![]() |
Gehrig 1925 Exhibit
So I am a huge fan of the man and player. Was wondering how his 1925 Exhibit is viewed within the larger collecting community-- in terms of it being his RC.
Edited to say that it seems clear to me now that it is indeed his RC. This card seems tragically undervalued to me, considering the man's character, the legacy of his famous speech, the incredible stats, the hallowed record held for so long, and of course the sadness at how he was struck down in his prime. The salient thing for me is the grace with which he conducted himself in the face of that; to consider yourself lucky in that circumstance...amazing. I have to believe that in time, once Ruth's cards are done skyrocketing lol, perhaps another film, widespread doc on MLB channel, or a special on ESPN will help bring Gehrig (and in turn his cards) the props they deserve. |
York
Hi Matt
I am one who consider the 1927 York Caramel (type2) as the Lou Gehrig RC. I do have some bias because it's my latest pickup. (posted in the July thread:D) This card was on my list of "dreams" for many many years, and I sometimes still pinch myself when looking at it... Anyway I think The exhibit folks have a legitimate argument as well, but this is just my opinion, I think the York fits better by some of the common designated "rules". US Caramel wouldn't qualify in my mind. You can't go wrong with either, but I think you should have both just in case...:p |
If exhibit cards are cards then yes. We have a nationally-distributed card of Lou Gehrig from 1925. It isn't a postcard [not that there's anything wrong with postcards, if that's what you collect]. It isn't a photograph. It wasn't cut from something else or turned into a card from something else. It isn't outlandishly sized [if so, then are Topps Supers from 1964-70-71 also not cards?]. It is ACC-listed. About the only knock on it is that it wasn't sold with something else or to promote something else, which I find to be a facile distinction, frankly, since that would also boot most "W" cards from the list of cards. But I could be wrong, so all of you with 1925 Gehrigs, please discard them immediately by sending them to me.
|
Like Adam said, the '25 Exhibit of Gehrig certainly makes sense to me as his Rookie Card. Gehrig also appears in the W590 strip card series which is most often dated 1925-31 although most would probably agree that the Gehrig card was most likely produced after 1925.
|
I have always thought his '25 Exhibit is his rookie. I bought a raw one in a Mastro auction, about 12-14 yrs ago raw, and it came back a 70 which eventually got bumped to an 80. Great looking pose. If you don't count Exhibits then I would go with his York Caramel also...
|
I'm personally of the mind that the 1925 Exhibit is the way to go. Now the big question is who will sell me one?
|
If there such a thing as a Rookie Card then the 1925 Exhibit would surely qualify. You have to make up rules for the things to even exist, I don't see how you disqualify the Exhibit.
|
1 Attachment(s)
Not interested in selling it but here's mine................
|
Nice Phil!
|
Thanks, Jeff.
One piece of advice, if you are buying one of these raw, look very closely at the color tint, there exists the exact same image in a blue-gray tint which was produced in 1926 as opposed to the gray tint from 1925. Sometimes, it is not that easy to tell the two apart if you don't have another example available for a side-by-side comparison. I think that, from time to time, even the grading companies have gotten them wrong. |
Phil's killing me with that card!
|
Yup not sure how it would not be his exhibit. Happy with mine but would like to purchase/trade for an SGC downgrade or upgrade anyone?
http://i112.photobucket.com/albums/n...t-Gehrig-4.jpg |
Great card
I'll throw my vote in for this being Gehrig's Rookie. I am looking for this card as well. It's not on the top of my list right now, so I will keep my eyes open for you.
|
1925 Exhibits Lou Gehrig Rookie Card - PSA EX 5
I will post a PSA 5 up for sale in the sell section if anyone is interested.
|
I think the premium that the 1925 Exhibits gets shows that most collectors consider this Gehrig's rookie card. The 1932 US Caramel card is expensive also, but not out of line when you consider the Ruth card from the same set. One thing to note for the 1925 Exhibits card is that the card should have a definitive gray shade. On some cards, the TPG's have mislabeled the bluish 1926 Exhibits incorrectly as a 1925 Exhibits. Also, note the 1927 Exhibits Gehrig which has the same image, but has the greenish tint, and different fonts for the caption.
|
1 Attachment(s)
What evidence do we have to support that the w590 Gehrig was produced after 1925 and not with the initial run? I always considered his w590 and the 25 Exhibit to be his rookies. The w590 has always been clearly the more affordable of the two but shows a terrific likeness of Gehrig which I don't believe was used on any other card.
Attachment 106112 |
Gehrig rookie
1 Attachment(s)
I'm partial to this 1923 Type I Photo which ended up being the image used on his 1925 Exhibit:
|
Brian:
I do not have any hard evidence indicating that the W590 Gehrig card was not issued in 1925. Since 1925 was his first full MLB season (1923 & 1924 contained only a scant few at-bats), it is much more likely that his card was issued after that season. Of course, it could have been issued later in the season or right after the season ended and still be a 1925 issue. The best way to tell would be if someone has seen a complete strip including the Gehrig card and then look at the possible dates of all of the other players based on their team designations, etc. I have seen a number of strips from this issue but have never seen one with the Gehrig card included. Does anyone have one that they care to post? |
Great card
But that has to be the most awkward pose captured in baseball card photography....sounds like the idea for a new thread....
|
What do you think is a fair offer if you were thinking of buying?
http://www.ebay.com/itm/1925-Exhibit...gAAOSwq~tZXpP3 |
Considering a psa 3 sold for 60k and and sgc 40 sold for 32k THIS YEAR, his price doesn't seem unreasonable. Though it was suspected that this was one of the cards that were "manipulated," it is a very rare true rookie card of a legend. I would throw a 30k offer and go from there, though there are varying opinions on this board as to what a "best offer" should be. You can always hang your hat on the qualifier.
|
Nice call by MattyC on the meteoric rise of this card. Four years ago to the day! Should have bought every one that I could find.
|
It is easy to see from the awkward stance where Lou's strength as a power hitter came from - the big butt and tree trunk legs.
|
Besides the pencil writing on the front, how was this card manipulated?
|
Quote:
|
Other Gehrig Exhibits?
