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#1
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I was reading through Harry Grayson's classic "They Played The Game" (a 1944 collection of player profiles) and came across the following: |
#2
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Posted By: leon
I have read that before and always thought it was some insight into his thinking. In keeping with nostalgia here is the intro in the American Card Catalog. I think it would help if we all keep this in mind while we are collecting (and I'm one to talk). There is probably a little more monetary emphasis today, than in the past, so naturally there is a little more stress than intended with the advent of card collecting. The excerpt from the initial intro in the ACC: |
#3
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Posted By: barrysloate
The major difference in the hobby today vs. yesterday according to Leon's post is that in the past, card collecting was a form of relaxation to take one away from the stresses of everyday life; while today collecting offers everyone a chance to stress themselves out a little more fighting and bickering and backstabbing over the small supply of available material. We can never go back to the price levels of the past, but wouldn't it be nice if collectors could go back to the mind-set of days gone by: that collecting should be a hobby and a form of relaxation, not a continuation of all the aggressive and anti-social behavior that many of us exercise in our daily lives. |
#4
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Posted By: Patrick McMenemy
Very well said Barry! |
#5
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
The joy of when this hobby was in first starting |
#6
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Posted By: barrysloate
Ted- did I reach one of the monuments? |
#7
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Yes... but they found cork in your bat. |
#8
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Except I remember just the same sort of mercenary, competitive, agressive attitudes back then. Only it wasn't money, it was supply of cards where the competition centered. We all combed antique stores, flea markets, etc., chasing down material in competition with our peers. And you better believe that when we got really good cards that our peers wanted, we held them for heavy ransoms--in cardboard. Let's not rose tint the past too heavily; I was there too and I remember how jealously we all guarded our resources and supplies (like the antique store I found that had a big box of old cards), or being "forced" into deals where I'd give 30-40 cards for one card that I really needed--the equivalent of a top-all bid today. |
#9
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Posted By: tobacco-r-us
Was a major contributor to the portfolio and stock market mindset of what was mostly a hobby. |
#10
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Posted By: barrysloate
Adam, nobody expects things to go back the way they were in the 80's, but the hobby certainly moved at an easier pace back then so I have to disagree with you to some degree. I think there was a lot more trading, it was a lot easier to get material as the stuff was worth less then and we all used to let things slide just a little. Sure, everyone valued their personal collections but I do not remember the hobby being even remotely as competitive as it is today. And I can recall going to the Willow Grove shows back then and knew I would find a ton of stuff and come home with a briefcase full of good material. Now I wouldn't even waste the gas money to drive there. Completely different hobby then, slower pace, and I will also add that nearly everyone who were my major trading, buying and selling partners from back then have in the majority dropped out of the hobby or at minimum are very disillusioned with how it is today. Nobody expects time to travel backwards, I'm just saying that for me and many others much of the fun is long gone. And so many of the vintage cards have become so ungodly expensive and will continue to get even more so that I realize that if it's a choice between keeping something or selling it, I think I would rather just have the money and let someone else own it. |
#11
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
And, I will add to your...."vintage cards have become so |
#12
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Posted By: barrysloate
Thanks Ted- but Hal accused me of using a corked bat. Hey, what does he expect from a guy who weighs 145 lbs.- I need to find an edge somewhere! |
#13
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
1st.....Barry, just tell Hal to take the "corked" bat and |
#14
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Posted By: warshawlaw
The card is rare because he was under contract to Topps at the time and litigation was threatened. The broken plate story was the T206 Plank explanation. |
#15
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Posted By: BlackSoxFan..
