I was wondering what you guys think are some bats that would be good investments for the future. I know no ones bats from todays age will ever be as much as a Babe Ruth. Like if you have the money A-rods aint bad, because he may break the home run record. i'd like to hear your guys thoughts on some different player bats. Thanks
Good Bat Investments
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Re: Good Bat Investments
I was wondering what you guys think are some bats that would be good investments for the future. I know no ones bats from todays age will ever be as much as a Babe Ruth. Like if you have the money A-rods aint bad, because he may break the home run record. i'd like to hear your guys thoughts on some different player bats. Thanks
Finding gamers from back in the day, is definately much rarer.
Just my thoughts.Regards, Tony
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~I'm sorry, I can't hear you....my World Series Ring is making too much NOISE! - Alex Rodriguez~ -
Re: Good Bat Investments
See what i like to do is this, you look at a given players number, you compare how many hits and homeruns they have to how long they have been in the league and how old they are. For example, Carlos Beltran is 31 years old, he has been playing for 10 years, he has over 1500 hits and over 270 HR. I believe that he could play another 8 years and at his rate he might have a chance at 500 HR and 3000 Hits. So for my reasoning i would buy a bat of a guy like that as an investment. But then of course supply and demand have factors, if there are too many beltran bats out there, then it wont matter what clubs he gets into.Comment
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Re: Good Bat Investments
Too much of everything nowadays to think good investment. Most the experts say pre-1980 stuff is the way to go. I agree. It's the old supply and demand thing. There might be 10 or 15 Johnny Bench 1976 bicentennial bats in the world, but there are 200 Arod bats every season that will hit the market. Simple math.
GregComment
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Re: Good Bat Investments
Too much of everything nowadays to think good investment. Most the experts say pre-1980 stuff is the way to go. I agree. It's the old supply and demand thing. There might be 10 or 15 Johnny Bench 1976 bicentennial bats in the world, but there are 200 Arod bats every season that will hit the market. Simple math.
Greg
I asked the forum a question about one of my Arod bats, but didn't get much response.
I have a 1996 Alex Rodriguez Rawlings Game Used Bat. To me, I would think this would be more in demand than his LVS. There are hundreds and hundreds of Arod LVS bats out there. How many Rawlings are there?Regards, Tony
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~I'm sorry, I can't hear you....my World Series Ring is making too much NOISE! - Alex Rodriguez~Comment
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Re: Good Bat Investments
many items that are pre-Ken Griffey Jr are good investments, primarily yankees (munson, mattingly, yes mattingly) and redsox (yaz, luis tiant ) stuff, hall of game players stuff (ruth, clemente), and players stuff from great teams (the big red machine, yankees early 90s).Seems as tho future appreciation is build into many of the new equipement's asking price. Great stuff but poor investments.Regards,
Joel S.
joelsabi @ gmail.com
Wanted: Alex Rodriguez Game Used Items and other unique artifacts, 1992 thru 1998 only. From High School to Early Mariners.Comment
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Re: Good Bat Investments
I have always thought that most equipment, cards and autographs are a lousy investment.
If you have a collection, collect - if you are investing, and you don't have a large amount of disposable income...maybe investing in bats, etc. is not the greatest idea.
I know too many guys who were collectors of something at one point - and they almost always have become dealers in one way or another...whether it be eBay or garage sales...and they rarely make enough money to be comfortable.
Just an opinion.Dave
Looking for 1990's STL Cardinal starting pitcher's bats
River City Redbird Authentics
http://www.freewebs.com/bigtruck260/
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Re: Good Bat Investments
I have always thought that most equipment, cards and autographs are a lousy investment.
If you have a collection, collect - if you are investing, and you don't have a large amount of disposable income...maybe investing in bats, etc. is not the greatest idea.
I know too many guys who were collectors of something at one point - and they almost always have become dealers in one way or another...whether it be eBay or garage sales...and they rarely make enough money to be comfortable.
Just an opinion.
I say, collect what you like and spend what you can afford to spend and forget about the value of items. Heck, some of the best items in my collection are things I acquired with absolutely no fore-thought as to what their value may be. Case in point, in 1987 when I was heavily into collecting 1987 Topps baseball cards, I briefly dabbled over into buying packs of cheaper (.35 a pack vs. .45 a pack) and less desirable 1987-88 Fleer basketball packs until I got a card of Jordan. I did this entirely on a whim. I bet the Jordan card is worth more than all of my 1987 cards together, not to mention the other cards I pulled along the way to the Jordan.
I think when you buy things hoping for an increase in value, you are more often than not going to end up disappointed.Comment
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Re: Good Bat Investments
This may sound contrary to how most folks think but I find myself paying more now for little known players than I did even 4 years ago. Suddenly when a Jamie Allen Mariners bat comes up on ebay I find I am bidding against a few others who need it. Instead of the $15 I paid it for in 2000 it is now closing at say $40-$50. For the diehard team collectors we see and have several of the big guys bats. I only buy Arod or Griffey if it is extremely cheap or unique since they are everywhere. Try finding a Leroy Stanton 77-79 Lousiville or mid 80's Jack Perconte. Granted they still close at a much lower price then the big boys but their percentage of appreciation has been quite remarkable over the past 8 years. Many hard to find common bats are now in serious collectors hands and new folks are looking to acquire them every year. There is a definite ceiling for many of these commons but I don't think we have seen it yet.......
Thanks!
DavisComment
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Re: Good Bat Investments
Somebody suggested to me this morning that maple bats in general may start demanding greater prices, if MLB ends up banning them.
Opinions?Jeff
godwulf1@cox.netComment
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Re: Good Bat Investments
you want to buy some maple bats?
LOLBert
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Always looking for Matt Wieters, Tettleton, and that Orioles magic
shoremen44@gmail.comComment
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Re: Good Bat Investments
Popular and fan favorites has a lot to with value in my opinion often more than numbers. How many players with great numbers and bats are $300 -$400. range and players with not as good stats demand 2 to 3 times as much! (Rice, Mattingly etc.) Supply and demand obviously factors in.
GeorgeComment
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