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robw1959 09-04-2023 08:31 PM

Ted Williams
 
I can't imagine that I'm the first member to post on Ted being undervalued. He is arguably the second best ballplayer of all-time, being second on the career OPS list. If he wasn't called up as a fighter pilot for both WWII and the Korean War, Ted may have finished his career with a Barry Bonds-like homerun total.

Any thoughts about what keeps the value of his cards relatively inexpensive in relation to his greatness?

Jay Wolt 09-04-2023 08:42 PM

I'm a big fan of Ted
We were born on the same day, last week was his 105th birthday, me a few years younger.

Here's a couple of Ted Williams cards from his collection

https://qualitycards.com/pictures/te...ermccarthy.jpg

icollectDCsports 09-04-2023 08:44 PM

He played in Boston, not New York, and it didn’t help that he wasn’t on good terms with the media.

cgjackson222 09-04-2023 09:29 PM

He never won a championship, and in the only World Series he played in, he batted .200 with no extra base hits.

Of course, that hasn't stopped Cobb from being highly collected, as he never won a World Series and underachieved in the postseason as well.

brunswickreeves 09-04-2023 09:34 PM

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I think Williams has some of the best card art, and love their relative affordability. He had a lot of strong competition from Mick, Mays and Jackie, all of whom won a World Series.

I gave his two 54 Topps cards as a thank you to my kids. The signed card was a gift from my brother for a milestone Birthday. And the photo was a parting gift from a retiring coworker.

Peter_Spaeth 09-04-2023 10:06 PM

Rightly or wrongly, he was overshadowed by two folk heroes, first DiMaggio, then Mantle. He was perceived as aloof or even surly, didn't win, and was not considered a great fielder or baserunner.

Imagine 50s baseball -- Mays and Mantle, Williams and Musial, Aaron. Will we ever see anything close?

G1911 09-04-2023 10:49 PM

I think it's more that Joe D. is overpriced. Ted seems about right generally, it's just that the 2 Yankees are boosted that makes people say Williams/Mays/Musial/literally-every-other-player is undervalued.

Williams certainly got some of the best looking cards in a lot of sets.

robw1959 09-04-2023 11:00 PM

This has the ring of truth, as do the other members' comments. Even though playing in a smaller market and never winning a WS hasn't hurt Cobb's value, It does seem to have hurt most everyone else to some extent, especially Musial and Williams, I think. Musial was on par with Dimaggio, and Ted Williams was a way better hitter.

I never heard anything negative about Ted's fielding skills before, so that is a bit of a revelation to me, and, of course, could contribute to holding down the value of his cards as well.

Aaron Seefeldt 09-04-2023 11:29 PM

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He wasn’t in the early Topps “glamor” sets, that possibly contributes. He is on the very short list of best hitters of all time. As mentioned, he missed a lot of time to serve in WW2 & Korea so his counting stats were affected dramatically.

CW 09-05-2023 12:08 AM

https://i.imgur.com/d5ep068.jpg

BillyCoxDodgers3B 09-05-2023 03:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aaron Seefeldt (Post 2370221)
He wasn’t in the early Topps “glamor” sets, that possibly contributes.

Funny you refer to them using that term, as one thing most can agree on is that his 1955 & '56 Topps have to rank among the most glamorous of the decade. The '57 ain't too shabby, either. Man, that guy could pose for a card! The '54 Wilson's is a work of art.

swarmee 09-05-2023 05:04 AM

I think it's also possible that his 1959 Fleer set and his sticking around as a manager makes it cheaper to get a vintage/playing days card of Ted for dollars rather than tens or hundreds at a minimum.

