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Please help settle a FB debate. Was the T206 Wagner EVER made with a Piedmont back?
Enquiring minds want to know....Someone on Facebook is telling me that the T206 Wagner WAS INDEED produced with a Piedmont back. My apologies as I am sure this has been brought up many years ago.
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Yes. The PSA 8 is one of them. It was not factory-issued as a Piedmont however.
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I don't think there are any confirmed examples of a Piedmont Wagner from a pack, but others may correct me.
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I believe there are 3 known and in major TPG holders and I've seen two of them.
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Why bother checking FB? FB is loaded with haters! Stick with net54baseball.com here please!
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Hi
On this forum there was a link that showed all the known wagners with pictures front and back Does anyone have that link. That would help |
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According to PSA there are "approximately 60-75 or so known (total) copies in the hobby today. Keep in mind that most of the surviving Wagners have Sweet Caporal backs. Only a few exhibit Piedmont backs, which includes the finest example of them all."
When they refer to the "finest example of all" they are of course referring to the PSA 8 Gretzky copy (which was trimmed/hand cut from a sheet). https://www.psacard.com/cardfacts/ba...s-wagner/18155 |
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As we all know, there's nothing more important than being right on the internet. Godspeed, bobby w.
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The Cobb/Edwards Honus Wagner had a Piedmont back and it was...oh, wait...never mind.
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yes
the few piedy s are printers scrap....
similiar to the planks scraps...:) |
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The real question is, did Andrew's Wagner have a Piedmont back?:D
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Or, is it just semantics? |
Please help settle a FB debate. Was the T206 Wagner EVER made with a Piedmont back?
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In this case, the Gretzky Wagner was not factory cut to begin with. It was part of a larger sample group with other cards in it, or was likely from a sample strip or factory oddity. The assertion of alteration here is due to the fact that it was hand cut to make it look like it was a factory issue that would have gone into a package of Piedmont cigarettes. At some point you could certainly argue that all this is semantics — if the card measures within tolerance, which PSA claims it does. But the fact of the matter is when you have an item so nearly unique as this, and it has an established provenance, the real story comes out sooner or later. Those familiar with this card claim it is altered because it was handcut, and it’s in a slab that represents it as a factory cut issue. Then there was the whole slip up were Bill Mastro admitted that that is exactly what he did to it… Either way, whether you consider that card altered or not - there is no disputing the fact that it is still the most valuable baseball card in the world. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Thanks for the explanation.
I have heard of cards (slabbed or not) being referred to as being “sheet cut” and always wondered why the “Wagner” was not. I assume that the majority of “sheet cut” cards are hand cut so that they resemble a “factory” card just like the “Wagner.” |
My biggest issue with the Gretzky Wagner is that the way it is graded is simply not correct. There are tons of T206s available to buy that are clearly hand cut/printers scrap, including all of the Old Mill SL Browns. Everyone knows those cards are printers scrap, they get PSA A or SGC A grades, and they still command an absolute fortune because they are incredibly rare. The Gretzky Wagner should be graded a PSA A, and because of its provenance and story, it would still command an astronomical figure.
Hand cut/trimmed cards should get an A letter grade, because that is what they are, authentic. Numerical grades should be assigned to cards that were in packs and in circulation. |
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It would be interesting to see what PSA would do about that card now if it's owner (Ken Kendrick of the Arizona Diamondbacks...) ever called them on it. The provenance is bulletproof at this point; Mastro got caught admitting on a wire recording that he had indeed cut the card from a sheet. I'm not sure how even PSA today could make a claim with a straight face that it deserves to be in a PSA 8 holder. |
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That PSA8 Wagner worth a lot more than Ken paid, so he wouldn't complain to PSA. On the other hand, pretty sure PSA is more than happy to buy that Wagner from Ken at his purchase price. |
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Suppose from a collector perspective he at some point agreed it should not be a PSA 8, and requested it be re-holdered as Authentic or AA? Would PSA honor that request? |
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It is trimmed...for sure...it would not grade today. This being graded was more a publicity stunt for PSA and the owners.
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and happily display it in their collection :eek: |
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