele, Maradona, Cruyff, Zidane, Messi, Ronaldo ... are setting new records every month. The soccer card market is maybe 20 years behind Baseball, but it is there and growing. Trust me, there are lots of people who collect these and lots of people who care about them. |
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That's all I said... some of you want to live in a fantasy world where there are supposedly tons of card collectors in countries like England to rationalize the ridiculous and sudden climb in card values... but if that were true, values of English cards would have LONG been increasing... but they have not. You said it yourself, the soccer card market is 20 years behind baseball... so if there are truly numerous collectors of these cards, there should have been a constant - not meteoric - increase throughout that time... but that has never happened. WHY? |
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Australia at least at one time had a thriving basketball card market. Including one or maybe two local producers of Australian basketball league cards.
And Upper deck made international editions in the early 90's. If only I could think of a foreign company that made big bucks on cards or stickers... Oh yeah, Panini. |
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This is most definitely the case. Back in the mid to later 90's I was mail ordering from The London Cigarette Card Company, singles of Jack Johnson, Jack Dempsey, Jesse Owens, Joe Louis, and even occasionally Bobby Jones (who even back then was selling for a bit of a premium) and others, for the same price as any other common in the sets. Of course, that eventually dried out once the internet made more people (especially in the U.S.), aware of these issues. ....and BTW The London Cigarette Card Company, along with Murray's Cards, were bigger then any Sports or Trading Card dealer in the U.S.., until well into the 80's, including the Larry Fritch's and Renata Galasso's. |
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It is interesting what captures collectors imaginations and what doesn't. Sebastian Vettel is a still active 4 time F1 Champ, and nobody seems to care about him. Max Verstappen hasn't won a title yet, and everybody is in love with him. Obvious recency bias. I'd say that even completely unproven drivers like George Russell and Mick Schumacher, elicit more attention then Vettel does. Niki Lauda is a 3 time champ, has a very compelling story, and was a featured figure in a very well received big budget film. His cards when found, don't sell for much at all. |
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Verstappen definitely seems to be second behind Hamilton in terms of the Topps prices, with Russell not far behind. I guess that is because the future appears limitless for each of them. Verstappen looks like a good bet to win the WDC this year at age 23 and Russell is seen as a future WDC if he does move to Mercedes. Schumacher also has the pedigree and is an F2 champion. On a related collector's note, even autograph cards of Nikita Mazepin in the Topps sets have been going dirt cheap. LOL |
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Ha Ha, nobody thinks much of Mazepin. Especially his own team-mate, Schumacher. Mazepin is a cautionary tale of what can go wrong in F1 if you have a backer and too much money. Sometimes it's not "The Best", that rises into those 20 seats on the course. Lance Stroll has a similar story, but he at least holds his own as a competent driver. |
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Stock car drivers may be second class hobby citizens compared to F1, but I can't imagine I will ever like an auto racing card better than this.
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Can this thread be moved to the soccer section, if there is a soccer section.
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LOL, the dreaded Testing forum. :D I'd be fine with Leon squeezing Soccer, Golf, Racing, Olympics, etc...into one of the other bottom 3 forums in the Postwar section: Either Boxing/Wrestling Basketball/Cricket/Tennis or Hockey and........... If you can't fit the names of the sports in the Forum title, just take one of them and name them something like "All Other Sports", or even "All Other Sports and Non-Sports Talk". Seems like there's enough eclectic collectors on this site to easily justify a name change. They just need to know which forum (not the testing forum ;) ) to go to. |
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What is the likelihood that women will enter this hobby in a meaningful way? I don't ask that rhetorically.
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That's so incredibly wrong it's hard to even respond. Collecting Tobacco and other cards was big enough in England that they had a national society in 1938, And had excellent and fairly comprehensive catalogs by the 1940's. Lots of catalogs some detailing the issues of a single manufacturer. Wills produced their first cards in 1896, and continued at least into the 1960's. (And may still produce cards? I'm not up on their modern stuff) Their collecting culture is geared towards complete sets in very nice condition. Not difficult, as the sets are generally small, 50 cards. And they were saved in huge quantities. That's why they're inexpensive, there are still loads of very nice complete sets around. The collecting seems to be more of a "collect everything" type like Burdick. https://card-world.co.uk/ |
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And yes please can we move soccer out of the testing forum??? |
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Please try and stay in context... And no.... they're affordable because very few collect them. It's simple. .... I googled "vintage sports card shop London England" and three retailers came up, NONE of which sell vintage sports cards. Additionally, checking eBay and entering "vintage soccer card" and then checking the sold listings.... not one single pre-1950 English card showed up as sold, just a couple small SETS selling in the extremely modest $8 to $20 range. No surprise here... |
As far as sections on the forum go the only thing I am positive of is it will never be to the liking of everyone. It is what it is and until a very convincing argument to change is made, they will be the way they are. They have already changed multiple times over the years.
People have fun collecting all sorts of things. It keeps it fun. . |
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That's because collectors there don't confine themselves to sports. And most sets aren't collected as individual cards, unless they're very hard to find. And as I said, most sets are inexpensive because they were saved in huge quantities. Ogdens has golfers that do fairly well. https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_fro...&LH_Complete=1 The Ogdens football (Soccer) sets from the 30's are small, common, and sell for around $70-80 Older sets are better. but still usually not rare if they're from a big company like Ogdens. No, these aren't trimmed. Ogdens albums are paper pockets with cutouts to show the card, and the back as well. One of the reasons so many are in very nice condition. https://www.ebay.com/itm/37359770314...p2047675.l2557 https://www.ebay.com/itm/20332216878...4AAOSwY81gXxFQ Ogdens football are harder to find because of how many football players are named Ogden. How about Wills? https://www.ebay.com/itm/27483359485...cAAOSwYABgs-Lr Cricket? https://www.ebay.com/itm/32456017075...AAAOSwt65gbfyH Dealers? Of course you didn't find any in London. Have you checked London rents lately? (Just rhetorical, I'm sure you haven't) Plus... more cultural differences, they actually still have small shops in towns. Why pay a London (or S.F. or NYC or....) rent, when you can have a shop in a nice village not too far away. Or maybe even far away, we have this internet thing now. https://www.rarecards.co.uk/ https://football-programmes.net/footballcardsuk.com/ |
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A few British sports cards.
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sports ?
I guess people collect what they want to collect, but personally ..I never had any interest in collecting cards from " non major sports "
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