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-   -   Hank Aaron 715 ticket stub (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=219729)

JoeyFarino 03-17-2016 10:01 PM

Hank Aaron 715 ticket stub
 
Ive had this for awhile (given to me by a seller) and was wondering a what a general estimate would be on it. I know its nothing major but just curious

http://i450.photobucket.com/albums/q...psrjoftdia.jpg

BBB 03-17-2016 10:46 PM

Hank Aaron 715 ticket stub
 
I have no idea. But think that is awesome. Don't care if there's 20,000 of em out there or 200. That was a ticket to a game where one of the top 5 record breaking moments in baseball history took place


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JoeyFarino 03-17-2016 10:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BBB (Post 1516482)
I have no idea. But think that is awesome. Don't care if there's 20,000 of em out there or 200. That was a ticket to a game where one of the top 5 record breaking moments in baseball history took place


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


Thanks alot man

irv 03-17-2016 10:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BBB (Post 1516482)
I have no idea. But think that is awesome. Don't care if there's 20,000 of em out there or 200. That was a ticket to a game where one of the top 5 record breaking moments in baseball history took place


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-h...ome-run-record


http://www.baseball-reference.com/bo...97404080.shtml

https://youtu.be/QjqYThEVoSQ

Scott Garner 03-18-2016 04:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JoeyFarino (Post 1516472)
Ive had this for awhile (given to me by a seller) and was wondering a what a general estimate would be on it. I know its nothing major but just curious

http://i450.photobucket.com/albums/q...psrjoftdia.jpg

Hi Joey,
There are a fair amount of ticket stubs to this game out there & they continues to be highly collectible. The value comes down to condition and how many portions of the 4 piece ticket are part of the stub. I would estimate the value of yours to be $125- $175, give or take. If you follow me, a ticket stub with two sections would be more sought after than stubs with one, and ticket stubs with three sections would be the most collectible and also considerably harder to locate.

BTW, in my experience, when the ushers tore Braves stubs from this era they typically handed the patrons back a stub with either one or two sections.

I hope this helps!

JoeyFarino 03-18-2016 11:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Scott Garner (Post 1516504)
Hi Joey,
There are a fair amount of ticket stubs to this game out there & they continues to be highly collectible. The value comes down to condition and how many portions of the 4 piece ticket are part of the stub. I would estimate the value of yours to be $125- $175, give or take. If you follow me, a ticket stub with two sections would be more sought after than stubs with one, and ticket stubs with three sections would be the most collectible and also considerably harder to locate.

BTW, in my experience, when the ushers tore Braves stubs from this era they typically handed the patrons back a stub with either one or two sections.

I hope this helps!


Thanks alot scott! Makes perfect sense. Ive seen a couple full tickets for insane amount of money. But its s great ticket. Got mine for free from a seller a long time ago. Almost forgot i had it. Appreciate your help buddy

Scott Garner 03-18-2016 01:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JoeyFarino (Post 1516582)
Thanks alot scott! Makes perfect sense. Ive seen a couple full tickets for insane amount of money. But its s great ticket. Got mine for free from a seller a long time ago. Almost forgot i had it. Appreciate your help buddy

Glad to help.
BTW, a lot of the full tickets that are sold in auction have no seat numbers and would be considered proof tickets, not actual tickets that could gain you entrance to the game. I would much rather have the stub that allowed the patron to witness history, FWIW.

71buc 03-18-2016 05:08 PM

For whst its worth I paid $300 for my psa graded ticket that has three sections.

mickeymao34 03-19-2016 07:32 PM

Sweet piece of history no matter how many out there!

JoeyFarino 03-20-2016 12:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mickeymao34 (Post 1516985)
Sweet piece of history no matter how many out there!

Well said

71buc 04-30-2016 09:18 AM

Saw this closed sale on eBay

http://www.ebay.com/itm/1974-Hank-Aa...vip=true&rt=nc

Scott Garner 04-30-2016 12:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 71buc (Post 1533552)

Mike,
I saw that as well.
That is definitely the highest price that I have ever seen this ticket stub sell for. FYI, the one that I have in my collection rivals the condition and size of this stub (3 section stub).

mcgwirecom 04-30-2016 01:09 PM

That particular ticket was a long stub. They are far rarer. 90% of the tickets out there are the one section stub. I would estimate at around $100. I would have said higher but recently a catalog auction (can't remember which) had a lot of maybe 200+ of this ticket sell. Some were long stubs too. I've seen a lot more of them leaking out now. So if you need one I would hold out for a good price.

Gary Dunaier 05-07-2016 09:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Scott Garner (Post 1516620)
I would much rather have the stub that allowed the patron to witness history, FWIW.

