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 Wednesday, March 19, 2008
How do people fall for this?
Posted by Chris
 I have a feeling that by the time Gavel Chat readers see this CLICK HERE eBay will have removed the auction listing, but try to check it out anyway. It looks like the seller of this Clemente rookie decided to doctor a PSA label, and make what looks like a mid-grade card, look like a PSA 8. The thing that baffles me is that bids have already exceeded $700. How gullible are people? I snagged the image just in case it gets pulled early. *************
Now time to blog about yesterday's pot I ended up stirring. Yesterday's entry was meant to call out some people and raise some important issues. My intent was not to put down gameusedforum.com, which I think is great for the hobby by the way, or any of the well-meaning members who participate on the message board. I made my points in yesterday's blog and stick to them. For the original man who photomatched the Namath helmet, I never meant to note that you didn't do a good job on what you discovered. My point was that many people were making it sound like Heritage acted irresponsibly by going ahead to promote the Namath helmet before it was ever authenticated. I just wanted to make sure that people knew how Heritage's entire consigning process worked and that its third-party authenticator never saw the helmet until this week. I want to thank the two gentlemen from the board who called me with their concerns, as I genuinely enjoyed our conversations.
3/19/2008 6:06:24 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, March 18, 2008
There is nothing worse than a guy who talks the talk but doesn’t … well, you know
Posted by Chris
 I’m the first person to say that I love when Gavel Chat readers comment on a topic, or email me about anything they feel is important in the hobby. I don’t want to single out Rick Asten, who posted this comment on yesterday’s blog:
3/18/2008 11:41:55 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Chris, from what we're hearing now that helmet was likely never used by Namath during ANY game, let alone the Super Bowl. Shame on Heritage for not checking facts before going public with this. Remind me again, what exactly is that 20% buyer's penalty for? R.A. But it triggered something inside of me, as to how silly some people have reacted to Heritage’s Joe Namath “Super Bowl III” helmet. Rick commented with the following sentence: Shame on Heritage for not checking facts before going public with this. Click here to read a thread about this topic from gameusedforum.com I want to start by saying, I am a huge fan of gameusedforum.com and have been a board member pretty much since it started years ago, but some of you guys are way out of line, and some are simply cowards. Most of you are great, but some of you are instigators and are bad for the hobby. The Namath HelmetI called Heritage today to get the lowdown on what actually took place with this piece and how they made the mistake of offering it to the public without even authenticating it. Here is what happened. Also, keep in mind I worked at a major auction house for two years and everything the Heritage official told me is absolutely the same way my former job processes were ran. Before every auction is “live” on Heritage’s site, from the moment a consignor’s package is received and entered into their inventory, the entire cataloging process is traceable on its site. Keep in mind, descriptions and images can change and nothing is set in stone until the auction’s start. See the screen grab below:  In the case of the Namath helmet, it came with great written provenance. It came with a letter from Namath, which claimed the helmet was from SB III, the helmet had a very significant inscription (which had been authenticated by PSA/DNA and JSA) and it also came with a signed football, which added to the claim that this helmet was indeed Broadway Joe’s SB III gamer. So, taking all that into consideration, the folks at Heritage decided to run some ads highlighting this “great” lot. Keep in mind, Lou Lampson, its game-used equipment authenticator wasn’t scheduled to come in to their Dallas offices until this week, when he will look at all lots for the May Signature sale. So, Heritage jumped the gun and ran the ads. Remember, this is a business and they wanted to get the word out ASAP that this huge piece was in its upcoming sale. Was it bad judgment to run with the ads before Lou looked at the helmet? Maybe so, but they did and that was a business decision, but given the strong provenance, I believe it was a calculated risk and the majority of other auction houses probably would have done the same thing. Then a board member at gameusedforum.com did a photomatching to SB III and Namath and found out that it wasn’t the same helmet. Many board members crucified Heritage for promoting the piece as something it was not, but what they didn’t realize is that Lou never authenticated it and caught all the things wrong with it and many more things that the message board member didn’t even comment on in his original thread. I know some of you will say, “Yeah sure, Lou probably looked at it and couldn’t tell it wasn’t real.” Trust me. Lou was in this week and he didn’t see the helmet until now. Not many people know this, but Lou owns the Namath jersey from Super Bowl III and he is very, very familiar with this game. The knowledge that this guy has in his head, some of you would never be able to comprehend. Has Lou made mistakes in the past? Yes. But, by going nuts on an auction house for a mistake like this is not only bad for Heritage, but it is also bad for the hobby in general and board members who like to sit behind their computer and rant and rave about something like this are nothing but instigators who need to calm down. Also, I don’t know how many times I have read on the board that people want to confront a certain authenticator about a mistake that was made on a jersey or a bat and they always seem to want to try to email the person.  Well, when people found out that Lou was at the National last year, not one single person came up to him and challenged him with any concerns that were mentioned on the board. Also, Lou will be on a panel at the PCCE with other authenticators to help educate collectors. And when that was called to the attention of the members of gameusedforum.com, nobody seemed to want to go to the show in Chicago to talk with Lou.I have no problem with someone who wants to call out someone on a public forum, but I do have a problem when people are just starting to cause trouble when they really don’t know the facts. I am assuming I will take some bashing for this blog, but hopefully you won’t take offense to what I wrote and you will actually agree with some points. *********** Oh yeah... before I forget. For the guy who posted the thread that said: If Heritage decides to back off the SB3 connection, I think they'll
likely still try and pass it off as a SB3-era Namath helmet. Today Lou determined that it is not a game-worn Namath helmet, but is a Jets gamer from an unknown player. The person who made the above comment is exactly starting the kind of trouble that this blog was about. Stating something as irresponsible as that is as bad as an authenticator who has no facts to base his claims when he states a jersey is authentic.
