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#51
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#52
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Once again, why is it that every time the subject of Bond Bread Jackie cards comes up, we focus solely on the portrait card being from 1947 along with how some/all of the remaining 12 cards were issued after 1947. What about the much more widely released D305 Jackie card that was included with the Musial and all other cards from that set. I have never heard any debate that this card was issued in 1947 so why isn’t it mentioned first and foremost in these conversations? This has to be the second or third time this subject has been brought up and no mention of the D305 Jackie until I interject numerous posts later.
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#53
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It started before my time. But I'll be very surprised if you can name me a dealer who didn't immediately embrace the concept and jump on the bandwagon.
Are you asking me to cite some "authority" to belabour the obvious? How about Adam Smith? ![]()
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That government governs best that governs least. Last edited by Balticfox; 12-19-2024 at 04:26 PM. |
#54
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Rookies cards, rookie cards. Sigh. Back in the day, someone did a heck of a job promoting this new notion of this thing called a rookie card. And everyone bit - hook, line & sinker.
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#55
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If the concept didn't resonate with collectors they would not have accepted it.
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Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ |
#56
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__________________
That government governs best that governs least. |
#57
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Your assertion that collectors prefer the first because they are stupid and gullible is insulting and ignorant. Ironically, you have now moved the goalposts from dealers convinced the stupid collectors to buy their old cards, to dealers embraced the idea. Obviously, they would embrace the idea. But they didn't come up with it. Last edited by OhioLawyerF5; 12-19-2024 at 07:33 PM. |
#58
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That YOU personally don't value rookie cards says nothing about the hobby as a whole, much less prove that this is some conspiracy foisted on dumb collectors by unspecified people at an unspecified time. Next point, if you have one?
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Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ |
#59
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The only RC that I feel like a fool for having in my collection is 1963 Topps Pete Rose because it's an ugly as hell card that has cost too much since the 80s.
I would say at least the value is way more than than when I bought it many years ago, but it's a card in my collection not an investment I'm trying to turn for a profit. The 63T Tony Oliva is ugly as hell, too, but at least it's not anywhere near the price of a Rose. Last edited by BioCRN; 12-19-2024 at 07:47 PM. |
#60
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I love my Ken McMullen rookie card.
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I collect all major sports and there is only ONE RC I refuse to own because it's so hideous -- Moses Malone 1975 Topps. Opted for a 1976 instead.
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Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ |
#62
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https://www.youtube.com/user/JStottlemire1 I just love collecting, trading and enjoying the hobby. I PC and enjoy pre war iconic cards. I enjoy anything Cobb, Jackson, Ruth and Robinson. Currently working and prioritizing Jackie Robinson Bond Bread set. Last edited by Jstottlemire1; 12-19-2024 at 08:47 PM. |
#63
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I am aware that there are different card stocks, but the Montiels are not printed on any of them. The paper they are printed on is newsprint, so you can call them sports images or whatever you like, but if you try to hold one level (horizontal) from the corner you'll find that they are decidedly not any sort of card. They'll just flop over, the same as any sheet of newspaper would, because that is how the material behaves. I don't expect we'll ever all agree on the minimum or maximum length or width for a baseball card, but I think we can at least agree that it needs to be a card.
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#65
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Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ |
#66
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You instead asked me to produce a "source" for something that should be obvious to any prudent man. Sellers will try to talk up the value of their wares. That's no surprise to any prudent man. Or by source do you mean "originator"? If so I'll leave the Sisyphean task of sorting through the mists of time to find this originator up to you. After all, you're the only one who's interested in his identity. Methinks you just want an argument. Fine then. You've come to the right place. Quote:
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Source? Hey, I can dole out as many insults as you deserve! Once again you've come to the right place for those. The ignorance though you'll have to seek elsewhere. ![]()
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That government governs best that governs least. Last edited by Balticfox; 12-19-2024 at 11:21 PM. |
#67
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__________________
That government governs best that governs least. |
#68
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In the early days, a player's card wasn't always the most valuable. Brooks Robinson's 1967 Topps card was worth more than his 1957 Topps card. Johnny Bench's 1970 card was worth more than his 1968 card. A lot of the 1963 Topps Pete Rose card's value was tied to it being a high number card and printed in lesser quantities than his 1964 Topps card. As time went on, the concept of the rookie card was marketed to collectors, newer collectors in particular. As the chase for current year rookie cards became more intense, the values of vintage rookie cards rose to the point where it was the only card that mattered and scarcity no longer as important. |
#69
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Yes I do indeed! Why do you and OhioLawyerF5 so often come across as Tweedledum and Tweedledee, or Abbott and Costello if you prefer? Is it the water in Ohio? Something more sinister perhaps? I'm sure I'm not the only one who'd like an explanation, if there is one. ![]()
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That government governs best that governs least. Last edited by Balticfox; 12-19-2024 at 11:51 PM. |
#70
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Oh absolutely! I agree! It was the 1952 Mickey Mantle high numbered rookie card that got the ball rolling (helped along by sellers sitting on Mantle rookies circulating stories of untold cases of high numbers being dumped in the Hudson River). Then the Topps 1958-59 Bobby Hull rookie card was the last card in the set thus being more susceptible to pocket wear and rubber band damage. But those sitting on inventories of rookie cards, i.e. dealers, fanned the flames of demand for rookie cards which is how/why the silliness took hold and escalated beyond all reason. ![]()
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That government governs best that governs least. Last edited by Balticfox; 12-19-2024 at 11:19 PM. |
#71
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Gracias.
