If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
When these type cards first came out, I could understand the immediate interest and crazy prices. But now, with so many out there, I don't. Plus, you never really know anything about the bat that the knobs came from. I couldn't see paying those type prices for a card with a knob of a bat. And if collecting those type cards as an investment, I don't see them holding high prices in the future.
Regards, Tony
sigpic
~I'm sorry, I can't hear you....my World Series Ring is making too much NOISE! - Alex Rodriguez~
1. Kids in particular (but adults too) have fun opening packs of cards and pulling things like this. I've done it with my son many times and he gets a real thrill out of pulling one, even if not a superstar. And the sets that include game-used cards typically include autographs too, so there is excitement about those too. It's a fun and harmless kind of gambling.
2. I, for one, have serious storage limitations on my ability to store bats. (Less about the space we have and more about the way my wife wants to use our space.) A little collection of cards is easy to store though. And they're easy to display too.
3. Although some of the prices are really out of whack, game-used cards are, in general, a much more affordable way to obtain a piece of a favorite player's gear.
I'd ask the question of why not just make an insert to win the whole bat? But then the company loses the entire rest of the bat with which to make GU bat cards.
For me, when you chop something into a thousand little pieces is ceases to be what it was. It is no longer a baseball bat or a jersey. It is now a small piece of garbage. I'm against the card companies doing this for many reasons. Here are a few...
A. It destroys vast amounts of real memorabilia.
B. It's been proven that the swatches are often fake
C. Card companies add phony value to cards by numbering them 1/1, etc.
D. Often cards are worth thousands right out of the gate based on a young players potential. It prices you out of being able to collect your favorite rookies. If you are sucker enough to pay those prices there is a high probability the card will be worth zero inside of 6 months because rookies often don't pan out.
E. It spawned $200-$500 boxes that only contain 4 cards.
F. Card companies are ripping people off because everyone is buying boxes trying to hit the lottery and get a high value card. Most do not because the boxes are full of trash autos of players that aren't even going to make the team that drafted them.
For me, when you chop something into a thousand little pieces is ceases to be what it was. It is no longer a baseball bat or a jersey. It is now a small piece of garbage. I'm against the card companies doing this for many reasons. Here are a few...
A. It destroys vast amounts of real memorabilia.
B. It's been proven that the swatches are often fake
C. Card companies add phony value to cards by numbering them 1/1, etc.
D. Often cards are worth thousands right out of the gate based on a young players potential. It prices you out of being able to collect your favorite rookies. If you are sucker enough to pay those prices there is a high probability the card will be worth zero inside of 6 months because rookies often don't pan out.
E. It spawned $200-$500 boxes that only contain 4 cards.
F. Card companies are ripping people off because everyone is buying boxes trying to hit the lottery and get a high value card. Most do not because the boxes are full of trash autos of players that aren't even going to make the team that drafted them.
Have you seen what card companies pass for "game-used" these days? Players wear up to 50 jerseys at once for a hot minute, then take it off to be passed along to collectors as "event-worn". Check out this pic: http://www.beckett.com/news/2011/05/...change-things/
Have you seen what card companies pass for "game-used" these days? Players wear up to 50 jerseys at once for a hot minute, then take it off to be passed along to collectors as "event-worn". Check out this pic: http://www.beckett.com/news/2011/05/...change-things/
Glad I got out of that hobby yrs ago, helped fund my GU collection! Had a few Pujols Beckett graded 10's pack pulled rc autos!
For me, when you chop something into a thousand little pieces is ceases to be what it was. It is no longer a baseball bat or a jersey. It is now a small piece of garbage. I'm against the card companies doing this for many reasons. Here are a few...
A. It destroys vast amounts of real memorabilia.
B. It's been proven that the swatches are often fake
C. Card companies add phony value to cards by numbering them 1/1, etc.
D. Often cards are worth thousands right out of the gate based on a young players potential. It prices you out of being able to collect your favorite rookies. If you are sucker enough to pay those prices there is a high probability the card will be worth zero inside of 6 months because rookies often don't pan out.
E. It spawned $200-$500 boxes that only contain 4 cards.
F. Card companies are ripping people off because everyone is buying boxes trying to hit the lottery and get a high value card. Most do not because the boxes are full of trash autos of players that aren't even going to make the team that drafted them.
This is one of the main reasons I finally got out of the card game. I see collector's going crazy over a Kevin Durant Autograph Logoman card. Granted it's a 1 of 1 from National Treasures, but going for like over 11K is crazy. I can get a full Durant gamer from Meigray, an Autograph Inscribed "Durantula" Panini Certified Basketball and a gamer of someone else for the same money! I just couldn't get excited about tiny swatches of uniform when I could get the whole thing for more or less the same price!
Comment