3/18/2008 5:33:41 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, March 17, 2008
Killer items sold on eBay last week
Posted by Chris
 I haven’t been tracking significant baseball tickets for too long, but last week a 1903 World Series ticket stub sold on eBay for a little more than 11K. I have never seen one of these, but I assume from the strong price realized that the winning bidder was confident that this example was authentic. Not sure if 11K is what one of these should go for, but what a great piece! Another ticket that sold on eBay last week, which is one that I have always wanted to own, is a Super Bowl II stub. It only sold for about 10K, nearly half of what I thought it would sell for. *************
In other auction news, in case you didn’t hear, the Namath helmet in Heritage’s upcoming auction, which was originally billed as the shell Broadway Joe wore in Super Bowl III turned out to be not from that game. It still may be a Namath gamer, which is still a great piece, just not from the Super Bowl game. We will find out if it still gets auctioned by the Dallas-based sales venue.
3/17/2008 4:49:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, March 13, 2008
PCCE 2008 offers great opportunities for collectors
Posted by Chris
 Yesterday, I had a chat with Ryan Friedman, the manager of “The Premier Collectible Conference and Exhibition.”
“It's for serious collectors,” said Friedman, about the event that will take place in Rosemont, Ill., on April 17-20. “People that want to go to a convention and see the top companies will want to check this show out. Collectors will be able to buy and sell from them without the hassle of the 700-table exhibitor shows, where half the dealers probably aren't even something they're even there for.” This event, which will feature keynote speakers, a card show setting and some potentially, very intriguing expert panel discussions. The event is something Friedman has been thinking about doing for years. He and Mastro Auctions president Doug Allen decided to give it a try.  For anyone who's ever had a question for some of the authenticators who may not be that easy to get in touch with, or who would like to rub shoulders with many industry experts, now’s their chance. Admission is free if you sign up at THEIR WEBSITE until March 31. CLICK HERE for a list of the featured panel discussions.  The authentication panel with Lou Lampson, Dave Bushing and John Taube should be extra interesting. “This will be the public's chance to get the straight forward answer directly from the source,” said Friedman. “These guys may be competitors with each other, but what they're really here for is to educate the collector. This is just a great opportunity. It's kind of like going to a coaching clinic and Coach K., Roy Williams and Bobby Knight who are up there answering questions.” For people who will be unable to attend the event, you can click on this link HERE to ask any of the speakers a question, which they will address at the conference. I will also be covering the event, and will be posting some video interviews, so I will make sure to keep everyone up to date on when these will be posted on our sites.
3/13/2008 11:41:40 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, March 12, 2008
The fate of Barry Bonds' "last" home run ball to be announced tommorrow
Posted by Chris
Remember this blog that I wrote four months ago? Well, if you’re like me, you probably can’t remember what you ate for lunch yesterday, so in that case CLICK HERE.(by the way... Youtube.com had the video removed) Today I received a press release from SCP Auctions announcing that the “owner” of Barry Bonds’ 762nd home run is holding a press conference tomorrow to tell the world what he is going to do with the infamous record-setting ball. It's kind of ironic that this news came about today, just five days after I called the Colorado Rockies' media relations department to ask them if they knew who caught the ball. They said it was a mystery and nobody knew. Well, maybe now we will know. I'm going to hold off commenting too much about this, because I am assuming most of my questions will be answered tomorrow at the PR event. This is going to stir up lots of conversation in the hobby. BRING ON THE BIG DOGG SPRING AUCTIONS!