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#72
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For someone so verbose, you sure lack logical substance. Comparing collecting mentality to broader consume markets is asinine. They are literally the opposite. Consumers, by definition, are buying to consume. Collectors are buying to keep/hoard/curate/build a collection. Very different purposes. A distintion that causes one to want the newest, and one to prefer the oldest, for obvious reasons that a prudent man would understand. But given that you appear to think your post actually contained a shred of evidence to support your claim that rookie cards are preferred because once upon a time dealers convinced gullible collectors what they should like, tells me you aren't even remotely close to being a prudent man. Last edited by OhioLawyerF5; 12-20-2024 at 04:34 AM. |
#73
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Regardless of your contradiction, every single collectibles market, be it art, comics, beenie babies, guns, antiques, or sports cards, prefers and values older and earlier to newer. It's been that way for centuries. Card dealers didn't come up with it, as it predates cards. There is obviously more to it than marketing. Further, as I explained to the not-so-sly fox, the fact that dealers anf manufacturers leaned into and embraced the desire of collectors to have the earliest cards of a player, does not mean they created that desire. If your position is true, that high number cards' perceived scarcity was the reason for collectors preferring the earliest, then this phenomenon would be limited to sports cards. But it's not. It is universal in collecting. If your argument about collecting mentality is based solely on a scenario unique to baseball cards, and begins in 1952, you have already missed the mark. Collectors preferring the earliest pre-dates the very existence of sports cards. All you are doing is trying to rationize why you prefer the cards you do. And you have to do it by denigrating the way others collect. Last edited by OhioLawyerF5; 12-20-2024 at 04:57 AM. |
#74
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#75
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Last edited by packs; 12-20-2024 at 07:18 AM. |
#76
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And it was all about the survival rate of those cards. Kids typically collected as kids for maybe 3-4 years. Yes, there were outliers like me and probably a bunch of others here who never really stopped. And the occasional purge of "stuff" by mom was a thing. Sometimes a favorite card or two would be saved, but most got thrown away or given away. So for example, a kid gets a 54 Aaron. Bit loses interest in cards a bit into 55. By spring cleaning 56, he's not really interested. Maybe isn't a Braves fan, and probably not a fan of then kid who hit a decent number of home runs but isn't flashy like Mays or Mantle and who knows if he will get any better? So the favorite player and maybe a few stars get saved, but the Aaron rookie goes in the bin with the rest of the cards. So they were less common. By the late 70's, that was less of a thing. The hobby was more advanced and popular. Not that kids collected longer, but the Rookie card thing had been established. So they got saved more often than not. By the junk wax era - yeah, it was nothing buy hype. And Beckett for better or worse promoted guidelines that said local issues couldn't be rookie cards. They had to be major nationally issued sets. I would say that for most sets since the mid 70's the rookie cards are more common than all but a few stars. But not by much. It's sort of silly for prewar cards, and even late 40's cards. A few other things influence it, mostly that people have a bit of a fascination with "firsts" . Sort of like a first edition of a book, or a card of someone who was the first to do something. |
#77
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Identifying a few historical examples where the RC was not the most valuable does not prove the hobby never cared about rookie cards. Even today there are such examples, not only Mantle. Pedro Martinez' RC isn't worth a nickel. In high grade, a 71 Munson and I think too a 71 Vida Blue are worth more than their RCs. There may be others. Nobody is contending relative abundance/scarcity is entirely irrelevant. Do people care now more than ever about RCs, perhaps, but again that does not show there was a time they did not.
__________________
Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ |
#78
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Sometimes a card just has a cool image like the Pee Wee Reese Bowman. But generally speaking I would say the hobby appreciates rookie cards.
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#80
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The price you'll pay for the Art Whitney with Dog N172 is about 5% Whitney and 95% dog.
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#81
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#82
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That said, a money printing machine like PSA should suck it up and deal with it...imo... |
#83
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I would have some respect for PSA if they instead announced that they don’t care about facts, because what matters is juicing the investment and the 1948 date lends itself to better investment gains than the truth, and that they are happy to lie because customers will never hold them responsible or expect them to be honest or competent, as in their desire to profit the customers will continue to submit to PSA no matter what PSA does and how transparently incompetent or unknowledgeable about the items they sell their alleged expertise on they are. Probably wouldn’t even hurt their business! At least it wouldn’t be an incredibly obvious lie.
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#84
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#85
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__________________
Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ |
#86
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Last edited by Pat R; 12-20-2024 at 05:04 PM. |
#87
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As far as the pack assortment and distribution of cards. This was not modern printing, there was not an order that things came off the press, these cards were printed, cut, and placed into packs by hand. Then the boxes were packed randomly by hand. It would be like taking 40 decks of cards, throwing them in the air and trying to play blackjack guessing when you would hit 21. |
#88
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Let’s be honest — the Leaf photo/image is absolutely hideous.
