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 Wednesday, May 09, 2007
Barry Bonds is going to break the home run record, like it or not. PLACE YOUR BETS!
Posted by Chris

bonds327.jpgLike it or not, Barry Bonds is going to break Hank Aaron’s home run record. The hype isn’t too strong yet, but in another few weeks I would imagine that the coverage for this topic is going to grow to epic proportions.

The smart money says Barry will probably break the record in June, according to stock-marketesque widget below.




widget.jpg













Gambling911.com lists the prop bets you can make surrounding the Bonds homer. You can even bet on whether Bud Selig will be in the house to see it.

Will Barry Bonds hit career home run #756 before or after the All-Star break?
Before -125
After -105

Will Barry Bonds hit career home run #756 at Home or Away?
Home -135
Away -105

Will Barry Bonds hit career home run #756 vs. a Lefty or a Righty?
Lefty +140
Righty -180

Will Bud Selig be present at the ball park when Bonds hits career HR #756?
Yes +250
No -400



It will be interesting to see what the ball actually sells for. I am guessing around $1 million, but maybe Todd McFarlane will get crazy like he did in the late 90s when he bought Mark McGwire’s milestone 70th home run ball for $3 million. I wouldn’t bet on it.

There is a chance that Bonds will break the record in Milwaukee. If he is close, I am definitely going to be sitting in the right-field bleachers. I remember when he was one dinger shy of home run 700. I actually was in the right-field bleachers at Miller Park and in about the fifth row.
He hit one ball to the warning track and boy was my heart pounding.

If you think about it, you have a much better chance to catch the home run ball than winning the lottery.

If you are in the right field bleachers at a stadium when he is one homer away from the record, you really only have to battle a few thousand fans in the area. What are the odds to win the lottery? One-in-a-million or so? You get my point.





5/9/2007 4:46:37 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Tuesday, May 08, 2007
Wire photos confuse the heck out of me!
Posted by Chris

wire photo 2300.jpgAll right. I am totally confused about the wonderful world of wire photos. I have seen them sell for thousands and have seen very nice ones sell for well under 20 bucks. What is the reason for this huge gap in price?

I understand that for any piece of memorabilia a few factors have to be taken into consideration:
- How rare is it?
- Is it original?
- How significant is it?
-How eye appealing is it?
-What condition is it in?

I honestly think you can throw at least one of these factors out the window when considering wire photos. I have seen many examples sell for big money even if they aren’t in great condition. Personally, I love the ones that have the AP stamp and date on the back. Crop marks are also a plus in my eyes.

wire photo 330 ebay.jpgThe most important factor when determining the desirability of a wire photo seems to be if it is a first-generation photo. I am definitely not a wire photo expert, but I truly believe that most of them are first generation photos. If a Hank Aaron 715 HR photo has a 1988 stamp on the back of it, then I am sure that it is probably not a first-generation example, but as long as the stamps are from the general timeframe of the event, I would assume that it is an original first-generation wire photo.

The next factors when determining value are all very close as far as importance goes, in my opinion.
How rare, significant and eye appealing a photo is seems to be what buyers consider.

Here are my questions and why I am so confused.
wire photo 220.jpgThe Joe Jackson photo on the right sold for $2,300, the Ruth sold for $1,100, the Aaron sold for $330 and the Rose sold for $220.

Now comes the confusing part and keep in mind, I believe all of these to be first-generation, original wire photos.
The Bill Russell/Red Aurebach photo only sold for $15, the Aaron photo picturing his very significant home run No. 600 went for a mere 20 bucks!

Yes, I understand that the Ruth and Jackson photos are very rare and very cool, but the Rose is from 1970 and doesn’t seem to be that much more significant that Aaron’s 600th HR. Not $200 more significant, I am sure of that.

wire5 15.jpgThese are just a few examples of what I am talking about. Punch in “wire photo” on eBay right now and see for yourself.

wirephoto7.jpgFeel free to share with me what you have found.




5/8/2007 4:47:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Monday, May 07, 2007
Heritage Auction, surprise lots and JFK
Posted by Chris

heritage 4.JPGAfter an action-packed weekend at Heritage Auction Galleries’ sale in Dallas, Texas I am back in Iola and people have been emailing and calling me all day to ask how it was.