What's your take on stubs from today's games, which technically do not exist in that these days tickets are scanned and not torn? So you can't tell the difference between one that allowed the fan to see the game and, for example, one from a season ticket holder who stayed home.

Scott Garner 05-07-2016 09:49 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Gary Dunaier (Post 1536420)
What's your take on stubs from today's games, which technically do not exist in that these days tickets are scanned and not torn? So you can't tell the difference between one that allowed the fan to see the game and, for example, one from a season ticket holder who stayed home.

Hi Gary,
Interesting question.
Since it is definitely a different era now, I would prefer to collect a MT ticket from whatever the event is.

My own personal preference for my collection is to find a scarcer version of the ticket if it exists (a suite ticket, a ticket that is embossed with metal foil, etc.) Something to differentiate, if that makes any sense.

smotan_02 05-08-2016 03:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 71buc (Post 1533552)

This one is relisted- always makes me wonder if the final price is correct. Relisted for double BTW.

Scott Garner 05-08-2016 04:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by smotan_02 (Post 1536451)
This one is relisted- always makes me wonder if the final price is correct. Relisted for double BTW.

FWIW, I suspect that perhaps the seller is the person that bought the lot of 200 of these tickets including some longer stubs in the recent auction that Randall Hahn referenced in his earlier post on this thread.

smotan_02 05-08-2016 05:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Scott Garner (Post 1536453)
FWIW, I suspect that perhaps the seller is the person that bought the lot of 200 of these tickets including some longer stubs in the recent auction that Randall Hahn referenced in his earlier post on this thread.

You're absolutely right. Seat numbers are different. Completely missed that when I first looked. Would be a heck of a profit of seller gets a sale even close to his asking price.

mcgwirecom 05-08-2016 06:00 AM

I found the auction site I was talking about. It's Huggins and Scott's 12/12/14 auction. Lot # 310. A hoard of 192 stubs sold for $7500. Not sure if that includes the buyers premium. But that would come out to under $40 per stub. But I look at it as an ensuing flood coming...

http://dec14.hugginsandscott.com/cgi...l?itemid=79283

smotan_02 05-08-2016 08:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mcgwirecom (Post 1536464)
I found the auction site I was talking about. It's Huggins and Scott's 12/12/14 auction. Lot # 310. A hoard of 192 stubs sold for $7500. Not sure if that includes the buyers premium. But that would come out to under $40 per stub. But I look at it as an ensuing flood coming...

http://dec14.hugginsandscott.com/cgi...l?itemid=79283

That's amazing. I can't believe the seller will see significant profit with these numbers. This might be an interesting case study in supply and demand.

Scott Garner 05-08-2016 08:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by smotan_02 (Post 1536513)
That's amazing. I can't believe the seller will see significant profit with these numbers. This might be an interesting case study in supply and demand.

Scotty,
The 1st few will bring a higher value until people catch on and then the prices will come back to reality. ;)

Gary Dunaier 05-14-2016 08:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Scott Garner (Post 1536425)
My own personal preference for my collection is to find a scarcer version of the ticket if it exists (a suite ticket, a ticket that is embossed with metal foil, etc.) Something to differentiate, if that makes any sense.

I know what you mean. But they can't be too scarce that only a hardcore specialist would know about them... they can't be too scarce that a general fan wouldn't believe it was real.

I've seen Mets tickets printed out at turnstiles, from fans who somehow got their tickets on the phone. (Apparently they put the barcode or QR code or some kind of code under the scanner, and that generates a ticket.) These appear to resemble box office style tickets in design, but are on paper. The only example I can share is this one, which is from the 2015 postseason, and for some reason is blank. I found it on the ground, all crinkled up as you can see, and wouldn't have saved it except that I never had a turnstile-printed ticket. Without doing any research, I'd guess that this would be the scarcest type of ticket.

https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/566/22...d48b8ab7_z.jpg

Maybe a print-at-home ticket from a historic game if it can be proven that it's an original printout (not a photocopy or a printout of a scan) that was printed on or before the date of the game, since the PDF file presumably still exists and can be printed out any time after the fact. (Yeah, a farfetched thought, but what the hey...)

Huck 05-15-2016 06:28 PM

The future ticket for historic events???
 
What do the ticket collectors out there think of this kind of item?

http://purchase.tickets.com/buy/MLBE...5339-896044133

Huck 05-15-2016 06:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mcgwirecom (Post 1536464)
I found the auction site I was talking about. It's Huggins and Scott's 12/12/14 auction. Lot # 310. A hoard of 192 stubs sold for $7500. Not sure if that includes the buyers premium. But that would come out to under $40 per stub. But I look at it as an ensuing flood coming...

http://dec14.hugginsandscott.com/cgi...l?itemid=79283

The usher would make a tidy profit at $100 per ticket.

