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T206 HOF tiers
Over the past few years, we've seen some surges in several T206 hall of famers. I know this discussion has been brought up in the past, but I think some things have changed since then. What would you consider the "tiers" of T206 HOFers if you had to group them by perceived demand. Let's look at it from the standpoint of players (not poses/variations) and exclude the super rarities (e.g. Wagner, Plank, etc..). My initial thought is:
Tier 1 - Ty Cobb Tier 2 - Walter Johnson, Cy Young Tier 3 - Mathewson, Speaker Tier 4 - Lajoie, E. Collins Tier 5 - M. Brown, E. Walsh, A. Joss, W. Keeler, Z. Wheat, J. Chesbro Tier 6 - S. Crawford, C. Bender, J. Tinker, J. Evers, F. Chance Tier 7 - Everyone else I realize the portraits skew everything a bit. A portrait Lajoie could be considered Tier 3 or a Mathewson portrait in Tier 2. But, if we're just looking at the players and the current conditions, where am I off? |
I like
what you have compiled....pretty close:)
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I'd get rid of Tier 4 and push Eddie Collins down / LaJoie up.
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Personally, I would group Mathewson with Johnson and Young.
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I agree that there's no way Eddie Collins belongs in a tier with Lajoie. He's treated as a mid-tier HOFer by the market, despite his great stats. Below are the current SMR prices for a PSA 5 of each T206 card of these players, grouped by the OP's suggested tiers. Clearly Cobb is in a class of his own, followed by Young and WaJo. Matty could arguably go in that second tier as well, and Speaker is not far behind. After that comes Lajoie, then Tinker-Evers-Chance, then (arguably) one tier containing the rest of these players, including Collins. Some other players would also belong in that tier, like Home Run Baker ($450 for a PSA 5, higher than Collins). Of course, SMR prices don't necessarily correspond directly to the market (you could probably double most of them), but they seem to be a reasonably accurate measure of relative value.
Cobb green: 15,000 Cobb red: 5,750 Cobb bat on: 5,750 Cobb bat off: 5,500 Young portrait: 3,500 Young bare hand: 1,950 Young glove: 1,750 WaJo portrait: 3,000 WaJo hands at chest: 1,650 Matty portrait: 3,000 Matty white cap: 1,750 Matty dark cap: 1,350 Speaker: 1,350 Lajoie portrait: 750 Lajoie bat: 625 Lajoie throwing: 550 E. Collins: 425 M. Brown Cubs: 485 M. Brown portrait: 475 M. Brown Chicago: 425 Walsh: 525 Joss portrait: 500 Joss hands at chest: 425 Keeler portrait: 650 Keeler bat: 550 Wheat: 500 Chesbro: 450 Crawford throwing 400 Crawford bat: 375 Bender portrait: 450 Bender trees: 400 Bender no trees: 375 Tinker portrait: 700 Tinker knees: 600 Tinker bat off: 495 Tinker bat on: 495 Evers portrait: 575 Evers Cubs: 515 Evers Chicago: 490 Chance yellow: 575 Chance red: 550 Chance batting: 450 |
Some good insight and research. Maybe my inclusion of Collins is wishful thinking. I don't understand why he's not more sought after, given his performance and the lone, beautiful red portrait in the T206 set.
I did forget Baker, who seems to garner more attention than players with similar output. Admittedly, his mid-grade examples don't seem to come up as often and they always have big price tags. |
LaJoie clearly in front of Speaker at least his portrait is. 750 for psa not even close you can't even get a 4 for 1k these days. Granted the other cards trade for far more than those SMR prices cited but I'd much prefer a LaJoie portrait over the Speaker in PSA 5. Similarly I think that Mathewson portrait rivals the Young Portrait but not the Johnson. I'd say Tier 1 Cobb, Tier 2 Johnson, Tier 3 Mathewson, Young, Tier 4 LaJoie, Speaker.
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Tier 1 Cobb
Tier 2 Johnson, Cy Young Tier 3 Mathewson, LaJoie Tier 4 Speaker, Collins. (Evers, Tinkers, Brown, Joss Portraits) Tier 5 Joss, Baker, TEC ect Tier 6 the rest of the HOFers |
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Lajoie -V- Collins
I think the '33 Goudey Lajoie raised his stock in the collecting world.
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young should have an up arrow
i agree with those who put mathewson/wajo/young on the same tier currently but i think young (at least the portrait) will eventually break upward from mathewson for a couple of reasons:
1. as unbreakable a record as it gets in the most followed pitching category (wins) 2. pitching award creates name recognition among all generations some consider the wajo portrait with piedmont 150 back a rookie card so it will likely retain its relative value from that. |
1. Cobb
2. WaJo, Young 3. Matty 4. Speaker, Lajoie 5. Keeler, Brown, Walsh, Joss, Tinker, Chesbro, Wadell, E. Collins 6. Everyone else |
T206
what about Jimmy Collins ..is he T 206 era ?
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Definitely Waddell would be in a tier higher than common HOFer.
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That is a good guess. I think slightly higher except for autographed ones. :eek:
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This is how I would rank...or at least how I collect.
1. Cobb 2. a. Johnson b. Mathewson c. Young 3. a. Speaker b. Lajoie 4. a. Brown b. Keeler c. Collins d. Waddell 5. a. Walsh b. Crawford c. Joss 6. Tinker to Evers to Chance 7. Everyone else |
If Wagner had been produced in the same numbers as Cobb or others on the list, where would he rank? Equal to Cobb? I would put him no lower than #2, along with Young, Johnson and Matty.
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Its hard to separate the allure of the Wagner card from the player. But, Speaker was comparable and his T206 is a rookie. I would give Wagner a slight nod over Speaker, but most consider Speaker a distant tier 3.
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My quick take on it...
Tier 1 - Ty Cobb Tier 2 - Johnson, Matty, Young, Wagner (the player) Tier 3 - Lajoie, Speaker, Plank (the player) Tier 4 - E. Collins, M. Brown, Walsh, Joss, Keeler, Waddell Tier 5 - Crawford, Wheat, Chesbro Tier 6 - Everyone else (which could be further tiered) |
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That PSA link is helpful.
Maybe someone who's good with spreadsheets (not me), can re-organize it all by rank? Some insightful take-aways. |
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http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/g...%20HOF%202.jpg |
Ah, thanks. the little button in the upper right did it!
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That's one set where the weight should have been adjusted to allow for more than a 10 point max. No way 10 commons should equal the Wagner.
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I'm surprised that they give Evers Blue Sky an equal weight with the Young, Matty and Johnson portraits.
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Sean- they factor in rarity, besides the desirability of the player. That pose was printed one year, I believe, so it's tougher.
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All the Chicago NL players with "Cubs" across chest are scarcer and more desirable than those with "Chicago" running vertically, IMO.
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McGraw gets little love when it comes to demand. His cards seem to fall on the lowest tier on average.
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delete.....
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How do you look at it from just the standpoint of players (no poses or variations)with T206s? Poses and variations are a huge part of T206s....If you eliminate these, then what is the criteria exactly? |
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If we want to look at specific cards from each player, your point makes a lot of sense. The Lajoie vs. Collins debate is no different than the Speaker vs. Wagner debate. One is certainly more popular than the other. Their performance was much closer than their popularity. |
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