This was the first ever major, live auction that I have attended and let me tell you… If you have never been to a live auction event, and if you are a serious collector, you must check one out.
The occasional good deal can be found, you get to hang out in a room full of some of the hobby’s biggest collectors, dealers and authenticators and you also get to view some of the sale’s highlighted pieces in person.

Heritage is located a few minutes from downtown Dallas and only a few blocks from American Airlines Center, the home of the Mavericks. Unfortunately, I didn’t get a chance to hang out with Mark Cuban during my trip, but I did get a chance to chat with authenticators Dave Bushing and Lou Lampson, in addition to super-collector Nicholas DePace.

heritage5.JPGCurrently, I am working on getting video interviews we conducted of Lampson, DePace and Heritage’s sports auction director Chris Ivy added to our website so everyone can check them out.
The Lampson and DePace videos are great, as they really give off a feel as to why they are considered some of the hobby’s most passionate collectors.

Ivy broke down the auction and talked about a pretty sweet new live video feature that Heritage was beta-testing for its Signature auction. It actually includes live, real-time video of the sale so bidders who couldn’t make it to Dallas can view the sale from home. According to Ivy, the feature worked perfectly Saturday with no problems.

heritage1.jpgI was very impressed with all facets of Heritage. The Heritage building is enormous and very cool. The auction setup was very professional and the auction itself went very well, as it tallied over $2.5 million.
The most excitement of the auction came when a 1922 Bert Cole game-worn Detroit Tigers flannel uniform sold for $47,800. Not too bad considering the min. bid was only $1,500.

Not far behind was a 1960s Ray Nitschke Packers home jersey that sold for nearly 40K.

heritage2.jpgAs an added bonus, Lampson had a rental car and brought Steve Bloedow and I to the site wear JFK was assassinated. Let me tell you, that was something to see. It was at night, so it was a little eerie.

The picture to the right is yours truly next to the infamous white picket fence atop the Grassy Knoll.
If you ever have a chance to go to Dallas, this site is a must-see.
Heritage has another major auction in October, so start planning the trip now. I will hopefully be there as well.heritage3.JPG




5/7/2007 3:24:23 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Thursday, May 03, 2007
No, they don’t switch cards
Posted by Chris

scd_garver.jpgI was just thinking about the period in my life when I graded cards for SCD Authentic… ahhh, the good ol’ days. Actually, it was one of the most boring jobs I ever had:) Sure, I got to check out some of the best cards in the hobby, Hank Aaron rookies, Mickey Mantle rookies – I even got to grade Larry Fritsch’s Honus Wagner T206 and Freddie Lindstrom 1932 US Caramel cards.

But I am more of a people person and it makes me cringe to think that I once spent more than eight hours a day in a small, dark room looking at cards.

That said, I remember some of the phone calls we used to get and I would like to share some of the biggest misconceptions in the card-grading world.

-    Grading companies do not switch cards.

o    I don’t care if it’s SCDA, PSA, GAI or even CSA, the large grading companies do not switch cards… it makes no sense. Why would a multi-million dollar company like PSA put its business in jeopardy to steal a few grand? Not happening.

-    The serial numbers on graded-card labels don’t mean anything significant.

psalabel.jpgo    I remember the rumors that the first number on a PSA label meant you had a certain grader looking at your cards. No. 5 meant you had the more lenient grader and No. 7 meant you were in trouble and would get no higher than 7s. Give me a break. It makes for a great Oliver Stone movie plot, but really holds no bearing in trading-card reality. There is no significance to the serial number. None.

-    People accuse grading card companies of damaging their cards.

o    I am not going to say that it doesn’t happen, but I will say it is highly unlikely. At SCDA, I can only remember one instance when a card was damaged. We immediately called the customer to explain what happened and I believe gave the man an amount in cash that he was happy with.

o    I would like to think that the other grading companies would handle it in the same manor as we did, but there is no way I will ever know for sure.

-    People used to call us and ask how they knew the package would get there safe. Many people simply would not send packages through the mail.

o    I can totally understand this. If the postal service lost a package, it would basically mean they lost someone’s childhood and/or passion. That said, I will throw in the fact that I have personally shipped thousands of packages in my life and the USPS has never lost one. Not even one.

-    Lastly, people used to call SCDA all the time and tell us they had a T206 Honus Wagner card and that they wanted to get it graded.

o    Ok… there is a chance that the card is real. Probably a one-out-of-a-million chance.

o    That said, if the back of the card tells you that a Honus Wagner T206 card is worth thousands of dollars, then it has no chance.