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__________________ • Collecting Indianapolis-related pre-war and rare regionals, along with other vintage thru '80s • Successful deals with Kingcobb, Harford20, darwinbulldog, iwantitiwinit, helfrich91, kaddyshack, Marckus99, D. Bergin, Commodus the Great, Moonlight Graham, orioles70, adoo1, Nilo, JollyElm |
#89
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The surviving pop counts of 1948/49 Leaf Short Prints is likely somewhere between 200-250 total copies of each card. Each SP was printed on the same 7x7 sheets, so the original pop counts were identical for all SPs.
The PSA pop counts for most SPs range from about 90 to 110 each. But those aren't graded often enough to get an idea of the true total population obviously. With the Paige being worth $20k+ even in low grade, nearly all copies have been graded at least once, with many of them having been graded multiple times. Are there still a handful of raw copies sitting in someone's attic that have never been graded? Sure, of course. But there probably aren't dozens of them floating around unaccounted for. The combined PSA/SGC/BVG pop counts for the Paige is currently 279 (193 PSA, 74 SGC, 12 BVG). It's safe to assume that each of the 12 BVG copies was sent to both PSA and SGC before being sent to BVG, so we can safely remove at least 24 from that pop report. Minus however many of the remaining PSA & SGC copies that were also cracked and resubmitted. Far more have been cracked and resubmitted than raw copies exist in Grandpa's attic today without question though. I would estimate that the true total remaining pop report today for the Paige is somewhere between 200 to 250 copies. And the remaining pop report for the other short prints is likely slightly less due to them being tossed in the trash at higher rates than the HOFers over the years. The data suggests that there is approximately a 10 to 1 ratio for the full print run cards to the short printed cards. See counts below. Notable combined PSA/SGC/BVG pop counts from the set: Short Prints: Satchel Paige 279 (193 PSA) Bob Feller 199 (156 PSA) George Kell 148 (111 PSA) Dom DiMaggio 171 (124 PSA) Larry Doby 215 (162 PSA) Non-SPs Ted Williams 2202 (1471 PSA) Babe Ruth 2328 (1595 PSA) Joe DiMaggio 2246 (1501 PSA) Jackie Robinson 2676 (1849 PSA) Stan Musial 1968 (1339 PSA)
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If it's not perfectly centered, I probably don't want it. Last edited by Snowman; 12-20-2024 at 08:03 PM. |
#90
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I would argue there are a LOT more ungraded copies than people think. We've graded two Paige cards from original owner collections in 5 years and we're pretty small potatoes.
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Check out https://www.thecollectorconnection.com Always looking for consignments 717.327.8915 We sell your less expensive pre-war cards individually instead of in bulk lots to make YOU the most money possible! and Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thecollectorconnectionauctions Last edited by Aquarian Sports Cards; 12-20-2024 at 08:09 PM. |
#91
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I would argue that getting two raw Paiges to grade graduates to you at least medium potatoes land.
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If it's not perfectly centered, I probably don't want it. |
#92
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Delete.
I'm not sure what happened to my response, but it looked like absolute nonsense when posted. Mark Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Last edited by dealme; 12-20-2024 at 08:47 PM. |
#93
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#94
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Kent Peterson Black Cap = 246 (62.4%) Kent Peterson Red Cap = 148 (37.6%) Cliff Aberson Full Sleeves = 249 (61.3%) Cliff Aberson Short Sleeves = 157 (38.7%) That gives us ~62%, or ~1550 out of ~2500, Black Cap Petersons and 38%, or ~950 out of ~2500 Red Cap Petersons.
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If it's not perfectly centered, I probably don't want it. |
#95
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That government governs best that governs least. |
#96
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#97
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#98
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Graig Kreindler's version of it is 10000x as good.
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#99
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And had not my contention been intrinsically sound, you wouldn't have been immediately compelled to simply obfuscate by calling upon my "sources". Quote:
My apologies though for venturing into set theory which is a subset of mathematics. I know many of you individuals in the legal field went into law because math isn't your strong point. But numbers very often intrude into the real world, they really do. Quote:
The very oldest semi-organized field of collecting may be that for coins. Coin collecting predates the Roman Empire. The coins most prized by collectors are those which best combine scarcity and aesthetic appeal. Those coins are rarely the oldest. For example, coins picturing the Emperor Decius postdate those picturing the Emperor Tiberius by nearly 250 years but Decius coins are more highly prized because they're rarer. And in the art world it's not a painter's earliest pictures that fetch the biggest bucks; it's his best. Quote:
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Incidentally the word is "rationalize". Yes, yes, I make mistakes too. But at least I have sufficient consideration for my fellow posters to read over my posts with a view to editing out any mistakes. Hey, despite your many and varied personal deficiencies, you too can have an impact (at least on this board)! How do you like my "new" old avatar which I'm resurrecting to better showcase the sly side of my character? ![]() ![]()
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That government governs best that governs least. Last edited by Balticfox; 12-21-2024 at 10:28 AM. |
#100
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That government governs best that governs least. |
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