Carter08 09-05-2023 05:55 AM

Not being in 52 or 53 Topps, playing in Boston instead of NYC, and being perceived as surly probably all go into being valued but not being explosively valued.

jsfriedm 09-05-2023 06:50 AM

I know that it generally doesn't make sense to imagine that players who we might consider "undervalued" will suddenly be appreciated more by collectors decades after their retirement (F.Robinson, Hornsby, Speaker, Collins, etc.) but occasionally it does happen (I remember when the Koufax rookie was worth more than the Clemente, for example). To connect this to a previous thread then, I think there is a reasonable chance that Ted Williams' cards on average appreciate more in percentage terms (not necessarily absolute terms) than Mantle cards from this point forward. His numbers do look better on the page (screen), esp with advanced metrics, and I wonder if his narrative - war hero, tortured genius, renegade, advocate of Negro Leaguers in the HOF, won't age better than Mantle's - country boy, matinee idol, drunk philanderer, what-if-he-had-been-healthy - with future generations. Thoughts?

Aquarian Sports Cards 09-05-2023 07:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by robw1959 (Post 2370217)
This has the ring of truth, as do the other members' comments. Even though playing in a smaller market and never winning a WS hasn't hurt Cobb's value, It does seem to have hurt most everyone else to some extent, especially Musial and Williams, I think. Musial was on par with Dimaggio, and Ted Williams was a way better hitter.

I never heard anything negative about Ted's fielding skills before, so that is a bit of a revelation to me, and, of course, could contribute to holding down the value of his cards as well.

Ted was very self deprecating about his fielding but he wasn't all that bad.

He used to joke that Dom DiMaggio belonged in the HOF as the only player who played LF and CF every game.

the-illini 09-05-2023 08:22 AM

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Williams and Musial are both underrated IMO and both missed key parts of their careers due to war service

BillyCoxDodgers3B 09-05-2023 08:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Carter08 (Post 2370246)
being perceived as surly probably all go into being valued but not being explosively valued.

He was always leaps and bounds better than the sour, offish DiMaggio. Ted did have a huge ego, but was still capable of friendliness if he felt like it. DiMaggio was practically incapable.

todeen 09-05-2023 09:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2370215)
I think it's more that Joe D. is overpriced.

I find this interesting because I know Net54 has previously discussed whether Dimaggio is undervalued. I believe the consensus was Dimaggio is properly valued due to his stand offish nature, he didn't endear himself to the early collectors that built the modern hobby. That core of early collectors still have influence in the hobby how players are perceived value wise. I think Mantle is a good example of a player who receives more attention than necessary in direct comparison with his peers.

I would like to hear more about being overpriced.

Quote:

Originally Posted by jsfriedm (Post 2370257)
.... and I wonder if his narrative - war hero, tortured genius, renegade, advocate of Negro Leaguers in the HOF, won't age better than Mantle's - country boy, matinee idol, drunk philanderer, what-if-he-had-been-healthy - with future generations. Thoughts?

I think this opinion carries weight. It needs to be brought by Hollywood or social influencers...or a combination of both. Jackie Robinson being taught to all grade school students didn't really push the needle on his prices until the bio-pic came out a decade ago. My high school students who didn't care about baseball watched the movie because of its social justice perspective.

I'm not sure if Hollywood could write a story that would make an old white man look important like that. American patriot hasn't been a #1 seller since "Saving Private Ryan" / Brokaws "Greatest Generation" / and O'Briens "The Things They Carried."

Sent from my SM-G9900 using Tapatalk

puckpaul 09-05-2023 09:51 AM

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Well, if he is undervalued, good chance to scoop up his cards. (Good ones don’t seem to go that cheap to me).

My favorites: 41 Paper issue (color just pops on these), wilson wiener, and 39 Goudey premium. I like the Leaf too, but don’t have one yet.

Aquarian Sports Cards 09-05-2023 10:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by todeen (Post 2370304)

I'm not sure if Hollywood could write a story that would make an old white man look important like that.

How about a half Mexican man? (Ted was)

G1911 09-05-2023 10:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by todeen (Post 2370304)
I would like to hear more about being overpriced.

Let's pick a commonly available set with both in it that aren't rookies. How about 1941 Play Ball?