71buc 05-21-2016 04:46 PM

Can't wait to see where this one goes

http://www.lelands.com/Auction/Aucti...me-Full-Ticket

Scott Garner 05-21-2016 06:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 71buc (Post 1541613)
Can't wait to see where this one goes

http://www.lelands.com/Auction/Aucti...me-Full-Ticket

Wow, that's a tough one to find in a full ticket...

mcgwirecom 05-21-2016 09:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by biohazard (Post 1539616)
What do the ticket collectors out there think of this kind of item?

http://purchase.tickets.com/buy/MLBE...5339-896044133

It's a made up collectible. They feel bad for not having season tickets so they try and make up for it with this type of thing. It is not collectible as a ticket, just as a souvenir.

The Mariners did a similar thing for Gaylord Perry's 300th win. The tickets look just like their box office type ticket but it actually says "Gaylord Perry's 300th Win" on the ticket. Some people really think it's a legitimate ticket!

Other teams sold unused seats after an event occurred like Nolan Ryan's last game pitched (9/22/93) in Seattle. They key to picking out the after-the-fact tickets is the date codes on them. They usually have the date purchased on it and you can see it was after the event. Clemens second 20 K game did this too.

But there were also teams that just reprinted season tickets as gifts for the season ticket holders like the Cards in 1998 with McGwire's 62nd and 70th homeruns. There is no way to tell them from the originals so they sell like the real deal. They just flooded the market with extra copies. I always thought the box office type to those games should be worth more because they weren't reprinted but people still prefer the season style so they are worth the most.

Scott Garner 05-22-2016 03:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mcgwirecom (Post 1541679)
It's a made up collectible. They feel bad for not having season tickets so they try and make up for it with this type of thing. It is not collectible as a ticket, just as a souvenir.

The Mariners did a similar thing for Gaylord Perry's 300th win. The tickets look just like their box office type ticket but it actually says "Gaylord Perry's 300th Win" on the ticket. Some people really think it's a legitimate ticket!

Other teams sold unused seats after an event occurred like Nolan Ryan's last game pitched (9/22/93) in Seattle. They key to picking out the after-the-fact tickets is the date codes on them. They usually have the date purchased on it and you can see it was after the event. Clemens second 20 K game did this too.

But there were also teams that just reprinted season tickets as gifts for the season ticket holders like the Cards in 1998 with McGwire's 62nd and 70th homeruns. There is no way to tell them from the originals so they sell like the real deal. They just flooded the market with extra copies. I always thought the box office type to those games should be worth more because they weren't reprinted but people still prefer the season style so they are worth the most.

+1

Huck 05-22-2016 05:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mcgwirecom (Post 1541679)
It's a made up collectible. They feel bad for not having season tickets so they try and make up for it with this type of thing. It is not collectible as a ticket, just as a souvenir.

The Mariners did a similar thing for Gaylord Perry's 300th win. The tickets look just like their box office type ticket but it actually says "Gaylord Perry's 300th Win" on the ticket. Some people really think it's a legitimate ticket!

Other teams sold unused seats after an event occurred like Nolan Ryan's last game pitched (9/22/93) in Seattle. They key to picking out the after-the-fact tickets is the date codes on them. They usually have the date purchased on it and you can see it was after the event. Clemens second 20 K game did this too.

But there were also teams that just reprinted season tickets as gifts for the season ticket holders like the Cards in 1998 with McGwire's 62nd and 70th homeruns. There is no way to tell them from the originals so they sell like the real deal. They just flooded the market with extra copies. I always thought the box office type to those games should be worth more because they weren't reprinted but people still prefer the season style so they are worth the most.

Interesting. Every collecting niche in this hobby has a story. So, eventually all full paper tickets go the way of vinyl records (which are making a comeback)? Have all MLB teams gone the digital print at home at the park etc.? Clearly, the teams save some money on paper and printing expense. Do you think that when a milestone is approaching teams will offer the choice of a paper ticket?

mcgwirecom 05-22-2016 03:04 PM

As of this year these teams do not have season tickets...

White Sox
Dodgers
Indians
Royals
Blue Jays
Nationals
Marlins
Braves

And the teams that do have season tickets sometimes offer electronic tickets also, so all the season ticket holders do not necessarily have physical tickets.

But the teams that do not print season tickets do have a box office at the ballpark which will print a box office ticket. So the only way to get the team logo ticket for many of these teams is to have someone go to the box office for you. The only thing they offer is a souvenir ticket for a special accomplishment, like the one mentioned in a previous post about the Scherzer 20K commemorative ticket. If that type of ticket does it for you, great. But as a collector I know that ticket would not get you into the game, and thats what a ticket is supposed to do!

People should start complaining to their teams about the disappearing ticket. It's a shame.


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