So the 1925 Gehrig Exhibit is now recognized as THE rookie card and consequently is super spendy. How are the second year cards doing value wise? i.e.. the 1926-29 Exhibits which have two variations, the "batting" (looks like '33 Goudey pic) and the "portrait". I haven't seen the 1926-29's play out in auction for a long time - I missed them if/when available. Also, I think there is a 1927 Gehrig Exhibit as well. How have these cards done? PSA populations appear quite low.
|
Price fluxuations happening with that card. Goodwin sold one under 20k a couple of months this ago. LOTG sold one for 30k which didn't seem any better than the Goodwin one. I wouldn't pay more than 20k for it. Yes, I saw the HA ones that fetched a lot more a year ago, but since then the prices have come down. Be patient as more will turn up soon including the next LOTG auction which is much nicer than the eBay one
|
To me its in the 25k-35k range I would list it for auction if i had 15-20k into it..
|
I paid $1,500 for my '27 Exhibit back in May. Maybe I overpaid some, not the first time for me :) but,
I wanted something from Gehrig's first MVP year and from the Yankees historic 1927 murderer's row campaign. Love the pose. Population is pretty low. Didn't want to risk the price escalating like the '25 exhibit. So I took the plunge. Don't regret it one bit! http://www.net54baseball.com/picture...ictureid=22531 |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
It's no longer available. It didn't sell on eBay, which isn't to say it didn't sell, but it's no longer listed.
|
It's the second or third time it's been listed and then pulled.
|
2 Attachment(s)
Quote:
|
Personally, I do not think postcards or exhibits are cards so for me this would not be his rookie card.
|
The '25 exhibits isn't a postcard. It is postcard-size, but not a postcard. It is blank-backed.
How about if it were just as tall, but thinner like a Namath rookie? Or does it need to be small like a T206, but no bigger than a 52 topps? Does it need stats or bios on the back? Are blank-backs "cards" in your opinion? How about redemption cards with coupons that were to be traded for ice cream? Does it need advertising, or does it have to come with gum or tobacco to be a card? With bread? With candy? In a magazine? In packs of hot dogs? Do you consider T3's to be cards? Stahl Meyer (oversized)? Or what about Old Judge Cabinets? Are those "cards?" Please tell me what a baseball card is. I thought it was cardboard images of players which were distributed to the public. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:
Fixed for Peter And to clarify, the card on the left is not really a card, but the one on the right is. |
There was just a great thread on what a "rookie card" is. This will never be agreed upon. However it is pretty clear the consensus of the hobby is that the 25 Exhibit is Gehrig's rookie.
|
Thanks Orlando. As far as the rest of it goes, I don't think there is really any good way to define a card, someone could always find some inconsistency in your definition. Not sure why it matters, as the old cliché goes, CWYL. Anyhow there were tons of debates on this question back in the days when Hal Lewis was obsessed with collecting rookie cards of HOFers, and I think some of Phil Garry's posts provoked some good discussions too.
Anyone wanna talk about the SGC 60? Seems not. |
Quote:
|
for what it's worth -- and apparently not much -- the whiteness of the exhibit Gehrig also struck me as odd when I saw it online in the auction
|
Make sure you know it's a 1925 Exhibit and not a 1926. Can't trust any holder from any TPG on the Gehrig rookie Exhibit. I hear PSA uses a consultant to help identify/figure out what the actual designation and year is on them now.
Orlando valid points and looking forward to Jays response. Would make for a great discussion to talk about 19th century cards and then compare to postcards and exhibits. Guess we can't use the SCD "Baseball Card" price guide as it prices out many 19th century items along with postcards as they felt everything belong in the baseball guide. Interesting strategy someone is doing on the LOTG Gehrig as it went from 15k to over 40k with just 2 bids. Does that really stop people from bidding on it who really want to win it? |
That big jump strategy in bidding was probably due to the card having a reserve and now that reserve has been met.
|
Personally, I think the best (albeit not perfect)definition of a baseball card is one that Rob Lifson came up with: a baseball card is an image of a ballplayer/ballplayers on a collectible card available to the general public, intended to advertise and promote the sale of a product other than itself. Of course there are other definitions, many less restrictive. However, I think Rob's was the traditional definition. Under this definition, postcards and exhibits are not baseball cards. That doesn't mean that they are not great collectibles, just not (to me) baseball cards.
|
Jay by that definition nothing after they stopped including gum in the packs is a baseball card?
|
Jay - what is your feeling on strip cards or similar issues such as R315?
|
honestly who cares what Jay considers is a card and what is not? I imagine most of you...like myself will collect what we want...despite what one person thinks?
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 09:45 AM. |