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#101
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Posted By: warshawlaw
If they didn't accept SNL's $3000 offer to reunite, you know the Beatles never would do it |
#102
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Posted By: barrysloate
Yes, but that's because Lorne Michaels told them to give less to Ringo. |
#103
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Posted By: Steve
I should probably not do this but I also agree with the old-timers. The grading services have changed the business and is not all negative. Of course people overgraded cards (and continue) to as grading is inherently subjective and an art and not a science. My request is simply for consistency, which is of course a regular board topic about the different grading companies. I think the grading companies have encouraged the collecting of some unusual issues, especially by ebay buyers, as people would be afraid to buy more obscure and advaned issues on their own. |
#104
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Posted By: Rick
I wish I could have met Burdick and Nagy ...I really do. |
#105
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Posted By: Larry
I have been pretty active as collector & dealer since early 1970's, I grew up with Rob Lifson, Don Lepore, Bill Mastro, Don Steinbach, Paul Gallagher, George Lyons, Barry Halper, TTS, SCD, Frank Nagy,Elliot Dock, Rob Bruce, Bill Heitman,Pat Quinn etc..all names from the past and some still around.. |
#106
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Posted By: William Heitman
I don't want anyone to think that I believe Old Timers are the only collectors who are passionate about collecting. Heck, I've known some really Old Timers who were anything but passionate about collecting. And it is clear to me that there are many who are not Old Timers who are very passionate about collecting and very knowledgeable as well. Time produces experience and knowledge. In the age we live in, it would seem a lot easier to gather information which can provide valuable knowledge to everyone. I've known plenty of Old Timers who were just terrible at grading cards; but, that didn't matter too much because if they sold a card, or traded it, it was always on approval if through the mail or it occurred in person. When I was auctioning a lot, I never hesititated to refund someone their money if, after they actually received the card, they disagreed with my grading or even if they just decided they didn't like the card. |
#107
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Posted By: JudgeDred (Fred)
....a given card grade 8 is $1000....grade 9 = $10,000....grade 10 = $100,000. I would never be crazy enough to pay these prices for what is so incrementally insignificant a difference |
#108
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Posted By: DJ
Ted hit it on the head! |
#109
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Posted By: Al Crisafulli
I never used the term "old timer". I don't know if I'm an "old timer" or not - I've been collecting since 1976, but took a few years off after being turned off by shiny stuff. |
#110
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Posted By: Rick
I have a great deal of respect for those before who did great research and had an incredible passion for cards when they were not worth the price of a car. |
#111
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Posted By: barrysloate
We are going through a generational change in our hobby specifically and in America at large. The baby boomers, one of the most culturally influential groups in American history, really got this whole hobby cooking in the 1980's. We are getting older now and next year the first official group of boomers turns sixty. As a result, many of us are getting out of the hobby and passing the torch to the next generation. There is nothing wrong with this and it is the natural order of things. I think today's generation collects a little differently than we did, and they are faced with the unfortunate reality that everything is so darn expensive, but that's just the way it is. One day years down the road all the boomers will be long gone but the cards we collected will still be here. It's important to recognize that change is inevitable. |
#112
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Don't pass us the stupid torch... |
#113
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Posted By: Michael Campbell
Yes, Mr. Heitman, I do know absolutely everything you mentioned. And all names mentioned. One can have such knowledge and still not be an old timer. There are many people in this hobby that fly under the radar. I know an individual in California who has millions of dollars worth of grade 8's and 9's, pre war, that no one on the forum would know. But for the record, I am not an old timer. I have been collecting cards since I was 5, and starting buying pre war in 1991. I guess I am borderline. |
#114
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Posted By: barrysloate
And you thought I didn't know that Clarence was Eddie Murphy? |
#115
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Rick |
#116
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Posted By: warshawlaw
The rose-colored glasses slip on every now and then around here and we all look back to the days of cheap cards and cameraderie...and it is selective memory at its best. The card "market" has always been driven by the same elements; they just used to be smaller money elements. I've been seriously into cards for 28 years (I consider running dealer tables regularly at shows in 1978 to qualify me as an "Old Timer" even if I was only 12-13 at the time) and the rivalry and competition for good cards has never been absent. The borderline personalities have always been there too. We just have a more sophisticated marketplace with lots more information and opportunities for communications today. The supply-demand-desire-behavior issues are the same as they ever were. |
#117
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Posted By: Al Crisafulli
"At first, Grading of BB cards was reluctantly received |
#118
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Posted By: Larry
The last posting above mine hit it on the nail.... |
#119
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Posted By: barrysloate
In the early years of grading I was one of those most vehemently against it; today I send everything out to be slabbed. If I didn't, I might as well close shop. You have to change with the times. Not always easy, as in some ways I'm still a hippie living in the 60's, but in business you can't be a dinosaur. |
#120
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Posted By: WP
There is one reason major reason for the success of grading companies. The consumer demanded it and the cards brought premiums over unslabbed cards. This began before the advent of ebay it started in 1994 and 1995 and was highlighted by the sale of the D. Hall collection. Whether or not pieces of the collection were altered and overgraded is a topic for another day. |
