zep33
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The law offices of Dewey, Cheatem, and Howe
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win!gracecollector said:Crook: BGS, PSA and just about every grading company. So many shady practices, including sub-bumps, better grades for bigger customers, slabbing the Gretzky Wagner as untrimmed, slabbing hundreds of autos for a major auction house in less than a day (which was computed out to about 15 seconds a card), and other crooked practices. Big crooks in my opinion.
Liar: Beckett's Interactive Dept. Saying their website would be easier to use, more feature rich, and better for collectors proved totally false and created an exodus of massive proportions. There current line that the website will be much improved by December doesn't feel too honest either.
Idiot: MLB Licensing. I feel their decision to limit baseball cards to a monopoly with Topps is really hurting the hobby.
matfanofold said:Back in the early 90's I knew a fellow who had collected cards since the early 70's. He had amassed every topps set from 1952 to 1992, including a 1951 bowman set, early FLEER sets, some 70's factory sets, ect.. Many sets he bought complete, some he put together himself, but all were in NM+/- condition in binders or set boxes and all were gotten fairly cheap. He also had binders FULL of vintage star players. I remember looking at his collection quite a bit, and even then to see page after page of vintage 50's Mantles, Aarons, Williams, Banks, ect.. was awe inspiring. To put this in to perspective, he had at least 1, if not 2 or 3 of every Topps set spanning from 52 - 92, he had anywhewre between 1 - 20 of any given star card and/or RC from the early 50's to the late 70's. To this day, it was probablly the largest, and best vintage collection I had ever seen. I'm sure in todays market his binders of vintage star and RC cards would be worth hundreds upon hundreds of thousands alone...
Why am I telling you this? Because here is where it becomes relavent to the thread. 'Mr. Mint' was a very well known buyer at the time, much more so than today. And this guy, who was not rich by any means, decided to sell his collection to fund a taxi cab opperation he was about to start. So with the help of an LCS he set up an appointment and Mr Mint actually sent someone to his house to see and hopefull buy his entire collection.
I remember at the time thinking he should get 100,000+ easy. But was only offered $10,000 and was told "he would never get a better offer, never". So he sold. Now, I know he could have said 'no', but that always struck me as bad form, and as such have always had a deep seeded resentment for Mr Mint and his opperation.
predatorkj said:matfanofold said:Back in the early 90's I knew a fellow who had collected cards since the early 70's. He had amassed every topps set from 1952 to 1992, including a 1951 bowman set, early FLEER sets, some 70's factory sets, ect.. Many sets he bought complete, some he put together himself, but all were in NM+/- condition in binders or set boxes and all were gotten fairly cheap. He also had binders FULL of vintage star players. I remember looking at his collection quite a bit, and even then to see page after page of vintage 50's Mantles, Aarons, Williams, Banks, ect.. was awe inspiring. To put this in to perspective, he had at least 1, if not 2 or 3 of every Topps set spanning from 52 - 92, he had anywhewre between 1 - 20 of any given star card and/or RC from the early 50's to the late 70's. To this day, it was probablly the largest, and best vintage collection I had ever seen. I'm sure in todays market his binders of vintage star and RC cards would be worth hundreds upon hundreds of thousands alone...
Why am I telling you this? Because here is where it becomes relavent to the thread. 'Mr. Mint' was a very well known buyer at the time, much more so than today. And this guy, who was not rich by any means, decided to sell his collection to fund a taxi cab opperation he was about to start. So with the help of an LCS he set up an appointment and Mr Mint actually sent someone to his house to see and hopefull buy his entire collection.
I remember at the time thinking he should get 100,000+ easy. But was only offered $10,000 and was told "he would never get a better offer, never". So he sold. Now, I know he could have said 'no', but that always struck me as bad form, and as such have always had a deep seeded resentment for Mr Mint and his opperation.
Yeah but can you call him crooked for that? Every dealer pulls that crap. Every dealer. Maybe not to that extent but I have never met a dealer willing to pay even close to 50% of what something is worth. He was willing to pay 10% and lie through his teeth. Sounds like every other dealer I have ever run across. Not saying its not wrong. Just saying its normal in my eyes.
matfanofold said:predatorkj said:matfanofold said:Back in the early 90's I knew a fellow who had collected cards since the early 70's. He had amassed every topps set from 1952 to 1992, including a 1951 bowman set, early FLEER sets, some 70's factory sets, ect.. Many sets he bought complete, some he put together himself, but all were in NM+/- condition in binders or set boxes and all were gotten fairly cheap. He also had binders FULL of vintage star players. I remember looking at his collection quite a bit, and even then to see page after page of vintage 50's Mantles, Aarons, Williams, Banks, ect.. was awe inspiring. To put this in to perspective, he had at least 1, if not 2 or 3 of every Topps set spanning from 52 - 92, he had anywhewre between 1 - 20 of any given star card and/or RC from the early 50's to the late 70's. To this day, it was probablly the largest, and best vintage collection I had ever seen. I'm sure in todays market his binders of vintage star and RC cards would be worth hundreds upon hundreds of thousands alone...
Why am I telling you this? Because here is where it becomes relavent to the thread. 'Mr. Mint' was a very well known buyer at the time, much more so than today. And this guy, who was not rich by any means, decided to sell his collection to fund a taxi cab opperation he was about to start. So with the help of an LCS he set up an appointment and Mr Mint actually sent someone to his house to see and hopefull buy his entire collection.
I remember at the time thinking he should get 100,000+ easy. But was only offered $10,000 and was told "he would never get a better offer, never". So he sold. Now, I know he could have said 'no', but that always struck me as bad form, and as such have always had a deep seeded resentment for Mr Mint and his opperation.
Yeah but can you call him crooked for that? Every dealer pulls that crap. Every dealer. Maybe not to that extent but I have never met a dealer willing to pay even close to 50% of what something is worth. He was willing to pay 10% and lie through his teeth. Sounds like every other dealer I have ever run across. Not saying its not wrong. Just saying its normal in my eyes.
No, I'm not calling him crooked for that, I even said "Now, I know he could have said 'no'", but there is a ethical line somewhere and he crossed it here. If you grandmother had a valuable family china set worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, and she was selling it to fund the grandchildrens college, but was offered $10,000 and told 'it's not woth, nor will it ever sell for a penny more', and sold it. Would you still feel it's just normal business in your eyes? Or whould that be shady in your eyes? It's much the same. The guy new he had something valuable, but was not like we are with regards to understanding value. He just bought/collected baseballcards durring a time when they were cheap and fun. He had no reason to disbelieve the guy. I guess, in the end, we can all see it the way we wish, but I'll always see it as slimey and seeing he made his millions doing this exact same thing, he tops the list for me.
bigalbert said:I'm going with Topps, who after getting a solo license for baseball could have shown us why MLB made the right decision instead they put out subpar products with chicle a&g and 206.