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#1
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Posted By: Robert Plancich
Dear Members: |
#2
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Posted By: steve k
Interesting post and enjoyed reading it. Certainly though none of this is new. This has been going on for many years. Just the dollar figures get higher each year. Sports memorabilia has always been a bit shady and probably always will be. |
#3
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Posted By: John
I agree 100%. I have watched my beloved hobby go down hill very fast over the past years. Due in large fact to many of the factors you have just stated. We live in a hobby that has become a big business, and many of us including myself would like to turn our heads and pretend it’s the same old fun collecting hobby we once participated in. The sad but true point as you said is that this is a huge industry. Many of the daily practices that these large “captains of industry” practice would be found as illegal and dishonest in any other business setting. Unfortunately because of the mindset by most of the collectors, these people continue to get away with murder. These practices that you described to ones I have seen with my own eyes, such as preferential treatment by grading companies to certain clients, are at a pace to have a huge negative impact on this hobby. |
#4
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Posted By: Anonymous
.....people make mistakes. |
#5
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
I am not going to get into this in much detail, as I like my current bidder status with Mastronet just fine (had my bidding "privilieges" revoked when I questioned the authenticity/grading of the PSA 8 T206 Wagner). I believe that grading companies are somewhat good for our Hobby. Afterall, like we discussed on this forum regarding Larry Fritsch (who wants to pay for a certain grade and get a card that is 2-3 grades lower than it was advertised???). However, like with the T206 Wagner (which I will NEVER debate about again BTW), initially, the grading company did the right thing and REJECTED the card. Then they (PSA) were "pursuaded" by the person who was a big name in our Hobby and ran a large auction house to SLAB the card anyway! |
#6
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Posted By: hankron
Of course the auction houses should do a good job. But I also feel that, on expensive items, collectors should educate themselves and hire a personal consultant to advise them. If you're buying a $100,000 glove, f*ck Sotheby's getting Joe Phillips' second opinion. YOU pay Joe Phillips for his opinion. I can tell you that currently I know of issues with significant items. The problem is that not a single bidder or potential bidder has asked for my input or likely will. Even if I wanted to talk to the bidders and potential bidders, I have no clue who they are. |
#7
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Posted By: Joe P.
And that definitely includes card grading. |
#8
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
It is my understanding that all major auction sales are final and that "no expert opinion trumps their "expert(s)" opinion(s)". More or less, if their expert says an item is real, it is real; and if you win it, it is YOURS! |
#9
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Posted By: John
“However, we all KNOW that there are some HIGH GRADE TRIMMED cards residing in NM/MT and MINT holders. This is really not to be blammed on the grading companies, but rather the HIGHLY INFLUENTIAL person (people) who submitted the cards.” |
#10
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
This is why I stay away from bats and balls and gloves and jerseys and autographs. |
#11
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Posted By: Jay Miller
I don't know who you are but I do know who the folks at Mastronet are. I have dealt with them, both professionally and personally, for over a decade and they are some of the finest people I have ever met, regardless of the venue. I feel safe in saying that I am soundly in the majority on this issue; their amazing success is a testament to this. |
#12
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I decided a long time ago not to collect memorabilia for precisely the reasons outlined above. Too many questions and too many shady possibilities. I collect cards and autographed cards only when they come from the source to me directly or after I have studied the signatures of the autographs' creators and am comfortable that they are real or have items that are unlikely to be forged (e.g., old bank checks). |
#13
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Posted By: dan mckee
There is plenty of this crap in grading. The fact that it matters who submits the cards proves this. I was at a show many years ago in Cleveland and I was adjacent to a now major grading company's table. A dealer who was a regular customer of theirs, dropped off a stack of topps cards. He returned a few hours later and was screaming! The cards were graded 6s and 7s. After his tirade, he was instructed to leave the cards and return in an hour. All of the cards were now 7s and 8s. Now this was a long time ago, 8 to 10 years maybe. But it still matters who submits the cards. I submitted a K-bats card to a major company, it was returned as trimmed, the card wasn't trimmed. I was consigning it to a major auction house and told them it wouldn't grade. It was later slabbed in front of me a VG/EX 4. |
#14
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Posted By: Scott
Many of us suspect questionable things go on behind the scenes. With that in mind, as David R. said, you have to use your own brain when bidding on stuff: We all know which auctions sell trimmed and over-graded cards - bid appropriately. We all know which auctions sell misrepresented items - consult an expert in advance if you are not one yourself. We all know that there are a zillion forged Ruth signatures offered in auctions - don't buy them unless you can verify upon receipt that the item is fake or real, and can use that research to get your money back if necessary. |
