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#1
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I know this is OT for this baord but I got to thinking and writing about Kerry for my occassionaly column for Sports Collectors Daily.
One of the themes I discussed was that after his classic one-hitter versus the Astros in 1998 the prices of his Bowman Chrome card exploded on BBay and that really helped to make EBay the market force it has become for baseball cards. When did you rezlalize that a form of buying cards other than at shows or through ads in trade papers would be a cool way to purchase cards or to sell cards. Regards Rich Last edited by Rich Klein; 05-19-2012 at 06:04 AM. |
#2
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The "when" for me was June 7, 2001.
Great perception of the situation, Rich. It would be neat to see a chart showing eBay membership numbers from 1996 through 2002... and look to see how many peaks or bubbles there are, then trying to match those up with something happening in the sports world. |
#3
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There were a few good email auctions in 1996 and a couple of years after. Solomon Cramer ran a good email card auction. As the name suggests, everything was done through email.
Last edited by drc; 05-19-2012 at 01:34 AM. |
#4
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I was a late bloomer, i got my first computer in 2002 sometime and within a month i was buying on Ebay and Naxcom. I actually didn't like Ebay at first because i didn't like how you had to bid and wait up to 10 days before you could actually "buy" the card. I liked going to Naxcom better at first because i could instantly buy and pay for the card without having to wait for a week on ebay. Took me a few weeks to realize that bidding on cards on ebay was better because 90% of the time i could win the cards on Ebay for a lot cheaper than paying the "Buy It Now" prices on Naxcom.
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#5
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For me it was 1999. I went on a big spree of collecting Mark Grace cards and was able to pick up stuff that shops didn't have. From there I started going for vintage cards and loved that I could find any card I wanted on the internet. Around the time of 98-99 the card shops by me only focused on the newest cards and packs and the hope of the ever elusive "chase card". I only have 1 shop within a few miles of me but I can get whatever I want with a mouse click instead of taking a crap shoot and usually losing by walking in the doors of the shop. Prices are better on the net because there is a low overhead
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#6
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About the question in charts showing prices, what I really miss was at beckett.com when you searched a card and clicked on the card, you could see a graph on the history of that card. Went up, down, stayed the same etc, it was a pretty neat tool to see. Wish they still had that. Always fun looking back at Pujols' cards before he blew up.
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