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#1
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Posted By: Adam J. Baxter
I know these hardly ever come up for sale, but I was curious to know how much these are going for nowadays? |
#2
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Posted By: bruce Dorskind
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#3
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Posted By: Cobby33
We agree with Bruce, et al., althoughh there is only one of "us." Oh well. |
#4
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Posted By: James Feagin
I picked up a SGC 40 T211 Sid Smith a couple months back for $410. Hope that helps a bit. Huggins and Scott has a SGC 50 up in their/our next auction. |
#5
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Posted By: leon
Average gd-vg ones will usually be in the $300-$400 range and there are a few folks collecting the set. If it's one they need you can add another $100 or so....higher grade ones will go for siginificantly more. I would guess a nice EX one could be in the $700-$900 range...but personally I haven't seen too many go that high...though I certainly could have missed some sales... |
#6
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Posted By: Jay
The supply of T211s and, maybe more so T209s, seem to have dried up. |
#7
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Posted By: Adam J. Baxter
Thanks for all the great info guys, I appreciate it. I don't track prices/auctions as fervently as others on the board, so I'm not always up to date on current prices. I remember T211's being $100, 150, 200 about two years ago and I'm not surprised by the price jump as they are both scarce and visually appealing. I've thought about picking up an example or two in the distant future to go along with my T210's, which is why I was curious. |
#8
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Posted By: Dan Koteles
If they are available, who is putting the sets together? The backs on Red SUn are neat, but the cards are ugly. But this is why there are different collectors for everything. |
#9
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Posted By: Todd Schultz
vg/ex T211s should sell for at least $600--I would not take that for mine. |
#10
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Posted By: bruce Dorskind
In comments with the regard to the relative rarity of the T 211 Red Sun |
#11
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Posted By: barrysloate
Dan is correct in that all my years in the business I have had only a handful of Red Suns, and I never gave it much thought. But now that it has been brought up, they are pretty darn rare. Problem is, if I had one in 1995, I probably got $25 for it. We didn't pay as much attention to cards like T211 back then, as they were more just an offbeat issue that very few people cared about. It just shows you another way the hobby has changed. |
#12
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Posted By: scott brockelman
just because they are not on any registry is irrelavant, that does not mean there are not highly competitive collectors chasing these elusive cards. There are many very tough and desirable sets owned by collectors on this board that are not on "the registry". |
#13
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Posted By: JimB
I picked up a T211 Seabaugh about ten years ago at a show from a guy who had mostly shiney stuff, but a handful of Goudeys and this card in the back corner of his case. I did not get the impression he knew what it was. I would guess it was just thrown in with a handful of other older cards he bought once and had been sitting on for a while. |
#14
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
I have one T211. I regret passing on a chance at buying half a dozen at a good price several years ago. All I have is Welf, Nashville. Seems T210s distracted me after I got one T211 as a type card. |
#15
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Posted By: bruce Dorskind
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#16
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Posted By: Zach Rice
I own only one T211, too. I'd love to own more but with the prices they bring even in poor condition and their lack of availability, I don’t think I’d be making much progress any time soon. |
#17
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Posted By: DD
We would like to know how many sets Bruce has on the various card grading registries. Whilst we have viewed a cadre of sets listed by a plethora of well known collectors such as Don Louchios, Marshall Fogel, Charles Merkel, extant, we cannot locate any listings by Mssr. Dorskind. |
#18
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Posted By: Jeff O
Bruce, |
#19
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Posted By: Adam J. Baxter
Not to ruffle anyone's feathers, but I posted this thread to simply to inquire about prices on an interesting issue, not create a debate about set registries, market speculation, etc. I like to believe, perhaps innocently, that this is still a hobby. I'm not naive enough to believe that money doesn't play a role in it, but I'm tired of treating this hobby like an F***ing stock exchange. |
#20
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Posted By: barrysloate
I'm with you Adam. And I think most people do treat it like a hobby. |
#21
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
I don't mind being disagreed with.... sometimes I don't agree with myself. |
#22
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Posted By: Jay
Frank--I think it lets people compete in areas where there would be no competition without grades. The vast majority of registry sets are not difficult to complete. So, the grading companies, mostly PSA, have come up with an interesting marketing ploy to get people to compete for an aggregate number rather than just for completeness. They've thrown the chum in the water and the fish are swarming. It's an ego thing. I'm not immune--I have a few registry sets of newer material but the vast majority of my collection is unslabbed. |
#23
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jay- I think it's just an example of different hobby philosophies. The oldtimers collect for fun, and a little profit along the way never hurts. The set registry people are in it purely for the competition, and while they all say they are having fun, they have a lot more fun being #1 than #2, and even less fun being #3 or #4. |
#24
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Why is it such a difficult concept for some people to understand? This isn't quantum physics: certain collectors want to have the best set of a certain issue that exists. With the set registry, the best graded sets are easily comparable. The more significant question is: why do seemingly intelligent people repeatedly claim that they don't understand the rationale behind the set registry? |
#25
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Posted By: barrysloate
I fully understand the rationale, just isn't my cup of tea. But clearly there is a need for it, as it has gained a huge following and a significant piece of the market. I just think it is one of those hot button issues that causes debate every time it is brought up on the board. |
#26
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Posted By: Jay