#15
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Posted By: Rhys
I am going to go out on a limb and estimate that 20-25%% of the Ruth autographs authenticated by PSA/DNA are fake. This is just my opinion from 15 years of collecting autographs, and dont take that as gospel. As such, I stay far far away from Ruth unless it is on a bank check (even some of the documents you see are fake signatures on once blank documents, but not the checks). Pay a little more for a team signed ball or a bank check and you will have piece of mind. |
#16
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Posted By: warshawlaw
No one would debate that position seriously. But it is nothing compared to the memorabilia potentials for fraud. Memorabilia is nothing more than someone's word for it, unless you have a situation where, say, Bobby Feller wrote on the bat that it was the one Babe Ruth used to make his farewell, or where the little boy's family consigns the gift ball directly to the auctioneer. Otherwise, the provenance (def: the background information of an object of art) of these items is often very mysterious if not impossible to establish because unlike a painting, they were not considered more than curios until relatively recently. This means that the process of handling these items is the "X File" method ("I want to believe"): someone supposedly in the know makes up a story to go with the item. There is no objective ability to check the story. It is a battle of hired "experts" (we lawyers call this a "whore fight" BTW). |
#17
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Posted By: Joe P.
When a heavy one slips through a Mt. Olympus graders crack, and after being pressed with the facts they do the only sensible,logical business 101 thing, ..... give a refund. |
#18
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Posted By: Marc S.
<<BTW, why do some sellers state that there are no refunds with a third party graded card? |
#19
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Posted By: PASJD
We can all rant and rave about trimmed cards and cards otherwise altered being slabbed (I fully believe the gentleman who posted to that effect), and the ability of certain insiders to get things done that the rest of us can't (same), and the (just my opinion) likely complicity at least to some extent of the grading companies. But how are we ever going to prove it? Unless you saw it done yourself, or someone confesses (about as likely as hell freezing over absent a criminal proceeding where someone might be afraid to commit perjury), "they" always have two fallbacks. One, grading and authentication are subjective, it may looked trimmed to you but not to us; and two, absolute worst case, we made a mistake, we are human, but sincere. Add to this the fact that I believe most people don't care and WANT to believe the illusion of mint 1887 cards that look better now than the day they were made (I submit a slabbed card will ALWAYS sell for near its commodity value even if it is so short it is literally swimming in the holder, and I have seen many of these), and I am pessimistic that the truth will ever be disclosed. |
#20
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Posted By: Joe P.
Yes! |
#21
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Although I also do not have any of my doggies in the memorabilia fight, it sure is an interesting one. It seems from my vantage point of a casual, mostly disinterested observer, that a desireable grading element for memorabilia is the degree of certainty associated with the Authenticity. |
#22
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Posted By: hankron
I regularly offer this equation to people whether they are collecting high end baseball memorabilia, fine art or fashion photographs. |
#23
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Posted By: steve k
Everyone or anyone can complain all they want to about grading companies. I have no problem with expressing your opinion. Some of these complaints are well justified especially from one of the posters here whose story has been well documented. But the facts are that card grading through reputable companies has made our hobby better. You can "say it ain't so" if wanting to - but it is so. I also collect coins. I remember what the coin and card collecting hobby had become shortly before the advent of grading companies. Counterfeiting, among other problems, had become rampant and out of control. Grading helped to basically "solve" these problems. Don't forget that when we refer to card "grading" this also includes authentication. Authentication in card grading is very close to a science with reputable card graders. As far as autographs and memorabilia, authentication is an art and a very imprecise art at that, if not many times an impossible art. |
#24
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Posted By: Pcelli60
Great that somebodys looking out. Now can somebody out there lend me about 500,000 so I could take advantage of it? VG-EX conditioned bills gladly taken.. |
#25
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Posted By: Joe P.
http://www.t206museum.com/page/periodical_5.html |
#26
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Posted By: PASJD
This kinda begs the question, why did Rosen, who surely must have considerable expertise himself and who for years blasted the notion of third party grading, (1) not spot the problem on his own and (2) rely at all on SGC's opinion. Did Rosen think Joe Merkel really knew more than he did? Something doesn't add up here. |
#27
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Posted By: Joe P.
