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Ted Wiliams
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I saw this ball and other items in Iconic Memorabilia Auction all the pieces that I questioned where authenticated by Justin Priddy. This is why third party opinions drive me crazy. Would love to know what you think.
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Ted Williams
Open "D" and open "A" what a dead giveaway.
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Agree
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The T & the s are also very suspect
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The auto looks fake to me as well....
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I like the first "i" in "Williams."
The second "i" I'm not so sure. (Tongue firmly planted in cheek.) |
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If I was a crook I would offer you a great deal on 3 baseballs just like the pictured one |
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And yes, point taken. I can't prove the opposite. |
My max bid for this ball is five cents.
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I wouldn't buy it
I would have to agree with the "clowns" on this. Looks terrible IMO.
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He might be right, the "ball" may be authentic.
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pm sent
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I can express an opinion, from my experience with Ted Williams items I have seen, owned etc in over 50 years of collecting. Mr. Williams signature, even after his strokes had a very natural flow to it. He did not use points as shown on the pictured example. While this signer followed the structure of Mr. Williams flow in the bottom part of the signature, he did not do the same at the top of each letter. This is due in part to hesitation in ones writting skills and in the split second that he had to think about what he was doing. You can do the same at home, take a pen and paper and have someone give you a difficult word to write. One that you have to think about how it is spelled while you write it. Even in your own handwritting, you will hesitate when you have to think about it thus causing the same minipulation as in the signature pictured above. Sorry it's human nature Jim Murphy Philadelphia Bat Company |
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you are right no one can do the same one everytime but the sturcture remain constant
And the structure is not consistant with an authentic Ted Williams signature in my opinion Jim Murphy |
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disregard
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Pass
I would stay clear of the ball as it full of differences from known true samples in my collection.
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Is it fake or real,
I'll follow up as if I were you. Did you see Ted sign the item? Or are you relying on someones opinion? |
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TheSquire
TheSquire won't be posting anymore in this thread per having to have a full name out in public. He would rather not have his name in lights so it's his choice. No one can have debates and (even friendly) arguments on the board without having their name by their post. For the record I am done asking folks to cooperate and am putting their names in their sig lines when they don't adhere to the privacy rules. Forewarned is fair warned. regards
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I think the WU telegram is real--just an earlier Ted. Much better flow than the fake baseball!
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I gotta say I have to laugh at a self proclaimed "expert on Ted Williams" guy who won't even put his name out there.
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http://cgi.ebay.com/TED-WILLIAMS-Sig...item1c19b0be6d
So, this one has been authenticated, but all the armchair experts here are calling the one in question fake? This is the number one reason I do not collect autographs. No one knows what they're talking about. |
I hate to let steam out of your engine Squire, but I do not see any similarities to the ball the was shown by the OP. The points that were made about the open ended "d" and "a" in the suspected forgery, bears no similarities to the JSA Certed Williams you referenced amongst a couple of other points that even I can tell.
I don't claim to be an “armchair expert”,:D but I did stay at a Holiday Inn once. BTW, squire, why the need to remain anonymous, who cares, post your name already... this is a great discussion and maybe we can all learn something. FUDD |
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Open Ended
I wonder if he signs his own name open ended as well. Ban him, and move on. Kyle Barniak, member
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Me Too
+1, with open ended letters...LOL
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When I saw the ball I imediately thought fake. I thought of a book I have
that had a pic of 12 ted signed baseballs with half being fake. The ball in the first post looks identical to the fake BB's in that photograph. As far as 3rd party stuff goes, what works well for me is not declaring something as good or bad, but asking myself the question,"would I feel comfortable spending my money on this item?" bottom line- DO YOUR HOMEWORK! |
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I have often wondered about the authenticity of my Ted Williams photo. What do you guys think?
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Here is as good as you can get for Ted Williams,,, after a friend and I spent one amazing hour with him in Florida, he signed two photos for me.
Here is one of them. Listening to the stories he told us were the highlight of all my years in this hobby. I should not fail to mention that on this trip we spent about eight hours with Monte Irvin, taking him to lunch and dinner. He signed about 20 original news photographs for me and told me the story behind each one of them. To this day it is still one of the best days of my life. |
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The open D and open A where part of thousands of balls sold on shop at home. I can tell you that B and J supplied them along with Howards and Madison Sports. The ball sold for $133 nice deal for someone. The shame of it all is that it was not authentic.
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You weren't banned....
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Auction co. uses primarily JSA and PSA/DNA, so then why did ACE authenticate this?
I wonder what JSA and/or PSA/DNA thought of it? :-) Hmmm... DanC |
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I've heard this rumor as well, but I have no idea if that's all it is or has anyone ever uncovered any actual evidence showing John Henry forged his father's signature? |
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