Jeff--I hear what you're saying but the whole registry comparison process is somewhat artificial. Let me give you an example. Consider two 1948 Leaf boxing sets. One set has a grade of 7.4 but lacks a Graziano, the Wagner of boxing cards. The other has an a grade of 7.3 but has a Graziano. Which is the best set? In my mind the second is the best set, no question. However, if these were the only two registry sets listed the first would be listed as the current finest. |
#27
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jay- aren't registry sets supposed to be weighted based on rarities? |
#28
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Posted By: Rob Dewolf
Whilst (sorry) I totally understand the rationale of the set registry, I am surprised by the large number of collectors I run across who use the registry as the definitive source for how many sets of a certain issue are "out there." |
#29
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Posted By: Jay
Barry--Many sets in the registry have no weighting. The grade is just the sum of all your grades divided by the number of cards in the set. In the example I gave a Graziano is worth no more (registry wise) than a Willie Pep. |
#30
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Posted By: barrysloate
The registry can only go with the information it has. It is still relatively new, so ten years down the road the information will probably be more accurate. I'm sure new cards are being added each week as more get graded. |
#31
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Jay, you've obviously taken an extreme example: a set where there is no weight given to rarer cards. Regardless, I don't think your example is what the Registry nay-sayers are talking about. Basically, anyone who collects differently than they do is met with puzzled looks, scratched heads and seeming shock that anyone can do things differently than they do. |
#32
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jay- if that is true, and I am pretty sure that HOfers are weighted more than commons, then using my example of the 5 T206 commons vs. the Wagner, at any given moment I would gladly trade my better set for your worse set. That's an odd way of looking at it. |
#33
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Posted By: leon
Bruce- I read your statement this morning: |
#34
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Leon, interesting point. I have some sets on the registry but also collect other sets that I have not bothered to enter on the registry despite collecting graded versions of them. I guess I don't put them on because the cards are very slow to come by...and while I expect to complete the set someday it won't be anytime in the future - and the sets are rare enough that very few registered sets even exist. I guess to each his own -- even within the registry set guys. |
#35
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Posted By: Jay
Barry-Some sets are weighted, like T206, and others, like '48 Leaf boxing, are not. |
#36
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Posted By: RC McKenzie
T211's don't pop up very often on ebay, but they do show up occasionally, about as often as e105 from what I've seen. I've never bought one because they are expensive and most of the players are unknown to me, Sid Smith may be considered a star along with Bay, relative to the other players in the issue. The boxers series has some pretty famous boxers, but they don't sell cheap when they show up. Would be fun to know what 2 cards are missing from the fellows set. regards |
#37
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Posted By: Cobby33
We find this analogous to 3rd grade. Some kids would show off their new baseball gloves at school the next week. Some would keep them until they needed them. Same thing here, "not that there's anything wrong with it," either way. |
#38
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Posted By: RC McKenzie
I know I like to look on sgc at the registries of other collectors of sets I collect. It's fun to see folks list what cards they have of rare sets on sgc. I will probably never list anything on there just because sgc is in NJ and I don't like sending my cards out in the mail for folks to grade my cards unless I am going to sell them, and even then it's a hassle. If I lived in NJ, I'd probably drive over there and drop off a bunch of cards b/c their holders protect cards better than a top loader. |
#39
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Posted By: barrysloate
I think people's personalities dictate to a large degree how they collect. I do not consider myself a particularly competitive person. When I was an active collector, I always tried to get the rarest historical pieces I could, but I always knew some people had the means to have a better collection than me, and others on a tighter budget would probably not be able to afford what I had. I kind of knew it went with the territory. So if I were collecting today I doubt I would have much interest in the registry. |
#40
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Posted By: Dave Hornish
Barry: |
#41
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Posted By: barrysloate
Yes- I've kept a few rare display pieces, primarily from the 1860's and 70's, mostly photographs and color lithographs, and some rare books, including some from the 1830's that are the first in America to depict baseball. |
#42
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Posted By: bruce Dorskind
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#43
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Posted By: Anonymous
In regards to the registry I agree with Leon. Most cards arent accounted for on the set registries. It would be ridiculous to assume that just because a set isnt acounted for on a registry that its not being pursued by collectors. |
#44
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
Thank you Jay, Bruce, Barry.... |
#45
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Posted By: Todd Schultz
navigate from here: |
#46
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Posted By: RC McKenzie
Judge Wakefield, |
#47
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Posted By: JimB
The registry is not only about competition. I put my E93 set up there several years ago with the hope of connecting with other E93 collectors and that is exactly what happened. Before I even knew about this board, I met other caramel collectors through my set and e-mail being on the registry. Being that I was trying to put together a high-grade set, it also enabled me to learn about more cards too. Often if people want to sell a high-grade card, they will look to see who is collecting that set on the registry and offer them the card. I was offered several nice E93s as a result of being visible in that way. The presumptions about competition, while sometimes accurate, are a bit knee-jerk in my opinion since that is certainly not always the case. There are many more low and mid-grade sets on the registry than there are high-grade. It is just that you all take note of the high-grade sets. |
#48
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
Gentlemen, |
#49
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Posted By: robert a
Jim B. |
#50
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Posted By: barrysloate
There are certainly some positives associated with the set registry, as Jim B. has clearly pointed out. |
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