3/12/2008 3:04:05 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, March 10, 2008
eBay boycott conspiracy theory won't go away
Posted by Chris
I was just surfing Youtube a while ago and found this interesting clip about eBay and the mystery listings I blogged about last week. Take a look at this ... The music is kind of creepy, like something you would hear on one of those SCI FI Channel alien documentaries or something. One of Gavel Chat's readers, Dave Bailey, made a good suggestion the other day in one of his comments... He said that buyers should be rewarded on eBay. Kind of like Mastercard does with its rewards program. I think that was a great idea and eBay should give "powerbuyers" some sort of a kickback, like airplane tickets, prizes, cash etc.
3/10/2008 4:05:54 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, March 06, 2008
March is here ... bring on the roundball
Posted by Chris
 Yep... I'm still here. I didn't jump off a bridge after the Brett Favre retirement press conference ... How could I? There's not a stop light in Iola, Wis., let alone a bridge. Well, I guess it's officially basketball season and the NBA is really starting to heat up. That doesn't excite me all that much, but March also means that it's time for the best college basketball of the year. I never get into the regular part of the college season, but how can't you not love March Madness? The weather starts getting nicer during this time of the year, and for some reason filling out an NCAA bracket is a tradition in every company's office. Any early Final Four predictions out there in Gavel Chat land??
3/6/2008 5:12:32 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Favre has retired and I have to admit, I am a little surprised
Posted by Chris
 I feel the same way I did on September 27, 1992, when I attended a game at Lambeau Field to see the team’s new quarterback Brett Favre make his first start in the NFL … Favre’s first start was made the exact same way as his last, illusively quiet. I attended both games, and just like I didn’t know he would have one of the most illustrious careers in the game’s history when I saw him for the first time in 1992, I had no clue he would be hanging up his jersey for good after the Giants defeated the Green and Gold at the 2008 NFC Championship Game. In typical No. 4 fashion, today it was announced that Favre was going to retire. With no notice, coming off one of his best years, and with a physical stature that appeared he could play at least another two years, Brett Favre retired. I feel a little upset that I wasn’t able to clap a little bit extra for Favre at the Giants game and give him the send off that he deserved. Nobody out of the 70,000+ fans thought this man was going to call it quits. Why would he? They may be only missing one or two pieces to really make a run at the Super Bowl next year, but Brett still hung em up. I guess the next time we'll get to clap for Brett will be in Canton in a few years. He will be missed.
3/4/2008 10:32:10 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, March 03, 2008
Obama baseball memorabilia is sick
Posted by Chris
 I mean "sick" in a good way. 2008 presidential candidate Barack Obama's signature is on fire. Check out these two auction listings HERE and HERE... It is amazing to me that people are paying $2000+ for a signature of a guy who may not ever become president and who is very young and will sign much more in his lifetime. Also, look at the Topps card. That is the shakiest Obama signature I have ever seen. He must have been in a hurry that day.
3/3/2008 2:24:17 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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Has the eBay seller boycott really caused this?
Posted by Chris
 Ever since eBay officials decided to raise listing fees, and make some pretty wild changes this year, sellers have been ticked. So ticked that there was a very large organized sellers boycott that has definitely affected eBay’s listing numbers. But has it caused eBay to commit fraud? I would hope that my favorite online auction site would be smarter than this, but many online users are screaming foul and are accusing eBay of listing tens of thousands of “fake listings.” These mystery listings, that popped up right during the sellers strike, were auctions that people couldn’t even bid on. I guess there was no "bid" buttons on the listings. Why would they do this? People think to fraudulently inflate listing numbers during this boycott. Here is a blog that talks about the mystery listings.What do you guys think?
3/3/2008 2:06:02 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, February 29, 2008
Heritage lands a whopper
Posted by Chris
 Broadway Joe was larger than life. Before knuckle-heads like Chad Johnson and Plaxico Burress were making guarantees, Joe Namath did it from the heart. Super Bowl III was the game, and the huge underdog Jets defeated the Baltimore Colts in a game for the ages. Now, for the first time, Namath's helmet from that very game will be offered at auction. Heritage Auction Galleries will be selling that monumental piece at its signature sale in May of this year. I think it can bring six figures. That would definitely be a record for the sale of a game-worn helmet. The provenance on this bad boy is rock solid and that is why I really think it can fetch so much at auction. Click here to read the full story.
2/29/2008 5:30:47 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, February 28, 2008
What is this seller's goal here?
Posted by Chris
 I love eBay. For the most part, you can list anything for sale that you want, no matter how awesome it is or how stupid we may think it is. I would like to get your thoughts on a listing I stumbled upon today. It is an auction selling a Chris Everett photo. Just look at the title and description of this. What exactly is the seller trying to accomplish by listing an auction in this fashion? Do they think this is going to help them make more money? Is this photo worth anything to begin with? Is the seller an old enemy of Everett? Sometimes I just don't understand the intentions of people or their mindset when it comes to eBay auctions. Are they just having a little fun, or do they think that listings like this are good marketing ideas? I have no idea.
2/28/2008 3:11:52 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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