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#1
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Posted By: Jimi
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#2
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Posted By: tbob
Let's say a guy corners the market on E94 Speaker cards and then destroys them all but one and that destruction is made public, I think the value of the Speaker would zoom. Whether it zooms proportionately or exponentially, that I am not sure of, and collectors would probably be so incensed they'd never bid on the card during their lifetimes. |
#3
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Posted By: Rob L
Isn't there something about the Topps 1952 Mantle having the high price because a large portion of the high numbered cards were destroyed or lost by Topps? |
#4
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Posted By: dennis
If you cornered the market,there would be no need to destroy the cards. the 52 mantle card was double printed.it has a high demand no matter how many are out there,but,that said it was in the destroyed high # series. |
#5
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Posted By: Richard Masson
I was involved in the Pinnacle/Score bankruptcy. Their last significant asset was significant (by both dollars and weight) of unsold sportscard inventory. They couldn't sell it because the amounts owed to the players unions (royalties) exceeded their expected liquidation proceeds. The inventory was destroyed, yet I don't think it had any impact on the value of their cards as collectibles, there were just fewer of them. |
#6
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Posted By: tbob
Supposedly Topps took tons of boxes and boxes of high numbered 52 cards and dumped them in the ocean. Mantle was a high number card in that set. I don't know if that story is apocryphal or not but I seem to have heard it more than once over the years. Topps then wised up after the '52 fiasco and started issuing their high numbered card sets in lower numbers because come fall kids were starting to get revved up and buying football cards and losing interest in that year's baseball set. |
#7
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Posted By: Richard Masson
the Kentucky Fried rat. But I still believe it. There was a similar story related to the 1967 high numbers and a fire in the production plant that limited output. I believe that too, because I want to. |
#8
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Posted By: dennis
but it sounds good,i want to believe too! |
#9
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
that Tbob is going to do something like this with all those E94's and E98's! Make sure you burn a lot of Old Put's as well Tbob - that way my Cobb will be worth more. |
#10
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Sy Berger of Topps has confirmed it in interviews on many occasions. The cards were stored at Topps' warehouse for 8 years while they tried to figure out ways to use old inventory. They even tried to offer them to carnivals and when that failed, had them barged and dumped in the Atlantic. |
#11
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Posted By: Richard Masson
Won't be too eye-opening for the cynics on this board, but gives an early account of the maestros at Upper Deck and what happened as our hobby went from Geek Kingdom to mainstream. |
#12
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Posted By: barrysloate
Here's a related dilemma- let's suppose the real reason the T206 Honus Wagner is rare is that when the card was pulled someone at the factory took a thousand of them and stashed them away in a box somewhere in the depths of the factory. It's now 2005 and somehow you find that box and inside it are the thousand T-206 Wagners. What do you do? If word gets out, it becomes about as valuable as a Matty black cap (not that a thousand of those would be the end of the world). In one sense you are a multimillionaire, but at the same time you can't flood the market. What is the best way to liquidate? |
#13
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Posted By: Billy
You never could. Id sell one and keep the rest |
#14
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Posted By: Richard Masson
I think the Wagner and Plank were chase cards. |
#15
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Posted By: barrysloate
Richard, you're thinking of the T206 Hal Chase. That was the chase card. |
#16
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Posted By: Julie
to keep you from getting some kind of premium--why is it not within the realm of reason (wherever that is) that the t206 people made some ultra-rare cards, so people would chase them? Or--=didn't anybody think like that back then? |
#17
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Posted By: tbob
<<If you cornered the market,there would be no need to destroy the cards.>> |
#18
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Posted By: Richard Masson
But isn't it true that Plank exists with two different backs? Why the scarcity, then? Chase card theory has been around a long time. The Patterson Stengel (I think that's the set), the US Caramel McKinley, that George C. Miller card...why not the Plank and the Wagner? |
#19
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Posted By: warshawlaw
The other examples mentioned had contests attached to them. I don't know of a T206 contest. |
#20
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
Richard, The Stengel card is from the Maple Crispette set. |
#21
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Posted By: Brian Weisner
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#22
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Posted By: barrysloate
