Increase in people flipping jerseys?

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  • mr.miracle
    Senior Member
    • Apr 2006
    • 883

    #31
    Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

    Originally posted by Oriolesfan29
    I know two examples I've seen recently are the Manny Machado and Carlos Correa game used St Patrick's day jerseys. Somehow the seller got complete pics of the Manny jersey less than 24 hours after it sold, I'm not even sure how that's possible. It is definitely annoying though I agree. The Correa one is listed for $8K and it sold for way less than half that.
    Patrick that seller of the Manny St Patty has been buying up Machado game used in the past 10 to 12 months like someone is having a fire sale, the only problem is, they are not. These jerseys are or were still regularly selling off MLB auctions or direct from the team at $2500 to $3000 plus so no discounts there.

    How in the world would anybody break even on ebay off a Machado at those price points much less make any money on them it is simply baffling to me.
    Brett Herman

    brettherman2131@hotmail.com

    Always looking for Cal Ripken Jr. Brooks Robinson, Boog Powell and Orioles game used bats and jersey's.

    Comment

    • mr.miracle
      Senior Member
      • Apr 2006
      • 883

      #32
      Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

      Originally posted by grandeleague
      Most of the stuff being flipped is "manufactured memorabilia" meaning it was worn or used with the intention winding up on the collecting market. Will be very interesting to see what this stuff is worth a decade or two from now. My team is the braves and braves jerseys used to be scarce. Vintage jerseys and jerseys from the 1990's are relatively scarce now. However they are simply burning through too many sets of jerseys now for these things to be all that collectible in the furture. I dont really care anyway but the real pain is getting them from the team into collectors hands. The team wants 1k for freddie freeman jerseys. So somebody has to pay up to get one but once a freeman jersey enters the hobby good luck getting 750 for one. Fat chance at 1k unless its something really cool or unique. These memorabilia jerseys are not really rare and the teams could care less about supply. They crank them out by the bushel every season. Common braves players going through 30 jerseys a year is nuts. Its probably the same hassle with many other teams nowadays.
      When we started the game worn program at Camden Yards the plan was to only pull jerseys specifically ordered by a customer in advance or day of game or if something spectacular occurred in the game and limit to around 5 to 7 per player max per year.

      Unfortunately we created Frankenstein as the Director of the program completely lost his mind and would not listen to anything Andrew or I suggested once he felt their was money to be made, then why not flood the market year over year.

      What you now have is the above mentioned issue. The everyday blue collar fan is priced completely out of this market and this continuous over-saturation will systematically devalue these items over time.
      Brett Herman

      brettherman2131@hotmail.com

      Always looking for Cal Ripken Jr. Brooks Robinson, Boog Powell and Orioles game used bats and jersey's.

      Comment

      • memorabiliaunlimited
        Senior Member
        • Oct 2013
        • 262

        #33
        Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

        Originally posted by sprint23
        I have to laugh when someone claims they "never get stuck with anything they buy from auctions.". I'd like to know the time limit they have in mind. A 2014 Adam Jones helmet comes to mind. It was listed on eBay almost immediately after the MLB auction ended for considerable more, and is still listed over a year and a half later with no change in the asking price. I may call that "stuck with" an item.
        and there hasnt been another adam jones helmet on the market since. someone will eventually want it, and if not, i have no problem hanging on to it. i dont consider that "stuck" with an item - when it can be kept and displayed beautifully in the meantime. people get so fixed on the list price, when every listing says "price is negotiable". most of the MLB auction stuff moves on the resale. it is quite easy to pick out the items that are too overpriced or oversupplied, and then stay away from those. i have won countless items on MLB auctions that have sold within a few weeks of purchase - MLB auction prices are not the end-all-be-all. the alex guerrero mothers day gear i have, that i would consider being stuck with - i gambled, and will lose on it. it happens in business, but when you are right more than you are wrong, its OK.

        Comment

        • yanks12025
          Senior Member
          • Jan 2006
          • 3118

          #34
          Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

          Originally posted by joshmiller0
          It is frustrating when you want an item, someone out bids you, and then it's an insane amount of ebay. However, if they're willing to take the risk, it is what it is...I mean someone could end up sitting on a jersey for a long time or taking a significant loss if the player isn't popular anymore or gets traded. It's only worth what someone is willing to pay...I know I've overpaid for a ton of my items like buying the 1st year in brooklyn...but I am keeping it in my collection. What frustrates me more is when people try to pass an item off as game used or issued when it isn't or when someone lists an auction and starts a new ebay account to jack up the price. I see this from sellers when an item sits..then they list it for auction...someone with 0 feedback wins and shortly after it is relisted at the old buy it now price.