Good day, I’m off to Dallas for the Heritage auction.




5/3/2007 3:54:55 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, May 02, 2007
Who are the toughest living signers?
Posted by Chris

davis.jpgIt’s intriguing to me that there are a select number of athletes, celebrities and historical figures who just plain don’t sign autographs. Of course, there are always a few examples from this fraternity, but when they actually show up you are going to pay through the nose.

Correct me if I am wrong, but the following sports personalities are known as infamous non-signers: Dr. Mike Marshall, Al Davis (I couldn't even find a past auction result to provide a link for Davis), Bill Russell (he used to be a non-signer until the late 90s), Sandy Koufax (used to be also, until he signed a deal last year with UDA).

Historical figures who won’t sign at all anymore is the famous moonwalker Neil Armstrong and author of Catcher and the Rye, J.D. Salinger.

Paul McCartney isn’t a “non-signer,” but is a “barely-ever signer,” so is Bruce Springsteen. McCartney actually had a book signing last year and The Boss will sign if you are extremely lucky.

I thought you would find it interesting to check out past auction results of the few autograph examples from these personalities. Click on their names and you will be redirected a result.





5/2/2007 5:29:39 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [6]
 Tuesday, May 01, 2007
Scammers are focusing on memorabilia, toys and more
Posted by Chris

Scammers are in full force and they are hitting up people’s memorabilia, toys and anything else of value. About two years ago my friend’s grandmother, who lives in Green Bay, a junk man come to her home.

She let him in, and to my friend’s dismay, bought all of her antique sports collectibles. She probably had a few thousand dollars worth of programs, yearbooks and autographs from the Packers’ championship teams of the 1960s.
She wouldn’t tell my friend how much she sold the items for, probably because she knew she got ripped off.

Now I know it ultimately was her choice, but she was totally taken advantage of and she was way too trusting… Most elderly people are.
Another story of a scammer taking advantage of elderly people happened to my friend’s mother this past weekend.

She is in her 60s and beginning to forget things etc, so she is becoming an easy target.
My friend always told her not to sell any of his childhood toys. She vowed she never would.
Then, over the weekend she had a rummage sale and advertised it in her local newspaper. A man who must have seen the ad came to her home a day early and asked if she had anything else for sale. She said she had some furniture and invited the man inside.

According to my friend, she said the man showed a lot of interest in his childhood toys. She told him that the toys weren’t for sale.

My buddy arrived to his mom’s house the next day and some of his favorite toys were missing. The man who came in the house stole the toys!

My buddy was so upset over the fact that part of his childhood was stolen, and I don’t blame him.
Now to the unfortunate story of hobby pioneer Lionel Carter. Listen to this interview. Very sad that there are horrible people there doing this to innocent people.



5/1/2007 4:10:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Monday, April 30, 2007
Mastro’s Mantle rookie gets mainstream coverage
Posted by Chris

mlb_mantlerookiecard_275.jpgIt’s always a good thing when our beloved hobby gets national media attention. Today on ESPN.com, and I would assume other media outlets as well, the 1951 Mickey Mantle Bowman SGC 96 rookie card that sold in Mastro’s recent auction was featured in a story.
The price of $160K was the most ever for a Mint example of Mantle’s true rookie card.
I am not going lie; I was very baffled when I saw the final price. Granted it was graded by SGC, and not PSA, but PSA has graded 9 1951 Bowman Mantles with a grade of a Mint 9, so it’s not like cards similar to this one don’t exist.

Also, the ones that have previously sold went for only about a third as this one did.
Was this because the card was once owned by hobby veteran Lionel Carter? Was it just a better example than all the previously-sold 9s? I have no clue.

That raises an important question. Does it make a big difference if a notable person once owned a particular item? I remember when SCD Authentic graded cards from Larry Fritsch’s collection, and they did rather well, but three times the normal price? That is very surprising.
I wonder if it will end up in a PSA Gem 10 holder some day.

*****************
Now on to the NFL Draft. If you read my post last Friday you could probably sense the excitement I felt from the Packers’ potential on really improving the team. Instead, they made no significant trades and drafted a bunch of players I never heard of.

I am not one to doubt a General Manager of a pro football team, but I will admit that Ted Thompson’s strategy is very baffling at times.

There are people in Wisconsin that are calling for his head right now. I will wait and see how this all plays out before I go looking for him.