Since everyone loves PSA and it's easy I'll just link and use them: https://www.psacard.com/priceguide/b...play-ball/1111

In a 7, everything over $500:
DiMaggio $19,000 (high, commons 20% more)
Williams $4,000
Reese $3,250 (Rookie card boost, high with commons 20% more)
Foxx $1,000
Gomez $650 (last card in set boost, high with commons 20% more)
Greenberg $600
Ott $545

Is Williams being 600% more than Hank Greenberg undervalued? Is being 400% more than Foxx undervalued? No. The outlier is that Dimaggio is heavily overpriced relative to performance. Just like Mantle, people say basically every single big player is undervalued because they are comparing to Mantle. The problem is the single outlier.

puckpaul 09-05-2023 10:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2370329)
Let's pick a commonly available set with both in it that aren't rookies. How about 1941 Play Ball?

Since everyone loves PSA and it's easy I'll just link and use them: https://www.psacard.com/priceguide/b...play-ball/1111

In a 7, everything over $500:
DiMaggio $19,000 (high, commons 20% more)
Williams $4,000
Reese $3,250 (Rookie card boost, high with commons 20% more)
Foxx $1,000
Gomez $650 (last card in set boost, high with commons 20% more)
Greenberg $600
Ott $545

Is Williams being 600% more than Hank Greenberg undervalued? Is being 400% more than Foxx undervalued? No. The outlier is that Dimaggio is heavily overpriced relative to performance. Just like Mantle, people say basically every single big player is undervalued because they are comparing to Mantle. The problem is the single outlier.


Those aren’t correct prices. You cant use the price guide.

Dimaggio: $18-19k up from $4k in 18-19
Williams: $7k in 2/23 up from $5-6k 2021 and $2-3k 18-19 but few have traded
Greenberg: $1900 3/21 last trade, was $800 20/21 and $500 prior
Foxx: $700 last in 20/21, few traded non recently
Reese: $3500 2/21 and $2300 2020

G1911 09-05-2023 11:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by puckpaul (Post 2370331)
Those aren’t correct prices. You cant use the price guide.

Dimaggio: $18-19k up from $4k in 18-19
Williams: $7k in 2/23 up from $5-6k 2021 and $2-3k 18-19 but few have traded
Greenberg: $1900 3/21 last trade, was $800 20/21 and $500 prior
Foxx: $700 last in 20/21, few traded non recently
Reese: $3500 2/21 and $2300 2020

Okay, we'll use these.

Does Williams being 300% of Greenberg seem undervalued? Does being 1,000% of Foxx make Williams seem undervalued?

What's the outlier here, relative to performance? It's Dimaggio.

packs 09-05-2023 11:33 AM

I actually think DiMaggio is underrated in most cases and that his stats don't get the respect they should. He put up huge home run totals hitting from the right side at Yankee Stadium, which was very difficult to do in his time. His power was immense but it's overlooked because he didn't hit 500 home runs.

DiMaggio is still 14 all time in career slugging and his 46 home runs in 1937 were the most by a Yankees right handed hitter until A-rod hit 48 in 2005, 70 years later.

I only know Ted Williams' reputation from late in life card shows, but he was not what I would call "beloved" by people. I remember him setting up at a Gloria Rothstein show in the 90s with Mantle and DiMaggio and I was surprised at how small Ted's line was.

Peter_Spaeth 09-05-2023 12:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by robw1959 (Post 2370217)
This has the ring of truth, as do the other members' comments. Even though playing in a smaller market and never winning a WS hasn't hurt Cobb's value, It does seem to have hurt most everyone else to some extent, especially Musial and Williams, I think. Musial was on par with Dimaggio, and Ted Williams was a way better hitter.

I never heard anything negative about Ted's fielding skills before, so that is a bit of a revelation to me, and, of course, could contribute to holding down the value of his cards as well.

Musial 1946.

Peter_Spaeth 09-05-2023 12:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the-illini (Post 2370276)
Williams and Musial are both underrated IMO and both missed key parts of their careers due to war service

I thought Musial only missed one season.

DeanH3 09-05-2023 12:52 PM

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Ted has a lot of great looking cards. I'm drawn to his '51 Bowman issue. Average in his missed years and his numbers are eye popping. Could Ted have broken Ruth's 715 first with those years added? Maybe he would have been close enough to stick around another year or two to have a shot? I dunno, but interesting to ponder.

jingram058 09-05-2023 02:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2370353)
I thought Musial only missed one season.

