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So, here's what 475K will get you these days:
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For 475K I'd rather a playing days card of each of the inaugural class, along with a smattering of other players to complete my "grail" list.
I'll never tell other people how to spend their money, but it blows my mind. |
How ironic - half a Wagner sells for half a million.
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Man, give me 475k and 18-24 months and I could build a very respectable 300 card collection.
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And in a few years the buyer will sell this for double or restore it and sell it for triple.
Regardless they are happy since they bid on it. Not for me but of course not in my budget. With that money I would focus on Ruth and Jackson none that are half baked |
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A different perspective
In perspective ...
This would buy 3 years of cancer treatment for a child at St Jude's Children's Research Hospital. This would provide 190,000 meals at our local mission. For the cost of a half a piece of cardboard. Tim |
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I thought for sure it was going to be something like.....
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I have heard about those companies that offer a "partial interest" in iconic sportscards, but this seems a bit extreme.
At this point, maybe Topps should buy it, cut it into 30-50 smaller pieces and overlay those pieces over a T206 reprint, get them encased and randomly insert them in packs so 30-50 people could own a small piece of Baseball's Holy Grail. It would be visually more appealing and just as significant as owning 50%. |
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Why do people exaggerate so much!
It's not half a card, it's easily 60, maybe 70 %. :-) |
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I would pay $475k for Half A Wagner than a logoman 1/1 who start playing in 2020.
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An affordable Wagner for someone. Well, good for them and congrats on the purchase.
That sort of money is what is going towards my retirement home. I can live in that, I cannot live in the Wagner card. Cheers, |
Apparently an autographed 1/1 card of a player who is still in the minors sold for $474K the other day.
For the buyer's sake, I hope the player pans out. https://www.beckett.com/news/2020-bo...ls-for-474000/ |
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I guess the Yankees are pretty high on him, having signed him for $5.1M as a 16 year old: https://www.si.com/mlb/yankees/news/tampa-tarpons-manager-rachel-balkovec-praises-new-york-yankees-prospect-jasson-dominguez#:~:text=But%20the%20Yankees'%20new%20Low ,he's%20doing%20behind%20the%20scenes.&text=Fair%2 0or%20not%2C%20the%20spotlight,%2Dyear%2Dold%20in% 202019. |
Hype machine on this kid has been off the charts for a while. "The Martian"
May turn out to be a very nice player. May not. Mets had a five tool phenom a few years ago Fernando Martinez who was supposed to the second coming of Willie Mays. Didn't work out too well. Sure fans of other teams can easily pull up their own examples. What doesn't make sense to me about this is Juan Soto has turned into an amazing player. Has established himself as a bona fide superstar. Would his 1/1/ refractor today sell for this much? I guess maybe. How much could this card really appreciate. If he turns into the next Mickey Mantle in two years is this going to be worth more than a Honus Wagner card all of a sudden? Just don't understand the investment thesis here. And it's an investment nothing else. Whoever paid this likely has never see the kid take a swing. Quote:
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Wagner
How much is the auction fee?
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On its face, the notion that the card of someone who never has taken a swing in the majors costs more than the cards of icons of the game, it is sheer lunacy-- it is the economics of this high stakes gambling game the participants play, the agreed-upon ante amongst them, that results in these sky high prices for these cards. Because it surely has zero to do with achievement on the field or even potential at these numbers, relative to what cards of the true greats cost. |
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It depends if you are a glass half empty or glass half full person.
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"you paid how much for that?" :p |
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Not even in the same ballpark, but I bought this severed card several years ago. I still have no regrets.
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half
but from the other side of the fence..
a guy ( with money of course) ...has a chance to finally COMPLETE the all time classic T 206 set .....not many out there that can say that |
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Very well said!
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Apparently the guy who bought the Jasson Dominquez Superfactor card for $474K also bid $500K on a Zion Williamson card that ultimately sold for for $594K.
This buyer of the Dominguez was interviewed and he claims that he bought a 1/1 Wander Franco Superfractor for $100,000 and that while many thought that was too much at the time, it’s market value today is in the $2 million-plus range. Wander Franco is yet another "Five-Tool talent" (power, hitting for average, running, fielding, throwing) who may end up being Fernando Tatis and Vlad Guerrero Jr. wrapped into one, but $2Million ??? What if he gets injured? https://www.actionnetwork.com/mlb/ja...ion-williamson |
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You only have to get rich once....and to Quote the Great Lefty Gomez “I’d rather be lucky then good.”
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Amazing what a hidden reserve and one bidder can do
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Does anybody wonder how those 1/1 cards are distributed? Is it going to be like those McDonalds Monopoly game pieces where the big prize tickets are handled by "security" personnel that are supposed to "randomly" have the game pieces added to the common game pieces? I'll try not to laugh too hard if we find out that these 1/1 or 1/2 potentially million dollar cards are pushed to friends and associates of the card companies claiming to distribute them. How's that for a conspiracy theory! |
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Funny, I asked about whether there was an equivalent Juan Soto 1/1 refractor. Well here's the story.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bu9S4OmEr6Y Quote:
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