![]() |
$117K SGC 8.5 DiMaggio WWG trimmed heavily, previously an SGC 6
https://www.blowoutforums.com/showpo...postcount=7884
https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/3/9/...25510947_o.gif In case one of you big spenders purchased this card, see if you can get a refund. Anothe point for the BODA. |
wow great investigative work there
Sent from my SM-S908U using Tapatalk |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Here are some of the top ones: https://www.blowoutforums.com/showthread.php?t=1298835 https://www.blowoutforums.com/showthread.php?t=1289859 https://www.blowoutforums.com/showthread.php?t=1297767 Wonder if the FBI is still doing any leg work? Most of their discovery has already been accomplished by volunteers. |
Props to BODA, doing the Lords work for half a decade, keep it up guys.
|
This hobby’s fraud and greed never stops amazing me. I wonder how many high grade, rare cards are legitimate? I suspect the number is shockingly low. This is the reason I’m a low to collector-grade guy.
|
This is why TPGs should use a minimum size requirement for cards with RAZOR sharp corners.
If the card doesn't meet the minimum size requirement and it has RAZOR sharp corners, then have a QUALIFIER that indicates it doesn't meet the minimum size requirement but has been graded as if it were. That would put the thought in everyone's mind that it could be trimmed (which it probably is). Think about it. When you look at the number of cards out there and find that a large number of high grade cards doesn't meet the minimum size requirement, then people may start asking why most cards with lower grades meet the size requirement but higher graded cards do not. I mean really? Are we this stupid? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
People are sadly this stupid. Strangely thin high grade cards continue to outsell by huge margins unaltered cards that are of normal size. What the slab says overcomes actual reality in the market. Reality is annoying, the card in the 9 slab lets you flex on the poor with the same card in a 6 slab. Being altered is irrelevant. |
At this point in the age of opinion sellers I actually enjoy seeing a trimmed card go for 6 figures.
Anybody who likes cards enough to pay THREE figures for a card should be able to tell the difference between trimmed and not trimmed, when it's to those degrees. Obviously it's harder to tell until they get the card in hand, but as soon as they do... Nobody who buys a trimmed card has any excuse. The person who bought the DiMaggio in 2021 knew exactly what he got moments after he received it. Nice looking slab, though. Doug "I wish I could get trimmed to an 8.5" Goodman |
For the most part, investors don’t care what may have been done to a card as long as it’s in a PSA Slab with a number grade it’s gold. This is the bottom line of where we are at in 2023.
|
Quote:
Sent from my SM-S906U using Tapatalk |
WIth a card like this in that high a grade holder, there really should be a presumption that it's been altered, IMO, even if it may be hard to tell given the expertise of the work.\
BTW I wonder if Dave Forman graded this one personally. I'll leave it at that. |
Quote:
Quote:
Bbwaa....and that isn't supposed to mean BB writers association of America... Bbwaa... I guess that's the point, they're trusting the TPGs. Trust'em? Bbwaa... Bbwaa... :p |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Sent from my SM-S906U using Tapatalk |
Quote:
Sent from my SM-S906U using Tapatalk |
This is why TPGs should
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Sent from my SM-S906U using Tapatalk |
Quote:
Back in the day the biggest concern about slabbed cards was that someone would exchange/swap a card in the holder (WIWAG was one of the first) and defraud people to make their money. Today, TPGs grade on a much larger scale and do it less accurately which results in a lot of people that are not getting what they paid for. What boggles the mind is that we're not talking hundreds of dollars but 10s of thousands of dollars (and more). |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Remember, they knew Gary was passing trimmed cards through them 20 years ago, and did nothing to stop it. And many of the cards outed over the last five years have been laughable, even from PSA. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Sent from my SM-S906U using Tapatalk |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Sent from my SM-S906U using Tapatalk |
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I understand it is easier to argue against this claim you made up instead, but nobody said it. Try harder. |
That's ridiculous. The strip that was removed from the left could be used as a shoelace...or belt.
|
The problem is if the card meets minimum size requirements, I don't see how SGC could conclude it was altered.
|
Quote:
I've heard before, however, that the TPG's can/should be able to detect, based on the edge color (and maybe some other things?) compared to the rest of the card, whether it has been recently trimmed or not? Imo, it is a tough one for the TPG's to grade, especially if the edge looks like the rest of the card, (color/age wise) if one has been trimmed or not if it still falls into the size parameters. (This is just my uneducated thought anyways) |
Quote:
Natural variance should lead, overall, to a roughly equal number of oversized and undersized cards. |
Quote:
It can be hard to tell that from a photo, or if the card is already graded but with before and after images we can certainly now see SGC messed up...again. |
I know the pay-off is substantial, but I'm still shocked at the cajones of somebody to trim a card, that is already 20K+ card nowadays. They've gotta have a lot of confidence that it's gonna pass.
I don't even have the confidence to cut cards from sheets or strips that are meant to be cut, with my crappy Staples issued paper cutter :rolleyes:. But I do understand that people with the right tools and skill-set, can make it seem imperceptible to most. I've said this before, but I set-up at hundreds of shows in the 80's and into the early 90's, and truly vintage NM to Gem Mint cards, were very, very few...and far between...and most of those were also trimmed or flattened out in brick like lucite holders to make them look better then they actually were. Even cards I pulled right out of packs, I had a hard time, in good conscience, calling them MINT. I'd always just call them NM to be on the safe side. That they started to become more common, when these huge price fluctuations began to develop between mid-graded stuff and high graded stuff, has proven to be not such a coincidence I guess. That Dimaggio "6" would have been the centerpiece of almost any dealers table, because that "8.5", would have never existed in the first place. Altering cards is not NEW. Back in the 80's, dealers used to color in the borders of 71' Topps cards, to get an extra buck or two a card. Can you imagine what somebody would do for an extra 100K a card? :eek: |
Quote:
As a collector, it doesn’t really affect me. I don’t care if a card is altered personally beyond an academic point of view. I fear the day may come where this same problem arrives with authenticity, and that’s when the hobby implodes. |
Quote:
Yeah, if they start convincingly 3D printing 1934 Goudey Lou Gehrig cards with ground up bits of 1934 Goudey Mark Koenig cards, then the high rollers are really gonna be in trouble. :eek: |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:42 AM. |