Friday, September 07, 2007

Honus Wagner tobacco card sells for over $2 million

Legendary baseball players always garner much attention and are revered as historic, fan favorites. This week Honus Wagner was the talk of the sport card collecting world. His 1909 Tobacco card sold for $2.8 million to a California man! Wow I could only dream of having a tenth of moola. The card as I recall after last checking was valued at $500,000 in mint condition. Most card collectors and investors usually like such sports hobby commodities to be graded and framed. This drives the value way up beyond imaginable standards.

Apparently this same T206 card sold for $2.3 million six months ago. Then it was sold at an SCP auctions later this week. It's crazy what collectors are willing to pay for such gems. I used to be a big hobby collector, but my mindset has changed after seeing the amount of money I've invested in cards with little or no return. Plus to me a specific card is nice to own, but it's really no more than a sentimental piece of history. Don't get me wrong I'd like to own the Honus Wagner tobacco card (actually have a reprint card of it, unfortunately not valuable) or a Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth from early 1900's set.

The rich investors out there flock at opportunities like the one mentioned above. Some have grown up idolizing these baseball players and followed their careers closely. That's a great part of being a fan. With that aside I don't like the gimmicks involved with today's hobby market. Buying wax boxes to find rare cards is a waste of time and money in my opinion. These Hidden Treasures boxes, featuring 50's to 70's cards on the front of players like Mickey Mantle, Joe Dimaggio, Hank Aaron, Roberto Clemente, and Satchel Paige are a bunch of bull.

You could open a case of this junk and find nothing other than a mixture of mass produced late 80's and early 90's Donruss and Topps cards which nobody wants. Don't forget about Fleer either. They'll make sure to dump in some of their best crap from years collectors want to erase from their memory. Their logo for these new sales promotions might as well be, "Disappointing collectors for over 20 years while simultaneously screwing them over royally." Yeah, these dirty schemes are nothing like the original, rare vintage stuff which will always hold high value.

As a limited collector now my advice to the Donruss and Topps company is this: STOP PRODUCING AND SELLING WORTHLESS PILES OF CRAP WHICH PLUMMET IN VALUE AFTER A FEW MONTHS OF BEING ON THE MARKET! Collectors demand satisfaction. This sports collector has spoken damn it!! Enough is enough with the mass-produced junk so deal with it scallywags!

2 comments:

Jack said...

Great blog, your right about that Honus Wagner card. Man, would I like to be the owner of that baby. Visit my sports blog at www.phillysports101.blogspot.com

Anonymous said...

bonus

Guillermo del Toro let his imagination run wild with Hellboy II: The Golden Army, a visual treat for the eyes crammed full of bizarre creepy creatures and magical beasties the likes of which normally dwell only in twisted nightmares. del Toro even makes cute little ahh-inducing fairies into calcium craving bone-crunching killers in Hellboy II, a quirky, comical, action-heavy follow-up to the 2004 box office hit.