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#1
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Been noticing something odd/interesting about the pricing behavior of these two cards.
Ryan RCs in the upper grades tend to sell for more than Seaver RCs. Ryan PSA 7s sell in the 2500-3000 range and 8s go for maybe 6k to 7500. The last three Seaver 7s have been reported at just under $2k and 8s go in the $4-5k range. Yet when it comes to beaters, it seems possible to grab a Ryan for 300-400 and basically impossible to find a Seaver for less than 500. No real conclusions on this one. Just think it’s interesting. Also somewhat annoying that I can’t find a crappy Seaver RC anywhere unless I want to pay 700+ (which I don’t). It’s not scarce but certainly much less pop than the Ryan. |
#2
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I hear you lol. I brought 2 Seaver RCs in psa 6 for about 1300.00 each. Maybe in 10 years that will be a bargain. I still need 1 more Seaver for my 3rd set.
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#3
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Nolan Ryan beating up robin ventura sets him above seavor..forget his ks
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#4
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Generally speaking, there are fewer Seaver rookies available for sale at any one time. As such, the competition for Seaver rookies is a bit more spirited among collectors who simply wish to own one.
Both cards are from the late '60s. Both are multi-player cards that feature HOFers. One (Seaver) may be the best pitcher from the 20th Century. The other (Ryan) may be the most popular pitcher from the 20th Century. In a "tale of the tape" that's otherwise relatively close, Seaver's scarcity matters. As for the prices at higher grades, Ryan's popularity may be a factor. This popularity applies to both the player and the card. Ryan's rookie has been a chase card for 35-40 years. For those into "competitive collecting" it probably makes sense to spend an extra five grand for a one-grade-bump.
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Eric Perry Currently collecting: T206 (135/524) 1956 Topps Baseball (195/342) "You can observe a lot by just watching." - Yogi Berra |
#5
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This is pretty normal. The Ryan is one of the most highly printed cards of the decade, the Seaver one of the least. When total population is low and demand high, it pushes the price between poor and mint closer than it is when there’s enough to go around and the set builders can just take the low grade ones without much scarcity. The Ryan is popular and iconic, but there’s one out there for every single vintage collector.
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#6
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Greg gets it.
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Eric Perry Currently collecting: T206 (135/524) 1956 Topps Baseball (195/342) "You can observe a lot by just watching." - Yogi Berra |
#7
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Seaver gets no love. Far superior pitcher to Ryan, and a very tough card that in addition to being in relatively short supply is plagued by several problems.
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Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 10-13-2022 at 04:04 PM. |
#8
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I believe 1968 topps has had a plethora of large finds. At least I was told that back in the 90s
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"Trolling Ebay right now" © Always looking for signed 1952 topps as well as variations and errors |
#9
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Both cards are great cards to have in your collection. They getting 1 of each in whatever the best grade your budget allowed. As for the why I think it feels like their are always Ryan’s cards available for purchase or auction.
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Thanks all Jeff Kuhr https://www.flickr.com/photos/144250058@N05/ Looking for 1920 Heading Home Ruth Cards 1920s Advertising Card Babe Ruth/Carl Mays All Stars Throwing Pose 1917-20 Felix Mendelssohn Babe Ruth 1921 Frederick Foto Ruth Rare early Ruth Cards and Postcards Rare early Joe Jackson Cards and Postcards 1910 Old Mills Joe Jackson 1914 Boston Garter Joe Jackson 1911 Pinkerton Joe Jackson |
#10
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What if any is the differential in price between the Topps Ryan and the Topps/MB Ryan in the same condition ?
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#11
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#12
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I'd like to chime in on this matter. I was a 13-year-old collector in 1967, trying with all my might to complete the big Topps set. Based upon what I did in 1966, I knew what I would have to do.
Late in the summer of '66, every outlet seemed to have turned to football cards. My Chicago suburb only had one convenience shop carry the 7th series, and by the time I discovered it, there was just one wax pack left! At this time, I was ordering cards from The Trading Card Company, located in Farmington Hills, Michigan. I ordered the 1966 7th series from them, for a very nominal price. Beautiful condition. This purchase completed my '66 Topps. So here it was 1967. Football was getting a lot more popular after the first SUPER BOWL, and the card-selling outlets seemed to stock them even earlier. I did not bother even looking for the 1967 7th Series baseball; I once again ordered them from The Trading Card Company. Same result---gorgeous cards---completed my 1967 set. Nestled among the last series was Tom Seaver! I had wanted him for several months. Early in May, Tom's picture appeared on the front of THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE sports section, just as he was about to deliver a flaming fastball. I thought to myself, "wow, that guy looks good!" Of course, Topps was doing their lousy-looking duo-player rookie cards; ugh, I hated how they looked. Be that as it may, that duo card was Tom Seaver's Topps rookie card. I was half a century away from discovering the New York Mets made a small postcard set of their team, including a drop-jaw gorgeous beauty of Tom Terrific! I finally got that baby this year; it's the proverbial 100 times better-looking than his sardine Topps. Back to the OP. None of my friends got the 1967 Topps 7th Series baseball but me. Compared to the plethora of 1968 Topps 2nd Series with Nolan Ryan, offered early in the season by the millions, the 1967 Topps 7th Series is a rarity. I remember well getting at least doubles of the Ryan rookie back in '68. Not that I noticed much, since he was a nobody at that time. That's what I remember as a teen collector back in the day. Take it for what it is. ![]() --- Brian Powell Last edited by brian1961; 10-15-2022 at 09:38 AM. |
#13
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To echo the above. My brother and I both completed the 1968 Topps sets and between us we had a dozen Ryan RCs. We both had 1967 complete up through series 6, but had few high numbers and 0 Seaver RCs. When I got my first job, the first thing I did was order 2 complete 7th series sets from The Card Collectors Co. My brother's Christmas present that year was one of those runs of mint high numbers to complete his set.