What a fantastic topic this has become.... although I am relatively young ... I am begining to get to the age where i too can "recall the days of yester year" ... and as previously stated ... let's not be so foolish as to think that things before were always better simply because they came first and were not what they are now. |
#16
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
ADAM W. |
#17
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Posted By: warshawlaw
None, and I never claimed to. I am not perpetuating a myth. I merely stated that the broken plate story was the explanation for the Plank, in response to the statement that the 1954 Williams Bowman was the result of a broken plate. As you agree, the Williams resulted from a threat of contract litigation, nothing more. |
#18
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Posted By: tobacco-r-us
In regards to the broken plate myth. |
#19
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Posted By: Robert
I don't buy this broken plate theory because in would affect multiple players all on the same sheet that the Plank was printed on would it not? Or maybe that one plate consisted of the Plank, Demmitt, O'Hara, Wagner, Magie, Shappe, etc...but then they all have different backs to go with it. So that theory is bunk IMO...we will probable never now the truth and we coul'nt handle the truth anyways. |
#20
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I don't recall Plank being the card next to Wagner on the uncut T206 strip, so I don't see how a problem removing Wagner would lead to a problem with Plank but not the cards we know were next to Wagner. |
#21
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Adam W. |
#22
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Posted By: warshawlaw
so why is it that all of the "2-name" T206 miscuts have the same guy's name at the top and bottom? Sounds to me like the sheets had vertical columns of the same cards. Until you can show me a T206 sheet or strip placing Plank and Wagner in proximity, all theories as to how the Plank card came to be rare are just theories. |
#23
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
It goes without saying, that many T206's were multiply |
#24
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Posted By: barrysloate
I agree with Ted that it is unusual that a T206 sheet has never been found. I've seen Old Judge sheets, a Buchner Gold Coin sheet, E93's, all 1930's cards upwards, but never a T205, 06, or 07. But it is clear that the same player did appear vertically as Adam pointed out. A Plank and and Wagner on the same sheet- I think it's doubtful because my guess is each is rare for a different reason, even though I admit I don't know what each of those reasons are. |
#25
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Posted By: MW
Based on the only known evidence to date, I would say that the T206 Wagner and Plank are indeed on the same sheet. |
#26
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Really, I am curious as heck, Mike. If there are no sheets and no photos of sheets and no information re sheets, what is there besides conjecture? |
#27
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Posted By: barrysloate
Wagner is known in both Piedmont and Sweet Cap 150. Plank is known in Piedmont 150 and 350. There is only one combination there where they could appear on the same sheet. |
#28
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Posted By: scott ingold
This is informative as hell. |
#29
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Posted By: MW
barry, |
#30
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Posted By: Paul
There is an uncut T206 strip with Wagner in the middle. Plank is not on either side. I don't think much of the "accidentally cut up the Planks" theory. |
#31
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
The Magie error card has a Piedmont 150 back. |
#32
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
JOE P. |
#33
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Posted By: Doug
"so why is it that all of the "2-name" T206 miscuts have the same guy's name at the top and bottom? Sounds to me like the sheets had vertical columns of the same cards." |
#34
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Posted By: tobacco-r-us
Among other things, this computer illiterate is going through an adjustment period. |
#35
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Posted By: jay behrens
Joe, it does get better. You need to get a 46" LCD tv, a DVI-HDMI cable and truly enjoy your computer on a big screen |
#36
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Posted By: tobacco-r-us
It would blow my mind, but what a way to go. |
#37
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
<<I am happy to say that I still have the glee, enjoyment and satisfaction whenever I add a needed card to my set.>> |
#38
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Posted By: barrysloate
Mike- Unless I am misunderstanding something in your last post, have you or anyone ever seen an uncut sheet of T206? Other than the proof strip with Wagner I can't recall ever hearing of even a two-card panel or partial sheet. How do you base your theory of Wagner and Plank being on the same sheet? Let's assume someone found one with Piedmont 150 backs. Are you saying that if a Wagner was on it, a Plank would be too? And as a final question- does any of this have to do with the PSA-8 Wagner and its origin? |
#39
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
Hi Barry, the original question was about the t206 Wagner in general, not the "the infamous one" once owned by "the great one". |
#40
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Posted By: barrysloate
There are so few T206 known with other cards connected to them- either uncut pairs, partial sheets, panels, anything- that it is tough for us to get any sense of how they were produced. I think all we have ever gleaned with certainty is the same card appears on the sheet in vertical rows. But I feel the reasons for the rarity of Plank and Wagner are different because Plank was reissued in the 350 series, Wagner wasn't. I still can't say to this day exactly why either is rare, but I can say with a measure of confidence that each is rare for a different reason. |
#41
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Posted By: ChuckkieB
I just wanted to say that as a frequent lurker and part time poster, it is threads like this that make this forum an absolute pleasure to be a part of. |
#42
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Posted By: tobacco-r-us
Hey Joe October 11 2005, 11:06 AM |
#43
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
Plank might have originally been an oversight or he was late to agree that his image could be used. 2 Possible scenarios of what then might have happened: |
#44
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Bill Heitman (T206 - The Monster) confirms my earlier |
#45
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
So what's your theory about Plank? |
#46
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Posted By: tobacco-r-us
Doyle -- Piedmont 350 - Fact # 25 VA |
#47
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
JOE P. |
#48
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
I didn't follow your point in the earlier post, but I get it now. |
#49
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Posted By: barrysloate
What's fascinating here is that with all the knowledge the vintage card hobby has about virtually every aspect of each card set, something as basic as the rarity of the big three in the exhaustively studied T206 set is still a mystery and still escapes consensus. |
#50
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Posted By: Scott Forrest
Ted could very well be right. Perhaps a bunch of early sheets were destroyed because of print flaws and they figured while they were fixing those images they would get rid of Plank and Wagner as well, Plank for unknown reasons. Then Plank reappeared briefly in another series and disappeared again for some unrelated and also unknown reason. |
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