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#1
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I guess I don't appreciate post-career "tribute" cards
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#2
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I also think it's an overrated card. Didn't the value plummet after all the "rookie" card collectors got one?
__________________
Looking for Nebraska Indians memorabilia, photos and postcards |
#3
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I've always felt that a "rookie" card is just that....a card from the player's rookie year or minor league issue. 1952 Topps Mantle? Not a rookie! 1986-87 Fleer Jordan? Not a rookie! 1982 Donruss Golf Niklaus? Not a rookie!
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#4
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I think another reason for the price decline is that Leland's was able to trickle these out over a period of time, so that few people knew the total population.
The interesting question here of course is why, in this day and age, a major auction house would sell a high grade, major card raw. |
#5
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Gee, like I said, that's a real head-scratcher. Maybe Lelands isn't aware that graded cards sell for more. Or maybe the card would have (or did) grade a 3 on closer inspection.
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/calvindog/sets |
#6
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I wonder how far back in catalogs we would have to go to find a raw $10,000 card that could have been graded?
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#7
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If only there were some sort of delivery service which could pick up a card and get it to a grading company within, say, 24 hours. And what if grading services offered an, oh i don't know, 2 hour turn-around for a set fee. Ah, but that's just crazy talk. Some day.
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#8
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Peter,the reason a big auction house would not take the trouble to grade a big ticket card is probably due to the philosophy once imparted to me by the infamous Doug Allen: "We didn't grade the better condition cards in your lot because sometimes we get more bidding interest on raw cards." Ah,those old Mastronet days.
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#9
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Or if perhaps the big ticket item had glue on the back, got a bad grade, then cracked out and sold raw, then sent to a different grading company which gave it a NM grade.
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/calvindog/sets |
#10
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Heh.
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