In my opinion, the 1967 Topps Seaver is one of the most underpriced cards in the hobby. Irregardless of how good Seaver was and if Ryan is overrated or not, the scarcity of the Seaver should make it more expensive than the Ryan RC. They were both outstanding pitchers. I think the disparity in pricing for lower grade copies is also due to the lack of distribution of 1967 high series. Many areas didn't even get them. Most of the supply came into the hobby through mail order dealers selling to collectors who took care of their cards. The Ryan being more available to the general public, put lots of copies into hands of kids who played with their cards, flipped them, put them in bike spokes, etc. Last edited by rats60; 10-15-2022 at 09:50 AM. |
#14
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PSA 1:
Seaver $415 Ryan $443 PSA 1.5: Seaver $603 Ryan $434 PSA 2: Seaver $823 Ryan $465 PSA 2.5: Seaver $576 Ryan $540 PSA 3: Seaver $928 Ryan $580 PSA 3.5: Seaver $730 Ryan $664 PSA 4: Seaver $1046 Ryan $859 PSA 4.5: Seaver $1183 Ryan $924 PSA 5: Seaver $1217 Ryan $1049 PSA 5.5: Seaver $1225 Ryan $1285 PSA 6: Seaver $1598 Ryan $1636 PSA 6.5: Seaver $1680 Ryan $2348 PSA 7: Seaver $2130 Ryan $2843 PSA 7.5: Seaver $3250 Ryan $4171 PSA 8: Seaver $4303 Ryan $7511 PSA 8.5: Seaver $7975 Ryan $21,690 PSA 9: Seaver $18,924 Ryan $108,034 PSA 10: Seaver $344,400 Ryan $600,000 Last edited by bobsbbcards; 10-15-2022 at 10:24 AM. |
#15
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And to think the Mets traded both of them for Jim Fregosi, Steve Henderson, Pat Zachry, and Doug Flynn.
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“interesting to some absolute garbage to others.” —- “Error cards and variations are for morons, IMHO.” |
#16
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Though I came of age during the time that the '68 Ryan card was skyrocketing in the early 1990's, I had started collecting 5+ years earlier, and from my reading already up to that point in time, I knew inherently somehow that the '67 Denehy / Seaver was the more difficult card due to it's series placement and scarcity. Interesting that when I first started buying packs in 1986 - Nolan Ryan was considered a good pitcher, but I think pretty much everyone would have agreed at the time that Seaver was better. Here nearly 40 years later - the card world aside, and the sports world (as evidenced by debates on social media, etc.) would seem to think just about the opposite.
I guess the Seaver RC has always been so appealing to me because it checks both the baseball greatness and baseball card greatness boxes. First ballot HOF'er, iconic pitcher who was likely the greatest of his generation. And from a card perspective, a single print high number in what was likely the most popular set of the decade of the 1960's.
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Postwar stars & HOF'ers. Cubs of all eras. Currently working on 1956, '63 and '72 Topps complete sets. Last edited by jchcollins; 10-15-2022 at 01:37 PM. |
#17
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I was a weekend show dealer in the late 80's on Long Island with a friend of mine and while I can't pinpoint the exact year, around 1988 there was a big uptick in business on Ryan cards and we could not keep them in stock at all. It was kind of organic as I recall, there was no overt event that triggered it.
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#18
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Wow great stuff from the guys who remember collecting these cards when they first came out. Love hearing those stories.
I wasn’t born until the 70s. I remember when Ryan madness hit in the late 80s and I also recall it being quite sudden. For all intents, Ryan cards took the handoff from Mickey Mantle in the late 60s and his card became kind of the default most valuable non rookie card in the set by around 73, once series stopped being issued. But this didn’t happen until 1988 or so as the previous poster said. I think it’s the whole Texas tough image. And his cards are all with the exception of his RC have great eye appeal. It’s as if he knew what made a great baseball card or something. |
#19
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I think 1988 was about when the slow uptick on Ryan RC cards began - in that it was no longer a $20 card, and nice ones got up to $200 or so. However from about 1989 until 1991 or so after Nolan’s 5000th K and with 2 additional no-hitters with the Rangers was when the card just absolutely skyrocketed, with EXMT or so copies fetching more than $1,000 in 1991 and ‘92.
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Postwar stars & HOF'ers. Cubs of all eras. Currently working on 1956, '63 and '72 Topps complete sets. |
#20
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I'll add one more story. In the early to mid 70's (I don't remember exactly), my aunt gave me all of my much older cousin's cards, since he had lost interest when his focus turned to girls. The cards were all from 1965 - 1968. Zero Seavers or 1967 high numbers. 3 Nolan Ryans though. Still have one now - recently graded a PSA 5.
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