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Well, this is the first time I have ever started a thread in the modern sportscard section. I have recently decided to go back to my childhood days and "re-collect" all of the baseball rookie cards from the '80's, Topps, Fleer, Donruss, Upper Deck & Score sets. Once I complete that, I might move forward at least into the mid-1990's and then go back as far as the mid 1960's and see how that goes.
In order to collect all rookie cards from each '80's set, the most cost effective way is to buy complete sets and break them up, I know that already. Here is my question, is it better to sell the remaining 90-95% of the cards as near-complete sets or break up the sets and sell the stars individually? For purposes of this discussion, let's assume that grading and gem-mint cards are not part of the equation. |
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#3
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The most cost effective way might actually be just buying the cards you want. Especially if you're picky about centering and some other condition stuff. Even a set like 83 with lots of rookies usually goes for more than the big rookies in average condition.
And getting rid of 80's commons is a lot of work for very little money. Steve B |
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Regards, Richard. |
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I did the same thing not too long ago. I decided to include the 1970's as well - so I eventually picked up every key rookie card from 1970-1999 and loved every bit of it. I left out O-Pee-Chee (except 1991 Chipper Jones), errors, Tiffany/Glossy's. I went with NM+ for the 70's and NM-MT+ for the rest. Bought some graded - then cracked out.
It got a little pricey - mainly due to the 1970's and a few select 1980's cards. I even bought duplicates of most of them (which is probably another reason why it was pricey - lol.) I really don't collect sets - so I wasn't concerned with them. The only sets I did pick up were my birth-year (1978) and 1984 Donruss (a steal!) Best of luck! |
#7
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I was thinking the exact same thing. I am not sure I would want to be getting rid of a bunch of commons. BTW, your old '51 Wheaties Premium Mantle is one of my favorite cards....and it is in good hands. Z Wheat |
#8
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Thanks for all of the tips, guys.
Since I would like to collect ALL rookies from each '80's set, I still think that buying complete sets is the way to go. With very few card shows these days, buying cards online necessitates shipping charges and that alone will not make it worthwhile to go after individual rookie cards. Since it appears tough to get much money back by selling the remaining cards, it sounds like I would be better off keeping the complete sets. I am going to put them in albums and keep them complete, as is. All factory sets will be opened as well as I can't enjoy the cards if they are in sealed bricks. I am not doing this for the investment potential anyway. |
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