          So if you want the item the bid more and win it. If not the other person wanted it more b

          Comment

          • Oriolesfan29
            Senior Member
            • Mar 2012
            • 254

            #35
            Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

            Originally posted by mr.miracle
            When we started the game worn program at Camden Yards the plan was to only pull jerseys specifically ordered by a customer in advance or day of game or if something spectacular occurred in the game and limit to around 5 to 7 per player max per year.

            Unfortunately we created Frankenstein as the Director of the program completely lost his mind and would not listen to anything Andrew or I suggested once he felt their was money to be made, then why not flood the market year over year.

            What you now have is the above mentioned issue. The everyday blue collar fan is priced completely out of this market and this continuous over-saturation will systematically devalue these items over time.
            You are exactly right on all counts there Brett. I don't buy nearly as much from the Os as I used to because of the Frankenstein you mention. His shady practices (as I've noted in another thread) of quoting higher prices when someone is asking about a specific item on the phone or email, even though it was in the store for a lower price all season, and the fact that he has gone kinda crazy with the pricing in there even though the supply is much higher thanever before have all turned me off. Given that it takes them forever to move anything is a testament to this. Whenever you go in the store its basically the same stuff almost every game. Its ashame, I still love the hobby, but its getting more and more frustrating to try and deal with the source of the items. I am with you though, I really cant see how a lot of money is to be made flipping things won on MLB auctions, unless you luck out and get a player who is still a relative unknown and then they explode on the scene.

            Comment

            • mr.miracle
              Senior Member
              • Apr 2006
              • 883

              #36
              Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

              Originally posted by Oriolesfan29
              You are exactly right on all counts there Brett. I don't buy nearly as much from the Os as I used to because of the Frankenstein you mention. His shady practices (as I've noted in another thread) of quoting higher prices when someone is asking about a specific item on the phone or email, even though it was in the store for a lower price all season, and the fact that he has gone kinda crazy with the pricing in there even though the supply is much higher thanever before have all turned me off. Given that it takes them forever to move anything is a testament to this. Whenever you go in the store its basically the same stuff almost every game. Its ashame, I still love the hobby, but its getting more and more frustrating to try and deal with the source of the items. I am with you though, I really cant see how a lot of money is to be made flipping things won on MLB auctions, unless you luck out and get a player who is still a relative unknown and then they explode on the scene.
              When Andrew and I provided the "Powers That Be" with our opinions and expertise if you will, regarding the whole game used market, pricing and basically how to start the program from scratch, we thought the end product would be drastically different then it ended up being. Andrew has been doing this forever, he has forgotten more about this business than most will ever know. "The Powers That Be" that work for the team had zero experience doing any of this, none, zilch, nada. We laid out a roadmap and they took it and ran and it is now what you see today. It was extremely frustrating hearing fans blame Andrew or Todd or myself as we were shot down on pricing in most cases and had to follow what we were given. Even the whole flood the market strategy was beyond frustrating when we were originally told and discussed pulling a select number of jersey's per player per season period and that certainly did not happen.

              It is frustrating for you and many others. Believe me, the program as originally laid out was to give the loyal fans of Baltimore true access to the game used in a reasonably affordable fashion without flooding the market. What it shifted to and became was a whole other entity.

              I certainly be no means claim to be an expert on game used anything, but I have done this long enough to know that you need to provide fair, truthful and transparent business practices based on honesty and treating the customers right. Andrew, Todd and I developed a very loyal customer base that we enjoyed working with during our tenure in Baltimore. I am sorry to hear that your having all this difficulty now, I have heard from a number of our loyal customers that they have had similar issues sadly.
              Brett Herman

              brettherman2131@hotmail.com

              Always looking for Cal Ripken Jr. Brooks Robinson, Boog Powell and Orioles game used bats and jersey's.

              Comment

              • grandeleague
                Senior Member
                • May 2015
                • 216

                #37
                Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

                Originally posted by mr.miracle
                When we started the game worn program at Camden Yards the plan was to only pull jerseys specifically ordered by a customer in advance or day of game or if something spectacular occurred in the game and limit to around 5 to 7 per player max per year.

                Unfortunately we created Frankenstein as the Director of the program completely lost his mind and would not listen to anything Andrew or I suggested once he felt their was money to be made, then why not flood the market year over year.

