|
|
|
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
|
Back in 2003 or 2004, a PSA graded T206 Plank showed up on ebay. For the first and so far only time in my life, I had the money to be competitive. I ended up as the under bidder just a bit over $16K
![]() Steve |
|
#2
|
||||
|
||||
|
I have a few that haunt me.... Probably the biggest one is not bidding more on a PSA 5 1933 Butter Cream Grove with the Sept 1 back that sold for $500 in 2003... Someone had bid $498 and someone had bid $500 sometime before the auction ended. I saw the bids and had time to bid the next increment to win it, but couldn't pull the trigger. Ugh! Eight years later I am still looking for this card!!!!!
__________________
http://www.bandkgreen.net/baseballcards.htm |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
I believe it was 1976 at the Hotel Aspen, Parsippany New Jersey. A dealer had exactly 2 pages of 1952 Topps Mantles, 6 or so per page. He told my dad and I we could have any one of our pick for $100 per. I can't remember the condition but I know they were not beaters. Probably Ex or Ex/Mt. We looked at each other like he was crazy and smiled. The most I had ever spent on a card was $35 and that was for a Goudey Ruth! This was just a Mantle. I sure wish I knew how to build a flux capacitor.
Last edited by bbeck; 04-12-2011 at 03:26 PM. Reason: name |
|
#4
|
||||
|
||||
|
these stories happen repeatedly with all of us....and too many times.
Fortunately...there are times when we get something a fraction of what we would pay for it. |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
Todd-
You will have another chance at the rare blank back version of Wallace in this springs REA auction. Also Cady and Becker as well. Never seen these EVER in blank backs. |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
There was a Leland's auction about 10 years ago with a group of D381 Fleischmann's that included Wagner. It went late and I flinched when it hit $10K. David Bryan won it and the Wagner eventually wound up in a moderator's collection... perhaps you've seen scans of it 8 or 9 times now on this forum. I get mild stabbing pains when I see it again. That will always be my single biggest collecting wuss-out
![]() Bill Last edited by bcornell; 04-10-2011 at 11:45 PM. |
|
#7
|
||||
|
||||
|
I have told this story a few times...at the National in Anaheim in I think '96 (the same year they showed off the PSA Gretzky Wagner...which is a whole other story from that same National)...I was standing near Kit Young's table and was handed a deck of playing cards and told that they were probably one of a kind. I asked if I could rifle through them and write down all the Phillies in the deck. Carefully opened the deck and wrote down all the Phillies on the back of my wantlist at the time and handed the deck back. I was told I could have several of the Phillies at $100 or so apiece. I turned it down.
The deck was the Allegheny card deck. This is the one purchase that haunts me constantly. I still hope to buy one someday but alas... Joshua PS At least I still have that old wantlist with the cards written on the back as a reminder. |
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
|
I bought a T206 Cobb (bat off shoulder) raw. I saw it would grade about a 4 (it did), and the coin dealer I bought it from wanted 500 for it. He also had a Cobb (bat on shoulder) same grade and I could have had both for 900. I passed on it. I wince when I think about it.
|
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
|
My basic vote goes with Adam--could have afforded a T206 Wagner one time in my life, shortly after getting out of law school, renting housing from a friend, giving me low overhead living expenses, in the late '70's. Unfortunately, while I had collected baseball cards through my early teenage years, at this point in my life, I was a lot more interested in putting substantial sums of $$$ into building and street racing some very fast big block Corvettes on Friday and Saturday nights on Telegraph Ave.--The adrenalin still flowing through an ex-athlete, you know. With what I put into those two Corvettes, probably could have purchased a couple of Wagners! Had a lot of fun street racing,though I'd rather have the $250 K + now, or even keep the card, knowing it was mine to sell if and whenever I wanted to.
The M101 Ruth in NMt-Mt, as I've posted before, escaped me at the Strongsville, Ohio show in the early '90's. A dealer there had both a raw NMt-Mt specimen, and one much rougher, grading fair to good. Unfortunately, he wanted $7,000 for the NMT-Mt Ruth, and I had only $5,000 to spend, and he wasn't about to make that deal. Reluctantly, I settled for the example in fair to good for much less. Several months ago, I advised the wife that a NMt-Mt M101 Ruth had sold for $140,000, at which time she advised that she would have given me the extra $2000 needed to procure the higher graded example. Hah! Hindsight is 20/20--the trick would have been to come up with the added cash then, and that would have been unlikely. The wife doesn't like the Babe; she likes the $140,000! I can sympathize with Daryle too--that T210 Joe Jackson is such an enticing, almost impossibly rare card! I hope you guys know what these recollections mean--try to learn to recognize the $100,000 + card well before it gets to $100,000 +! There are those still out there; still in process. Think rare, significant and the best condition you can find or afford! Larry Last edited by ls7plus; 04-11-2011 at 11:09 PM. |
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
|
easy. late 1985, my Dad took me to a card show. One dealer I remember well, had some 54, 55, and 56 Topps. The Ernie Banks rookie was, wow, had to have been Nr Mint. And the 55 Clemente was in awesome shape. He was willing to sell the PAIR for $150. Now remember, this is Oct 1985. Against my Dad's wishes, I went instead with a lot of smaller rookies. Winfield, Yount, Brett, couple of 84 Donruss Mattingly's. Seems like I got a 80 T Henderson also. Seems like the Brett was the highest $$$ of those I got, and even it was only $20 or so. But boy, do I regret not taking my dad's advice. Especially since it was his money lol
|
![]() |
|
|