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#1
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Too bad SGCs website sucks and is a complete mess every time you go there for a pop report. PSA takes less than 30 seconds to get all the 1914s displayed and after 10 minutes trying to look up the SGC Cady I gave up...PSA makes SGC look very bad when comparing websites.
Back on topic, that is one way to do it Tom but I always thought the community was quite small though. I'm with Barry at 10-12 sets and I do not think most people understand the difficulty of finishing this set even if you have large wads of cash. When cards only come up f/s once in 5-6 years it makes it tough. There are those that "toy" with the set and I just think most of these collectors do not fully understand the difficulty involved. Barry, you set took 5 years to complete? Last edited by rainier2004; 03-23-2014 at 07:21 AM. |
#2
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Took me less than a minute to look up. SGC has 7 Cady's graded
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#3
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Thanks! Ok, so there are 16 Cady's graded. Yes, there are at least a few raw ones out there also. However, I would argue that any raw Cady's are probably not a part of a complete 1914 set. So it's somewhat obvious that it's possible that 16 sets exist as a maximum. Anyone out there with a Cady??
But the more interesting question I have is about other sets and their level of difficulty in comparison to the '14's: if there are 16 Cady's, with the Pratt, Caldwell, Keating and a few others being almost as scarce, maybe 20 of those, are there any other mainstream, non-regional sets with cards as scarce as those mentioned? Again, excluding purposely short-printed cards and error cards like in t206. I am not well-versed in all of the early sets.. |
#4
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Steve, thats right, it took me about 5 years to finish the set. It is not that five years is a tremendous amount of time, but I lived and breathed 1914 CJ's for at least 4 of those years and don't think I purchased a single "non-red" card in that time. Not to sound like a DB, but money was not the issue in completing the set…….availability was. This may have changed slightly in the past year or two with several sets being disassembled and hitting the market, but it is still a tremendously difficult set to COLLECT.
I capitalized "collect" to bring up the point that, of the four complete sets listed on the SGC and PSA sites, two of them were purchased as complete sets or essentially complete sets, and one was (as legend holds) obtained directly from the CJ factory There is absolutely nothing wrong with that, but it is very different than collecting a set one/several card(s) at a time. The other point I would bring up is, whereas the population reports are the best that we have, they clearly overestimate the populations of graded cards (by how much, I don't know) because there are many cards that get broken out of their holders and get resubmitted to another company, either for the sake of registry completeness, perceived under grading or the perception that a different holder will instill additional value to the card. Again, I don't say this disparagingly, but it is a fact (I know I have been complicit…..). I think this is especially true of the rarer cards and perhaps the key expensive cards in the set. I maintain that I can't imagine there being more than 10-12 complete sets. Sorry Tom……I know this missive doesn't address the main question that you posed regarding the rarity of other sets, but even back in high school I always had trouble actually answering the question that was posed….... |
#5
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__________________
Tackling the Monster T206 = 213/524 HOFs = 13/76 SLers = 33/48 Horizontals = 6/6 ALWAYS looking for T206 with back damage. |
#6
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Its all about who you know and cash talks.
I agree that cards are crossed over, busted out and the reports are a touch inflated...I have also contributed to this. You definitely lived and breathed CJs Barry for all that time. I also agree about collecting the cards one at a time, finding them in the far reaches takes some work opposed to buying someone elses set. |
#7
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Alex
__________________
Tackling the Monster T206 = 213/524 HOFs = 13/76 SLers = 33/48 Horizontals = 6/6 ALWAYS looking for T206 with back damage. |
#8
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Yep. I agree with the money situation. It helps tremendously. But the time comes where a person will be SOL if he or she is looking for a certain card, especially in a certain grade. I can track down the highest graded Keating, call it a Psa 7, let's say. And I can wave $8000 at the owner. The man is a millionaire many times over. One of the top 2 Psa sets is owned by the guy who owns the Pittsburgh Steelers, and lord knows what else. He laughs at my $8000 (which I don't have that kind of discretionary income anyway). Besides, no one wants to break up a set, not even us little guys.
As for the crossovers without retiring labels, which I'm sure has been discussed countless times on the forum, it is prevalent to the third power with the 1914's. The population numbers are inflated. I can vouch for that. Obvious point, it's true...but when a card till only has a Psa pop of 12, and it has been inflated, that is one scarce card. |
#9
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I think that there are a lot of really tough prewar sets out there, but since they are not widely collected like the 1914 CJ's, it's difficult to tell how rare they really are. For example, I think the W519 Numbered Type 2 and W590 Master set are really difficult to complete. However, if each card in these sets went for $1000+ like some of the difficult cards from the CJ's, perhaps a lot more of them would appear. Because of lot of these cards from these sets sell for less than $50, there is not great demand for dealers and collectors to scour their inventory to see if they have these cards and put them for sale on ebay or at an auction house. Other tough sets include E121-80 (and not including the back variations), E121-120, E122, and E220. I'm sure that there are plenty of other difficult sets. Still, I think the 1914 CJ's is one of the most difficult with a large number of collectors actively spending $$$$ to try to finish.
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#10
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I personally doubt 40 or more sets are out there.
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#11
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Back in 2004, SGC released a website promoting the sale of a very high grade 1914 complete set. The set sold, supposedly before it was graded, for $800,000 and was advertised to be sold through Mastro. The set was graded and received many high grades, including an amazing SGC 98 Joe Jackson. I did some searches for the SGC site, which is now no longer in existence, but did come across some matches on the wayback machine. The Net54 archive also had a thread on the set, which (oddly enough ![]() ![]() Old Net54 thread brought about by the announcement of the sale Going back in time -- the opening intro page to the site The press release about the sale And the discussion of the find, which mentions the factory connection, but not how the set was obtained... Last edited by CW; 03-23-2014 at 09:05 PM. |
#12
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Why?
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#13
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I think that it's "somewhat obvious" that at least 112 sets exist as a minimum. Doug |
#14
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Well, the guidebook says there are 121 1923 W572s, and no one I have ever heard of has ever assembled more than 114. Of the 7 not in that collection, 2 have no known graded examples (and therefore might not even exist), 1 has one graded example, 3 have 2 known examples (graded and ungraded added together) and 1 has 3 known examples.
The last card (one of the ones with no known graded examples) was added to the set in 2006. The cards were sold in strips of 10 cards. If the 121 is accurate ... it seems plausible there could be as many as 9 other cards out there that are uncatalogued. So, I think it's safe to say, there could be as few as 1 set that is even possible to be assembled, and it may even be impossible to assemble a full original 1923 set because those 9 cards could have been tossed over the years. But as others noted earlier, outside of Cobb and Ruth (over 35 of both are known) and few others, most of these cards don't command very much money ... but if they did, perhaps some would surface. Cheers, Patrick Ps - If you have a w572 of Barbare, Duncan, Heilmann, Parkinson, Rapp, Rigney or Wambsganss please PM me. Thank you.
__________________
__________________ Looking for 1923 W572 Walt Barbare and Pat Duncan. |
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