                What you now have is the above mentioned issue. The everyday blue collar fan is priced completely out of this market and this continuous over-saturation will systematically devalue these items over time.
                Exactly. Greed has run its course and supply outsrips demand by a long shot. People buy these jerseys and they are worth half or less of what it costs to get them. Who cares most will say. The poor sap who cant get 600 for a jersey he paid a grand for will probably care. If you look at the braves jersey list you will find instances of them pulling three jerseys during the course of a 3 game homestand. Some braves jerseys of recent vintage have set numbers over 15. That is sheer madness if these things are ever supposed to be collectible. When the teams started controlling jerseys instead of selling to someone in bulk who in turn sold to the hobby is when the madness started.

                Comment

                • grandeleague
                  Senior Member
                  • May 2015
                  • 216

                  #38
                  Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

                  Originally posted by mr.miracle
                  As a collector who has primarily focused on the Baltimore Orioles for the past 20 plus years, I have intimate 1st hand knowledge of how the Orioles now sell and market their game used compared to as recently as 5 years ago when everything either funneled through Fan Fest unauthenticated or went out the back door. I can honestly say I too am just dumbfounded by some of the insanity that now takes place with attempting to flip items. I get it, supply demand, free market etc. if you can make some money then more power to you. What amazes me is that there is for instance a seller on ebay now from the Baltimore area that regularly acquires a very very heavy supply of Manny Machado game used bats, jersey's, game used balls, batting helmets, etc. I personally have had in the past 2 or 3 years several Machado game used bats and bases, balls etc. that were MLB authenticated, signed, photomatched, etc. that I was selling for literally 1/3rd or less of the price that this seller is charging and I could not move a single one of these items, in 2 or 3 years, just sitting relisting on ebay over and over again. As Sprint mentions above, unless someone has Bill Gates money, how in the world is this sound business practice. The prices that this seller is paying to acquire these items and what he is looking to flip them for is in some cases a 1000% markup or more which is simply beyond insane. Many of the items carry zero authentication he is selling and quite honestly Manny could win the next 5 consecutive AL MVP awards and he would still never see the prices he is asking. I don't know if he has ever sold more than one of these items. We are talking about game used Machado hits that are being purchased for $150.00 and being sold for $5000 or more.

                  This strategy just makes zero sense on any level. As someone who has worked in various levels of retail for over 25 years, you strive at all cost to move product. If it is dying on your shelves your not making money period.
                  These folks can mark this stuff up 10,000% if they so choose. They won't ever sell it and it makes zero sense on any level to me but you see this strategy play out time and time again. I am just stunned too that people say they never take a loss utilizing the flip strategy from MLB or NFL auctions direct to ebay. I can honestly say in the past 2 to 4 years I have seen a complete about face probably due to this market saturation as I rarely if ever come close to getting my money back out of anything I sell on ebay. 9 out of 10 times in the past 2 or 3 years I am often taking what amounts to a 20 to 30 or even 40% loss on every single game used item I sell. How others are bucking this trend is beyond me, I would really love to know.

                  I just don't get how people are spending $1000's on these items and letting them sit on ebay marked up 5 or 10x's and they just sit year after year after year. Especially given the fact that there is so much market volatility that more often than not your items over the long haul on the newer game used from the past 2 - 4 years stand a reasonable chance over the long haul to drastically reduce in value given the sheer over-saturation of the market on all this stuff.

                  If anyone wants to kindly volunteer some strategies on selling game used on ebay today where you can simply break even on the sale I am all ears. I can get this stuff signed and inscribed with unique HR inscriptions, photomatched to the HR, MLB Auth, JSA Auth, does not matter, it's nearly impossible to come close to breaking even which is why I am pretty much out of the game used business anymore.
                  It appears most jersey flipping is done with a current modern player. Its all about hype. Dude just scored 50 pts in a game. Old boy is hitting .450 to start the year. Once the player is retired or out of the limelight scalping becomes next to impossible because the scalping has moved on to new players. Its all about hype. The only things that change are the players and parties involved. Notice the like of true ebay auctions anymore. Most ebay sellers are running museums at most of the listed prices.

                  Comment

                  • Juicyfruit66
                    Senior Member
                    • May 2015
                    • 1287

                    #39
                    Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

                    Haha museums! So true

                    Comment

                    • grandeleague
                      Senior Member
                      • May 2015
                      • 216

                      #40
                      Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

                      Originally posted by Oriolesfan29
                      I know two examples I've seen recently are the Manny Machado and Carlos Correa game used St Patrick's day jerseys. Somehow the seller got complete pics of the Manny jersey less than 24 hours after it sold, I'm not even sure how that's possible. It is definitely annoying though I agree. The Correa one is listed for $8K and it sold for way less than half that.
                      Have the orioles mass produced and flooded the market with adam jones and chris davis jerseys? What did they charge for them when the team originally sold them?

