Quote:
Originally Posted by mannequin1
I was going to stay out of it but I changed my mind.
I was good friends with Joe from the mid 80's to the early 2000s. I saw a good chunk of his stuff. He had the best Rusty Staub collection in the world, virtuallly everything that existed that he could get.
About 90% of his collection is Rusty Staub. It includes multiples of every Topps card, all the Topps Test issues such as the 68 3D (I think he had 2 or 3 of them), Action Stickers, Discs, Punch-out, Greatest Moments you name it, he had at least 1 of each.
He had several original Jerseys, bats, balls, gloves, a zillion autographed items including mostly photos. You name it. if it was Staub, he had it.
I always thought it was insane that someone could be so obsessed with one player, especially a non hall-of-famer and I knew when he eventually sold the collection most of it would be hard to sell.
He should have gotten 100% or more for all the "cream" in his collection, but all the photos, newspapers, etc. I could see him getting only 50% at most due to the sheer volume.
Phil G
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Rusty Staub was a very good player and has a following.
However, other than game used items and the few rare cards you mentioned, his value is very limited, especially in volume.
His regular Topps cards other than his rookie have little value.
His autograph is cheap on virtually anything as he signed a ton over his post playing career.
If the collection is truly 90% Staub related, it will be very difficult to sell at any high level, again other than key items.
It takes a LOT of very good Rusty Staub items to get to 6 figures and my guess is he sold most of his game used items himself or consigned them to an auction house.