#121
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Posted By: William Heitman
I am very reluctantly weighing in on this thread once again. Rick's posting which refers to "old timers" as gators and/or dinosauers is just too insulting. It also demonstrates too much ignorance to ignore. |
#122
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Posted By: William Heitman
Thanks, Ted. I don't know of one collector who stood up and shouted--GIVE ME A GRADING SERVICE!!!! |
#123
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Posted By: WP
This would be a good time for Davallilo to jump in. |
#124
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Posted By: Anonymous
Rick, |
#125
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Posted By: Rick
I apologize for the "Hobby dinosour" line. |
#126
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Posted By: William Heitman
How available are $15,000 plus cards to you, Adam? |
#127
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Nobody begged for a grading service; enterprising people saw an opportunity and took it. And it caught on. I don't think anyone entered this hobby hoping to buy graded cards. I know I didn't; in fact, I only bought my first graded card two years ago or so. After putting together a 1958 Topps set, card by card, ungraded, all in cards purchased on ebay advertised as Near Mint, I came to realize that 90% of the dealers, reputable ones included, lied about the grades of their cards. It was a joke. So, instead of continuing to throw out money, I started buying PSA, SGC and GAI graded cards. This reduced the possibility of getting robbed. And even if the stray trimmed card ends up in a slabbed holder with a grade on it, my investment is protected. End of story. |
#128
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Posted By: DJ
I have enjoyed the progression of this thread from PSA/DNA's lawsuit to the "Honus" accounts to labeling those who came before us "dinosaurs". Been collecting 25+ years, not offended. |
#129
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Posted By: jay behrens
Rick, it's true that anyone can ganer a wealth of card knowledge in a short period of time in this day and age, but there is nothing can replace the handling of 10s of thousands, if not 100s of thousands of cards. All the book knowledge in the world about cards isn't going to help you when you finally get your hands on a G&B, Yum Yum or some other rare issue. Being able to handle and see the cards from a source you know to be legit is the only way to really become knowledgable about the cards you collect. |
#130
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Posted By: JimCrandell
WP-"It would be a good time for Davalillo to jump in." |
#131
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Posted By: Al Crisafulli
Attaboy, Jim. |
#132
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Posted By: Chris
I agree with Jim. I would get so frustrated with cards being misrepresented when I would buy them. Dealers would buy VG cards and sell them as VG-EX or EX. You may be taking a chance on a graded card not being what it is "advertised" to be but IMO you are taking a bigger chance with ungraded. The % of altered cards in slabs is much less than the % of over graded or altered raw cards. |
#133
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Posted By: JudgeDred (Fred)
Jim, |
#134
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Posted By: Al Crisafulli
No doubt. Buy the card, not the holder. |
#135
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Posted By: Anonymous
William, |
#136
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Posted By: William Heitman
The first article of mine that was published in The Trader Speaks some 30 years ago was on grading cards. I called for a standardized system of grading and made suggestions as to what I thought it should be. I have no doubt that the grading services are a step in the right direction. Two areas, though, that are inherent to any grading system would be the questions of authenticity and issues like trimming cards. Saying that a card is "authentic" is not the same as saying that it is in original shape. If a card has been played with, it should not be "graded." During the '70's a horrifying number of trimmed cards were thrust into collectors' hands by some overzealous, and less than honest, young dealers, who may not have known better, but should have. It was, in fact, common for these dealers to trim cards to achieve sharp corners, which were, at the time one of the prime things people looked at on cards. It was very common for these dealers to alter a vg card into an ex-mt looking card by trimming just a little off of the borders. Just about everyone knew that the McNall T206 Wagner was trimmed, even the guy who did the grading, and knew that it shouldn't have received a grade at all. Bruce McNall made his "fortune" as a coin dealer and sold a lot through mail order. He knew the value of slabbing that card. We have all known people who believe something to be true just because they've heard it said to be true over and over. Well that slabbed card makes a perpetual statement of truth, but it isn't true. I have collected coins just as long as I have collected cards. I loved both. Sometimes coin dealers submit the same coin for grading to the same grading services over and over, just hoping to get the card graded higher than it really should be. I once bought a slabbed 1909S VDB Lincoln penny from a dealer that was graded Red MS65 who stated to me "don't ever remove that coin--it'll never get the 'red' designation a second time." While I certainly believe standardized grading is essential to this hobby, I thought it should benefit collectors greatly, and not just seem to be a vehicle to bring in investors. |
#137
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
This thread has gone from the interesting "10.5 mil", to the very interesting "not 10.5 mil but really about 14k", and on to the fantastic, the history of the Gretzky-McNall card. That is what I want to read!!!! And I like seeing people talk about The Trader Speaks, and Mr. Burdick, Mr. Bray, and Mr. Nagy.... I love the history of the hobby, wish someone would do a book about it. Get down an oral history of how things were from Mr. Heitman and others, soon. Long live the old timers! |
#138
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Posted By: warshawlaw
most of the major holders will pop open with a screwdriver and twist of the wrist. |
#139
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Posted By: Brian Daniels
How much would you estimate Clarence's Saxaphone to be worth in Mastro ???? |
#140
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
I estimate that it will go for just under what they got last auction for: |
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