                      Comment

                      • sprint23
                        Member
                        • Jun 2012
                        • 93

                        #41
                        Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

                        When the program started with the Orioles the team was only going to pull jerseys requested and paid for by customers during specific games. Jones first jersey (which I believe I owned at one time) was $1,000. Then Davis got on his streak and the Manny hype began. Their jerseys went to $1,500... then $2,000 and beyond. At one point they sold a Davis jersey for $5,000.

                        They (the team) also began pulling jerseys, bases, etc for any and all accomplishments (ie. A 3-hit game, a HR, etc.). They also found the avenue of MLB Auctions to use to sell these items. Soon the store in the stadium was being given less and less access to stuff so it could go to the auction site. At first this was successful for the team but as supply increased and demand increased soon Davis and Jones jerseys would sit on the site for months and months at a time without sale because the team imposed reserve was too high for true market value. Rather than lower the reserve (or get rid of it altogether) they would just relist and relist.

                        So now these $1,500 or $2,500 or $5,000 Davis jerseys are currently selling in the $600-$800 range after having more money put into them to have signed and inscribed. While I have not been to the store recently (now under Orioles management) it sounds as if not much has changed.

                        All this is why this "business" of flipping jerseys (at least in the case of the Orioles') is confusing to me. The team asks top dollar and usually more than true market value. My observations after watching these closely for the past several years are that for some reason (maybe because it comes directly from team and not a middle man) MLB Auctions command a much higher premium than they can ever come close to on eBay. Yet I see sellers continue to attempt this and just sit on items for years. Do as you wish but I fail to see the business savvy in this tactic.

                        As was mentioned, eBay is looking more and more like a museum of show and tell "look what I got" than an actual marketplace for these types of items.

                        Comment

                        • grandeleague
                          Senior Member
                          • May 2015
                          • 216

                          #42
                          Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

                          Originally posted by sprint23
                          When the program started with the Orioles the team was only going to pull jerseys requested and paid for by customers during specific games. Jones first jersey (which I believe I owned at one time) was $1,000. Then Davis got on his streak and the Manny hype began. Their jerseys went to $1,500... then $2,000 and beyond. At one point they sold a Davis jersey for $5,000.

                          They (the team) also began pulling jerseys, bases, etc for any and all accomplishments (ie. A 3-hit game, a HR, etc.). They also found the avenue of MLB Auctions to use to sell these items. Soon the store in the stadium was being given less and less access to stuff so it could go to the auction site. At first this was successful for the team but as supply increased and demand increased soon Davis and Jones jerseys would sit on the site for months and months at a time without sale because the team imposed reserve was too high for true market value. Rather than lower the reserve (or get rid of it altogether) they would just relist and relist.

                          So now these $1,500 or $2,500 or $5,000 Davis jerseys are currently selling in the $600-$800 range after having more money put into them to have signed and inscribed. While I have not been to the store recently (now under Orioles management) it sounds as if not much has changed.

                          All this is why this "business" of flipping jerseys (at least in the case of the Orioles') is confusing to me. The team asks top dollar and usually more than true market value. My observations after watching these closely for the past several years are that for some reason (maybe because it comes directly from team and not a middle man) MLB Auctions command a much higher premium than they can ever come close to on eBay. Yet I see sellers continue to attempt this and just sit on items for years. Do as you wish but I fail to see the business savvy in this tactic.

                          As was mentioned, eBay is looking more and more like a museum of show and tell "look what I got" than an actual marketplace for these types of items.
                          So is it fair to say the davis jerseys on ebay are less than the orioles sold them for but more than what a fair price for one is? Your report on the orioles sounds very similar to my favorite team.

                          Comment

                          • sprint23
                            Member
                            • Jun 2012
                            • 93

                            #43
                            Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

                            I'm not sure I ever saw one in the store for less than $1,000 and that was in 2014 when he was not having a stellar year. That is unsigned. The ones that ACTUALLY sell seem to be going for far less than that on eBay even with signatures and inscriptions added.

                            Comment

                            • Samets
                              Senior Member
                              • Apr 2012
                              • 745

                              #44
                              Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

                              My stance is not to feed the flipper unless he's taking a loss.

                              They may call it whatever they want but at the end of the day they are looking for that sucker "to help"

                              Comment

                              • yanks12025
                                Senior Member
                                • Jan 2006
                                • 3118

                                #45
                                Re: Increase in people flipping jerseys?

                                Originally posted by Samets
                                My stance is not to feed the flipper unless he's taking a loss.

                                They may call it whatever they want but at the end of the day they are looking for that sucker "to help"
                                You people are so clueless.

                                So you have never sold anything that you bought? I highly doubt that b

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