*****************
I will be headed to Dallas this Friday and I am very excited to tell everyone that I will be covering Heritage’s live auction. I will be writing a story covering the event for the pages of Sports Collectors Digest and also will be taking some video and doing some audio interviews with the hobby’s key players.

I am going to most likely be talking to Heritage’s auction director Chris Ivy and Heritage’s jersey authenticator and hobby pioneer Lou Lampson.

Should be very interesting content to say the least.




4/30/2007 5:00:39 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Friday, April 27, 2007
What the heck is Bonds up to now?
Posted by Chris

conte1.jpgLet me get this straight. In 2005, Victor Conte pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute steroids.  He admitted to running doping programs and has pretty much been the face of the Major League Baseball steroid scandal for a few years now.

After checking out Conte’s new website, where he is touting a new health supplement, Barry Bonds seems to have no problem posing with him and former trainer Greg Anderson, the man who allegedly provided Bonds with steroids.

All I can say is “wow!”

This is one of the most disturbing sites I have seen in a while, not because after serving a small jail sentence Conte is back selling supplements again. But, it is bothersome because Barry just doesn’t get it. Now call me crazy, but if I were Barry, the last person I would endorse is Conte and his shenanigans. Instead, he is smiling at the entire world, as to say “you can’t phase me, I can do whatever the heck I wanna do.”
Maybe he’s right.

*****************
honus.jpg
What a crazy week it’s been for sports memorabilia auctions. Mastro, Robert Edward, (ends this weekend) American Memorabilia, Bricol and others all close by this weekend.
I didn’t get a chance to analyze the final prices in these sales yet, but one card that caught my eye was Mastro’s 1903 E107 Briesch Williams Type I Honus Wagner ($111,6111). I won’t lie. I have never seen an example of this card, but I have a feeling there can’t be much more than a handful of these.

*****************

The NFL Draft is tomorrow. I am pretty pumped about it because I assume my Packers will try to capitalize in a major way. The consensus in Packer Nation is that we will be making a draft-day trade with the Raiders for Randy Moss. The Packers are also slated to take running back Marshawn Lynch in the first round. Green Bay has a ton of cap room and the team has also been rumored to be after the Chiefs Larry Johnson.
marshawn_lynch.jpg
I highly doubt that KC would dump the second-best running back in the league, but if they are willing to do something like that I am fine with paying him whatever he wants.





4/27/2007 12:31:36 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Thursday, April 26, 2007
Does pro-cut equal game-worn? Some people seem to think so
Posted by Chris

procut1.jpegAs I mentioned yesterday, two nights ago a notable game-worn jersey dealer gave me a ring out of the blue. He was just checking to see how everything was going, but also wanted to touch on some very important issues in the hobby.

The topic of pro-cut jerseys made its way into the conversation, and pretty much consumed the rest of our one-hour chat. It turns out that my dealer friend sold a batch of pro-cut baseball jerseys, which he suspects were later sold as “game-worn” jerseys. We both agreed that this has been going on for years and that it is a major problem in the hobby.

Then our conversation changed to the question of whether an honest person should ever sell a pro-cut jersey. I am not going to call anyone dishonest for stating a jersey for sale is a pro-cut shirt and not game-worn, but I am willing to bet that the majority of jerseys sold as pro-cut will be sold as game-worn at some point.

procut2.jpgSo, what am I getting at? Well, I am not exactly sure. Maybe if you ever sell a pro-cut jersey it would be a good idea to mark it in some fashion to make sure you know that it was never game-used. Invisible ink is a procedure that comes to mind.

I don’t know how many times I have seen a pro-cut signed jersey, which sold in an  sale and it ended up on eBay or somewhere else with dirt and other artificial wear.

Someone please correct me if I am wrong, but how many pro-cut jerseys you have seen sold on eBay are later sold again as pro-cuts? Probably very few. I am sure some end up in collections, but my gut tells me that a bunch of them are sold fraudulently as game-used.
Many people are being fooled and it really is a shame.




4/26/2007 4:48:32 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Paypal to the rescue
Posted by chris

Hello all. You will be happy to know that my Paypal account was restored to full power last night. After I made a phone call to its customer service line a representative asked me a few questions and restored the account.

I asked the lady why I was never sent my confirmation code through the mail. She said "sometimes it takes up to three weeks, sometimes it comes right away." Thanks... that's nice to know. If I wouldn't have called last night I could be waiting through the good part of May to receive the code.