There is another theory about the Plank scarcity. There are a number of A's missing from the set- Mack, Coombs, and a few others who escape me; someone once suggested that there may have been a team boycott because the players weren't compensated, and Plank may have joined in a little later than the others. I'm not saying that theory is totally satisfying, but it is interesting. |
#23
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Posted By: Rhys
Were the 52 topps cards dumped in packs or just stacks of cards. If the entire wax box was dumped, there is still a fortune worth of 52 Topps wax wrappers at the bottom of the ocean. They should still be ok from the water resistant wax paper even though the cards would be mush by now. I am sure several thousand of those babies would be worth the cost of a few deep sea divers. I think it was just boxes full of the cards though if I remember right. |
#24
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Posted By: Steve Dawson
A collector made the cover of SCD when he protested the MLB players' strike that year by burning a huge pile of baseball cards. What made it so noteworthy was that the first card he lit up was his 1952 Topps Mantle. |
#25
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Posted By: Bob Lemke
that guy burned a real 1952 Topps Mantle. As I said in a column back then, it was just too coincidental that the card he was shown holding to the match was centered exactly the same as the full-size, full-color picture of the card we had recently published in the first issue of Baseball Cards Magazine. |
#26
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Posted By: Adam J. Baxter
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#27
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Posted By: Kevin Cummings
I am reading a Honus Wagner biography and it says the following: |
#28
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Posted By: Steve Dawson
I never believed . . . January 31 2005, 1:56 PM |
#29
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Posted By: Glenn
I'm sure the value of the individual cards you didn't burn would increase somewhat, but it wouldn't make up for the value of what you destroyed. If there are, let's say, 50 legitimate T206 Wagner's around and you owned 40 of them and decided to destroy three-fourths of the ones you owned, you'd have gone from owning 80% of the Wagner's to just half of them. No way the prices would jump enough to make that profitable (except from the perspective of all the other owners, who would surely applaud your actions). Even if you owned all of them and destroyed all but one, I can't imagine anyone would pay $10 million for it. |
#30
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Say, did you hear about the Norwegian who won an Olympic gold medal? He was so proud of it, he had it bronzed. |
#31
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Posted By: Bob
If there's any justice in the world, as the bonfire of burning cards is at it's peak a gust of wind would blow the one you kept out of your hands into the pile. |
#32
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Posted By: Darren J. Duet
Anyone caught burning or destroying prewar cards in any manner should be subjected to capital punishment. |
#33
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
If all of the above is true, then why would anybody try to corner the market on OJ Corcorans? |
#34
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Posted By: john/z28jd
Man i shouldve read the thread before i went and burned all my rare cards.Fool me once shame on you,fool me 100+ times i end up losing alot of cards |
#35
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Posted By: Jay Miller
A similar story has been told about the "world's most valuable stamp" the British Guiana One Cent Black on Magenta. This stamp is thought of as unique today. However, as the rumor goes, a second example was found early in the last century. The owner of the first copy secured the second copy and distroyed it thereby maintaining the uniqueness of his copy. |
#36
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jay- That makes no sense if it is true. Isn't the cumulative value of both stamps worth more than the value of a single unique one? Larry Fritsch had or still has both Lindy Lindstrom cards after he purchased the one we auctioned- do you think he will tear one up to preserve the value of the other? I say the stamp rumor is false. |
#37
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Barry- You may be right although I'm not 100% convinced. If Mastronet auctioned off a unique T206 (case 1) or auctioned off the only 2 known copies of a T206 (case 2) which would yield more? I'm not sure of the answer. However, it is an ego thing to have a unique item and perhaps that entered into the owner's thinking. |
#38
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Posted By: john/z28jd
It may make no sense value wise but if the one guy had the stamp for a long time thinking it was the only one he mightve taken alot of pride in that and he might be so rich that the monetary value is a distant 2nd to rareness in this case.Think of how disheartening it would be to find out a one-of-a-kind card isnt really that at all,and if youre rich and the person who owns that card finding a 2nd copy exists might make you do something drastic like buy the other copy and burn it. |
#39
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Posted By: barrysloate
Whether or not one unique item is worth more than the sum of two is debatable. What I'm talking about is physically taking the second item and going through the process of tearing it up. Jay, you have at least a few Old Judges that are unique. If you found a second, would you then tear it into little pieces and throw it in the trash? Of course not. How could anyone do that? |
#40
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Can it be more of an ego thing to have a unique item than to have the only two? I would prefer the latter - it seems like more of an accomplishment. |
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