I believe that is true.

Kzoo 09-05-2023 02:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2370329)
Let's pick a commonly available set with both in it that aren't rookies. How about 1941 Play Ball?

In my opinion when we're talking 1941 Play Ball, the 'swinging' Dimaggio pose is a much better looking card than the Williams 'head shot'. They both had a monster year in '41, but Dimaggio's swinging pose adds value because it's a classic image.

jbsports33 09-05-2023 02:20 PM

I collect Ted stuff, it’s challenging and fun!

Jimmy

G1911 09-05-2023 03:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kzoo (Post 2370390)
In my opinion when we're talking 1941 Play Ball, the 'swinging' Dimaggio pose is a much better looking card than the Williams 'head shot'. They both had a monster year in '41, but Dimaggio's swinging pose adds value because it's a classic image.

Which set would you like to use?

Peter_Spaeth 09-05-2023 03:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2370400)
Which set would you like to use?

They are both in Leaf, how do those compare?

Peter_Spaeth 09-05-2023 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kzoo (Post 2370390)
In my opinion when we're talking 1941 Play Ball, the 'swinging' Dimaggio pose is a much better looking card than the Williams 'head shot'. They both had a monster year in '41, but Dimaggio's swinging pose adds value because it's a classic image.

I hate that card lol. Pinhead shot of Dimaggio that is always blurry and if you look at it closely is all distorted and barely looks like him.

G1911 09-05-2023 03:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2370403)
They are both in Leaf, how do those compare?

DiMaggio multiples of Williams per PSA, 2-5x depending on grade https://www.psacard.com/priceguide/b...1948-leaf/1115

Happy to use any pricing source people like. We will find the same thing; Dimaggio outsells Williams and Williams outsells the players he was better than other than Dimaggio. The outlier being Dimaggio.

Aaron Seefeldt 09-05-2023 03:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2370409)
DiMaggio multiples of Williams per PSA, 2-5x depending on grade https://www.psacard.com/priceguide/b...1948-leaf/1115

Happy to use any pricing source people like. We will find the same thing; Dimaggio outsells Williams and Williams outsells the players he was better than other than Dimaggio. The outlier being Dimaggio.

I'm going to say Williams was a better hitter than Mantle and Mantle outsells him (and everyone else from that era) by a lot

DeanH3 09-05-2023 04:05 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2370406)
I hate that card lol. Pinhead shot of Dimaggio that is always blurry and if you look at it closely is all distorted and barely looks like him.

Nice registration is a must on this card.

Kzoo 09-05-2023 04:10 PM

C'mon man!
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2370406)
I hate that card lol. Pinhead shot of Dimaggio that is always blurry and if you look at it closely is all distorted and barely looks like him.

Peter.............^^^ That card's a classic!

Kzoo 09-05-2023 04:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2370400)
Which set would you like to use?

Greg.........There might not be a good set for comparison :confused:. I just think the '41 TW card is not very attractive. Just my opinion. Maybe something basic like a c. 1950 exhibit card in high grade would be a good test?

Peter_Spaeth 09-05-2023 04:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kzoo (Post 2370432)
Peter.............^^^ That card's a classic!

LOL Matt I know. But look at his face close up, it's a mess. He looks ghoulish.

Kzoo 09-05-2023 04:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2370434)
LOL Matt I know. But look at his face close up, it's a mess.

I disagree, he just connected for a 3 run HR. He's smiling as the ball is sailing over the center field wall (he just hasn't dropped the bat yet as he's showing up the pitcher).

Peter_Spaeth 09-05-2023 04:23 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kzoo (Post 2370435)
I disagree, he just connected for a 3 run HR. He's smiling as the ball is sailing over the center field wall (he just hasn't dropped the bat yet as he's showing up the pitcher).

