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1914 CJ Joe Jackson PSA 2 to SGC 5
https://www.blowoutforums.com/showpo...postcount=3297
Seemed worthy of its own thread. Nice 65K bump. Welcome, SGC. |
Sadly when folks buy flips instead of actual cards this is what you get.
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Yikes. This and a T206 red Cobb SGC 6.5. Not good
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Color is often hard to determine from online scans due to different scanner settings. That wouldn't have necessarily been a red flag. |
Looking closer I’m not sure the Jackson’s are the same card. Of course we could not be sure unless someone still has it in a PSA 2.
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That I agree with. Circling a couple of dots on the back of 2 cards that look similar does not prove they're the same card.
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I own a print shop and any defect that happens to a sheet of paper like Baseball card goes on all the sheets printed until noticed by the printer. So similar dots, scuffing, hickeys ect can be the exact same on multiples cards. Like the 1990 Frank Thomas NNOF, that was a dent in the black blanket.
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2 Attachment(s)
The OP on Blowout suggests that the red turned maroon because of the chemicals. It could be, but I’m thinking that the scans have something to do with it. What struck me was how the scratches between the face and the bat disappeared. Could it have been that they added color to that particular area, or the entire background? Could that explain the change in color? Is it even the same card?
Edit: There is a stain on the 2 that appears to be the same shape and size of a much lighter stain on the 5. Look at where it reads “Orleans,” then under that “late in 1910.” The stain goes on a bit south from there. It’s kind of shaped like Texas. Anyone else see that? |
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Definitely the same card.
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Any chance 2 cards that came out of a box of cracker Jacks 100 years ago could have similar looking stains in the same spot? Maybe one shaped like something covered in caramel was pressed against it.
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I think it is likely the same card too.
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Also back damage on the upper right that's been worked on, you can still traces of it and patterns match up, easily seen to the right of the "Cleve-"
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Is it possible all this is just a bad dream?
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Same card
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Just checked the registry. No one has that card listed but the cert is still active. Assuming this card and others have been cleaned up and resubmitted maybe these guys could send the old flips back in an unmarked envelope. It should help everyone to have more accurate population numbers.
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I’ll repeat what I said a few days ago. All the graders, regardless of the company, have trouble picking out cards that are doctored. Given enough time, and a library of before images, they could do it. Unfortunately, they have neither.
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So what are we paying them for? Maybe we need to start a Graded Card Submitter Support Group to try to stop this vicious cycle. It's like drug peddling and addiction.
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You are paying for a one minute or less look at most cards. If you want someone to spend a half hour on a card then grading fees will be a lot higher. People can’t legitimately expect a lot for $7.
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It was rhetorical, but with a $99 max declared value for bulk submissions, these weren't submitted at that level. Some of these cost between $1,000 and $5,000 for the service level to be graded.
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This hobby is shot. Collectors need to understand that if they continue to collect baseball cards their collections will contain altered cards, and that they will not be getting what they paid for. You either have to accept that fact, or find a new hobby. What a shame.
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The constant questioning and denial of some leave me to wonder how many PWCC cards they are sitting on.
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Ah, the dam will break; they just don't believe it yet. They're at some earlier stage of the grieving process.
And some will have already gotten their refunds, and the ones that hold out the longest risk losing it. This is why PSA and SGC and BGS need to decertify all of those altered cards in holders. Collectors will clutch them to their bosom and never let them go without it. |
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The 5 was graded at the National according to Brent.
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https://www.blowoutforums.com/showpo...postcount=2827 |
Is that Cracker Jack for sure the same card ?
Removing Gloss, how in the world can they miss that ? The top right corner ? What kinda special chemicals were used on that idk it’s not that hard if this is the same card....how did SGC miss this crapola...it’s disgusting |
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It's interesting that of all the cards outed on Blowout so far, I don't think there's been a single instance when someone came forward and said he still owned the "pre" card. |
Here's more proof it's the same card:
The larger circle is paper loss while the small circle was recolored. (sorry, the PWCC image is not the best of quality, even though it's "High Res") Heritage PSA 2: http://www.net54baseball.com/picture...ictureid=27048 PWCC SGC 5: http://www.net54baseball.com/picture...ictureid=27047 |
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I assume that at the National there will be more than a few collectors who will get into verbal confrontations with PSA. Should be interesting. Somebody needs to film it.
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Here's a sad statement: I miss Battlefield/Candyman!
They were entertaining and all they did was photoshop and over grade |
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I have mentioned before I use PWCC for all of my consignments. There's always an auction running, they get the highest prices, and have the lowest fees. I am still not convinced yet at their level of involvement in this scandal, and think it's very possible card doctors use their service for the same reasons I do. |
I know that there are a lot of guys who have some amazing ungraded cards. But isn’t it fair to say that if you are a TPG receiving a really nice 1914 Joe Jackson at this stage in the game, there is a 90% chance that the card has already been graded before, and the owner wasn’t happy with the grade and/or altered it? Wouldn’t they look at a card like that a bit more skeptically, and assume that at best, the owner wasn’t happy with the previous grade and broke open for a regrade? If I see a raw 1914 CJ JJ at a show, I can tell you that my first thought would be “no thanks. You either got an ‘A’ or the card presents much better than the grade you got and didn’t like.”
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The population of slabbed cards is a combination of clean cards and (reasonably) well-doctored cards.
The population of unslabbed cards is a combination of clean cards and poorly doctored cards. So it seems, as long as you're at least as good at detecting alterations as the graders are, as seems to apply to an increasingly large proportion of Net54 members, that it's safer to buy raw since the altered ones will be fairly obvious. |
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