View Single Post
  #2  
Old 06-29-2025, 10:14 AM
timn1 timn1 is offline
Tim Newcomb
Member
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Illinois
Posts: 1,210
Default T207 scarcities

Quote:
Originally Posted by jboosted92 View Post
great read
Hi all,
Thanks for the kind words about my research, which is now 20 years old , holy cow!

Since then I've watched some fluctuations in what seem to be the toughest t207s. For a while it seemed like Donlin was the toughest of them all, but then a few of them came out of the woodwork and I began to think that somebody flying beneath the radar, as Donlin had once done, might be hardest. Somebody like Mogridge.

In any case, I'm still convinced that Lowdermilk and Ward Miller are overpriced relative to their scarcity, and several others underpriced.

Concerning the "obscurity of the players" theory, i agree that it must play a big role in some sets like T3 and Worch Cigar. With sets like t207 or t204 where cards were pulled from packs it still plays a role, but somewhat smaller.

With t207, I'm guessing something else was operating with some players, especially Donlin, who was a bona fide star even beyond basebal, from his vaudeville exploits. If anything he would have been collected more enthusiastically than the average player. He was with Pittsburgh the whole season but only played in 35 of the first 89 games, so it's imaginable that he was added into the set later in the season. But then there would be an odd number of players, not a round 200 total with 50 Broadleafs. So that seems unlikely.

In any case, some of the tough ones like Lowdermilk and Irv Lewis, are ultra-obscure guys. But there were several others equally obscure in the Broadleaf group who are much easier to find. And Ward Miller, for example, was a starter for several years.

So a clear pattern is hard to trace. But it's fun to speculate.

Tim

Last edited by timn1; 06-29-2025 at 09:44 PM.
Reply With Quote