Ghoulish. That's not a smile. And it barely looks like him, where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio? :)

puckpaul 09-05-2023 04:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2370438)
Ghoulish. That's not a smile. And it barely looks like him, where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio? :)

The Ted card is ok, I like it. The Joe D playball isnt very attractive, and as said, it needs perfect registration to look decent at all. Still classic but hardly a great looking card.

G1911 09-05-2023 04:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aaron Seefeldt (Post 2370421)
I'm going to say Williams was a better hitter than Mantle and Mantle outsells him (and everyone else from that era) by a lot

Yes, that is exactly my point. Joe D and Mickey are overpriced; and so everybody says literally-everyone-else-is-underpriced. The outlier is obviously the 2 Yankees, not everyone else.

G1911 09-05-2023 05:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kzoo (Post 2370433)
Greg.........There might not be a good set for comparison :confused:. I just think the '41 TW card is not very attractive. Just my opinion. Maybe something basic like a c. 1950 exhibit card in high grade would be a good test?

They have it as 2X-5X https://www.psacard.com/priceguide/b...-exhibits/1106

CW 09-05-2023 05:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kzoo (Post 2370432)
Peter.............^^^ That card's a classic!

I thought the same thing! When Peter started out with, "I hate that card...", I thought he was going to talk about the Ted Williams card. :)

I get it, though, Peter -- once you see something in a card or an image, it's hard to unsee it.

In a similar way, I've always thought the smiling portrait on Mickey Mantle's 1956 Topps card looked weird, yet for many collectors it's their favorite Mantle card.

BTW, here is the original image used for the Play Ball DiMaggio for both the 1940 and 1941 Play Ball sets. You can see where the baseball card lost a good amount of the sharpness and detail in the image. It also shows a little better why Joe has that expression. [this is not my photo, but was borrowed from a prior Leland's auction]

https://i.imgur.com/Cgq1d1A.jpg

And here's a comparison with Dean's nicely registered example (cool card, Dean):

https://i.imgur.com/kmkVvgc.jpg

Brian 09-05-2023 06:48 PM

Ted
 
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I like the exhibits, especially when signed by him.

todeen 09-05-2023 09:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aquarian Sports Cards (Post 2370325)
How about a half Mexican man? (Ted was)

I think that would be a stretch. In what historical corner has Ted Williams been held up as a beacon for minorities? I did a Google search, and this was one of the first results - "Ted Williams Hid His Mexican Heritage."

Compared to Jackie Robinson, it's not the same.

https://baseballegg.com/2022/01/12/t...ican-heritage/

Sent from my SM-G9900 using Tapatalk

Baseball Rarities 09-06-2023 06:00 AM

Chris - I love that image of Willams.

MikeGarcia 09-06-2023 06:19 AM

Photogenic Player indeed.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Baseball Rarities (Post 2370592)
Chris - I love that image of Willams.



..http://imagehost.vendio.com/a/204295...7TEDDY_NEW.JPG

..http://imagehost.vendio.com/a/204295...YAGAIN_NEW.JPG

..http://imagehost.vendio.com/a/204295...YDOERR_NEW.JPG

...except in 1947 an editor at Sports Exchange thought Bobby Doerr was the cat's pajamas and the bee's knees.

..

Snowman 09-09-2023 03:51 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2370403)
They are both in Leaf, how do those compare?

48/49 Leaf provides the most fair comparison for Dimaggio vs Williams prices that I can think of. It controls for numerous factors that might otherwise affect price differences, like both being from a very popular and widely collected set, both having effectively the same PSA pop report (~1100 ea), neither being rookie cards, and both having very similar poses.

The Dimaggio sells at about a 20% premium over the Williams in grades 3 through 5, and a bit more in the higher grades, although the data is more sparse and less reliable as you move up the grading ladder.

Here are mine side by side. I just received my Williams back from grading today. It was a PSA 3 when I bought it. Interestingly, I paid $3700 for my PSA 3 Ted Williams and only $1500 for my SGC Dimaggio.

Oh, and don't get me started about SGC not being able to place the cards in the same spot of their slabs... Arrrggggh!


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