Re: Team's definition of Game Used
Good points Mark! One question would be then that if a player is inactive, who is not a QB but is dressed, is the shirt game worn. NFL auctions sold a Andre Johnson shirt as "game worn" even though he was inactive. Does that mean he dressed but didnt play? I thought that NFL players who were inactive due to injury were on the sideline but in street clothes. Baseball may be different.
As for prices you are right on. I have no idea how, with players using so many shirts that prices are so high. It should be the opposite! I think it is multifactorial as to why prices are what they are. Prices at JO (no knock on JO here at all as they sell quality shirts) never start cheap thus raising the bar for other sellers. I have had numerous sellers tell me that they base their prices of old 49er shirts on current prices. So lets say JO prices (who knows what the shirt actually sold for) an average receiver shirt at $1500, the seller of the 49er shirt tells me that if an average player sells for $1500 then a John Taylor must be 3000$! The 49er seller doesnt know that the JO shirt actually sold for say 800$. All they see is the retail 1500$ and thats what they base their price on.
Sellers also use NFL auctions for pricing guidelines. I think sellers also realize that some collectors want what they have and know that they eventually will pay somewhere close to the asking price.
I also agree that one game wear is not what is ultimately desirable on game used items. With shirts being unwashed though one game wear can be fairly extensive though. Just look at the Willis shirt posted by Clay in "feb pickups". It is beat to hell!
Now and then their are bargains out there but overall i think stuff is way to expensive. It always should boil down to "you get what you pay for" and in some cases its true. A genuine Jerry Rice shirt should be expensive for the real deal.
Always buying 9r gamers
paul
garciajones@yahoo.com
Good points Mark! One question would be then that if a player is inactive, who is not a QB but is dressed, is the shirt game worn. NFL auctions sold a Andre Johnson shirt as "game worn" even though he was inactive. Does that mean he dressed but didnt play? I thought that NFL players who were inactive due to injury were on the sideline but in street clothes. Baseball may be different.
As for prices you are right on. I have no idea how, with players using so many shirts that prices are so high. It should be the opposite! I think it is multifactorial as to why prices are what they are. Prices at JO (no knock on JO here at all as they sell quality shirts) never start cheap thus raising the bar for other sellers. I have had numerous sellers tell me that they base their prices of old 49er shirts on current prices. So lets say JO prices (who knows what the shirt actually sold for) an average receiver shirt at $1500, the seller of the 49er shirt tells me that if an average player sells for $1500 then a John Taylor must be 3000$! The 49er seller doesnt know that the JO shirt actually sold for say 800$. All they see is the retail 1500$ and thats what they base their price on.
Sellers also use NFL auctions for pricing guidelines. I think sellers also realize that some collectors want what they have and know that they eventually will pay somewhere close to the asking price.
I also agree that one game wear is not what is ultimately desirable on game used items. With shirts being unwashed though one game wear can be fairly extensive though. Just look at the Willis shirt posted by Clay in "feb pickups". It is beat to hell!
Now and then their are bargains out there but overall i think stuff is way to expensive. It always should boil down to "you get what you pay for" and in some cases its true. A genuine Jerry Rice shirt should be expensive for the real deal.
Always buying 9r gamers
paul
garciajones@yahoo.com
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