Well, that's done at least.

I am sorry that this is going to be a short entry today. I was out of the office and am home now, but just wanted to touch base with everyone.

However, in closing, I will offer you this teaser for tomorrow's blog entry. After I received a call from a notable game-worn jersey dealer last night, I came up with a very disturbing angle on game-worn and game-cut jerseys.

Be sure to check out Gavel Chat tomorrow.

Good night.


4/25/2007 7:25:04 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Olbermann, Paypal and more
Posted by Chris

Keith Olberman.jpgIf you haven’t already checked it out, there is a picture of Keith Olbermann on the sportscollectorsdigest.com home page linking you to an archive of stories written by the host of MSNBC’s Countdown, regular participant of the Dan Patrick Show and columnist of SCD.
Keith is an avid collector and quite the historian. I think you will find his stories entertaining and equally informative.

*******************

I hate to keep bringing it up, but my Paypal account is still down. I really am getting tired of waiting for Paypal to send me a confirmation code via U.S. mail. Today I emailed them to find out what was taking so long. I have many items I have won recently off eBay and need to pay for them ASAP. You would think that Paypal would splurge for Express Mail on something this important, but I guess not.

*******************

If anyone missed it, the NBA Playoffs have started and last night I forced myself to watch some of DEAL OF NO DEAL.jpgthe games. Is it me or does nobody really care about the first round of these games? About ten years ago I would watch every single game of the playoffs that was televised. Now, I am more interested in the winner of The Apprentice than how many points Rip Hamilton scored last night.

I still would rather watch the NBA Playoffs than Deal of No Deal. What a stupid show! What is so exciting about watching a hyperactive contestant jump up and down, trying to win prizes with no talent or real strategy? I heard that it’s one of the highest-rated shows on television. If that’s true, we have truly sunk to the bottom of the barrel.





4/24/2007 3:58:47 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Monday, April 23, 2007
An eBay crook caught in the nick of time
Posted by Chris

fake ruth ball psa1.jpg


On Wednesday of last week someone forwarded me an email with a link to an eBay auction of someone selling a fake Babe Ruth signed baseball. I did a screen grab of the auction and it is posted it above.

With only a couple seconds left in the auction the ball was at about $800. Now that isn’t a ton for a Ruth ball, but a lot to pay for something that is worthless. I kept watching it and with ten seconds left in the auction it doubled in price.

The crazy thing is it had a full PSA/DNA letter included. Problem was the photo of the ball on the PSA letter was of the fake ball. The crook Photoshopped it in there or something.

Usually blatantly fake auctions similar to this get pulled from eBay immediately, but this one actually ended. I am guessing it didn’t get pulled right away because it had the PSA/DNA cert.
The thing that disturbed me most was that it was a real PSA/DNA letter (real cert number included), but when I went to PSA’s site and typed in the cert. number, there was no photo downloaded.
I am guessing PSA is so backed up they don’t get around to downloading all the photos for certs they write.

Now, I am not bashing PSA because I love its service, but I will say that a cert is pretty much worthless if it doesn’t download the photo onto the site. Anyone trying to deceive a buyer could use a real letter and import a photo of the fake piece onto the real one and have a fake cert produced.

This story does have a happy ending. I emailed the person who won the item (I am sure I wasn’t the only one who contacted the buyer) and the item was removed from eBay’s database and I assume the buyer was saved.

Also one little side note. I checked out the other auctions the seller had up today and he was selling something, meaning he wasn’t kicked off eBay. I assume his account was hijacked and he never even knew about the Ruth ball.



********************

I have an update on my Paypal account that was shut down last week.

Well, it is still shut down. I had to confirm my phone number, change my password and confirm my address. The phone number and password have been taken care, but I am still waiting for Paypal to send me a confirmation code to my home address. I can’t confirm my address until this happens.
This is turning into a pain. The stress that came from this hassle escalated when my automatic payment for eBay fees (set up through Paypal) was bounced back to me because of the Paypal account being shut down.

Money_Order.jpgI ended up paying for it with my credit card, but this is still becoming a little stressful and I can’t do anything with my account until Paypal sends me that confirmation code.
Hey, doesn’t Google offer a payment program similar to Paypal? Maybe I should just start using money orders again.

Stay tuned.






4/23/2007 3:29:59 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]