To Alan's credit, he was admitting that the question of the Doyle authenticity, was not his area of expertise. |
#28
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Posted By: Jeff S
Rhys mentioned several posts ago that for piece of mind in buying a Ruth signature, one should buy a bank check or a team ball. |
#29
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Posted By: PASJD
I am not sure it is that simple. Mr. Rosen for years has portrayed himself as an expert (presumably with good reason, given his vast experience) and for years ridiculed grading companies for adding nothing of value (I wished I had saved some of his polemics), so why would he need to take a card to SGC at all, much less one that from all I am reading was an obvious tamper job? It isn't adding up to me. |
#30
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Posted By: Joe P.
PASJD: |
#31
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Posted By: Anonymous
when you say SGC as authenticator, who have you cast behind that curtain ? |
#32
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Posted By: Lee Behrens
I think anyone buying "game used", "authentic" or what ever you want to call them item are taking a serious gamble with there money because if you did not get it personally i don't believe anyone can be absolutely sure it is what they say it is. I just can not be confident that any of it is what they say it is. |
#33
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Posted By: martindl
Lee said |
#34
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Posted By: PASJD
Thanks for the eloquent clarification, disturbing though it is. At least in this case the collector was knowledgeable enough to rectify the situation. One only wonders how many similar "mistakes" reside in holders. |
#35
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Posted By: Julie
even ungraded cards, as opposed to memorabilia, is living in a dream world.Even if it's true that a bat has now sold for more than a card. I wouldn't want either of them... |
#36
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Posted By: dennis
i'd like more info on your organization.are there any members? what do you monitor? do you consult any experts on sports memoribilia? i could not find a website about your organization. you will find a lot of skeptics as well as experts on this site. |
#37
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Posted By: PASJD
About five years ago I sold my entire pre-war collection, most of which was PSA 7s and 8s (it wasn't THAT many cards, but some were pretty big ticket items), because I was convinced that most or all of them were altered and the uncertainty detracted from any enjoyment in owning them. I got back in a couple of years later and am only buying mid-grade pre-war. I figure that isn't immune from fraud either, but at least my odds are better (or I am not into it for as much money). However, based on what I hear through the grapevine, I am now starting to have many of the same doubts about my 50s and 60s cards. |
#38
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Posted By: hankron
Collectors of Pre-War baseball cards and related material should not take for granted how lucky they are having the Net54 Board (well run by Bill Cornell). Consider that this is a place where folks like Barry Sloate, Bob Lemke, Josh Evans, Rich Klein, Jay Miller, Scott Brockleman (sp, sorry Scott if I got it wrong, I tried), Leon Lucky, Scott Forrest and all the bright rest offer information and learned opinions, and the beginning collector can ask a question or offer an opinion just like anyone else. I can promise you that there is no equivilant board for collectors of million dollar Picasso paintings or Ming vases where Paris museum curators and Harvard art historians and average collectors mingle to shoot the breeze and trade tricks of the trade and point out the errors in the latest Sotheby's auction catalog and post their latest pick-ups. |
#39
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Posted By: hankron
As exemplified by this board, the great thing about the internet age is that you can communicate with someone in New York City or El Paso or Miami as easily as if they were ten miles away .... I knew there was something special about the internet when I got an email from an 10 year old girl in Australia who needed help with her homework on photographs (After dealing with the regular adult eBay sellers of color Fro Joys and 'blue eyed' Honus Wagner, talking with a bright 10 year old is by far the more mature of the conversations. I guess girls mature faster than boys). |
#40
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Posted By: Joe P.
PASJD: |
#41
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Posted By: Julie
Spanish...but i will continue to buy ungraded cards, sell ungraded cards, and when I happen to buy a graded one (even a PSA 8) I will liberate it. Before I sell it. |
#42
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Posted By: Dan
I have read enough about how this all works and have gradually become much less inspired with what I read and see on a routine basis. I had always dreamed of collecting as many vintage items as I could, however, after being burned on a few trimmed/graded cards and a few other not-worth-mentioning dealings with a few folks... I have decided to place my stuff up for sale, please view at www.4elitecars.com and let me know if you are interested. Bulk sale price on all items except the Cobb CJ (not mine), Cobb T3 (sold), Shoeless Joe National Game (sold), T200 Cleveland that is SGC graded (sold) and the A&G items (sold). |
#43
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Posted By: Joe P.
"By the Way, I think our buddy Al is a big blow hard, how he can not authenticate a card from a common issue, by himself is shameful for all he thinks he is." |
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