Baseball Cards

1,969 Views | 30 Replies | Last: 12 yr ago by WN AG
blacksmith21
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AG
I just found out that my wife is having a boy, so as you can imagine, I'm pretty excited. I always collected baseball cards as a kid and was wanting to buy a ton now to invest in the little guys future excitement of having a Bryce Harper or Stephen Strasburg at some point in the future. However, my favorite cards were Upper Deck and those don't seem to be available so I was wondering what is the best brand of card these days? Topps was the only brand that I even recognized.

Bonus question: what are your favorite baseball gloves? I have always been a fan of Nakona and will likely buy one of those but curious what the consensus was from the board.
astros4545
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AG
My poor baseball card collection and it's value

I always bought a Kelley glove, small company, not sure it exists any more
DallasAg 94
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AWESOME!

Boys are a real joy... <usually> ;-)

I've always gone with Rawlings...
Griffle
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1. Congratulations
2. I believe that Topps owns the right to MLB now. That is what I have was told maybe 6 months ago or so.
3. In my opinion, forget buying the new stuff. Go with the greats. With the price of them so far down, why not teach them about Griffey, Gwynn, Sandberg, Mattingly, etc. All for relatively cheap.
4. Rawlings
Griffle
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P.S. I realize there are many more greats better than these, but 80s and early 90s stars are quite cheap.
Griffle
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Cell phone double post

[This message has been edited by Griffle (edited 11/30/2013 11:28a).]
blacksmith21
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AG
Thanks for the info; I guess I'll just have to stick with Topps. I've got the mid 80's - mid 90's players covered with a few rookie cards as well. Still need a Billy Ripken "F@#$ Face" for myself though.
Aggie_Eric98
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AG
a great gift I give me son, now 4 is a box of unopened packs of cards every year, one day if he ever decided to get into collecting he will have the fun of opening 10 years worth of baseball cards.
Mr.Ackar07
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The easiest place to buy cards is at Wal-Mart or Target. They have "blaster boxes" that contain packs of cards (usually totaling about 80 cards per box) for $19.99 each. They also sell loose packs of cards for somewhere around $2/pack. If you wanted to buy multiple boxes, I would suggest that you purchase a "hobby box" that are only available online through sites like blowoutcards or at a designated Hobby store (usuallu any place that only deals in sports cards is considered a hobby store). Those boxes will run you between $60 and $100 a box, but will contain about 300-400 cards, and most a guaranteed a "hit" which is either a card containing a piece of game used jersey/bat or an autograph.

The best sets or series for low end cards in my opinion is the Topps flagship set which is broken down into Series 1 (released early in the year), Series 2 (released in the summer), and the Update series (released after the World Series). Series 1 and 2 will contain all the main players (usually at least 10 players per team) along with rookies, managers, playoff recaps, and plenty of inserts. The update series will contain players who changed teams during the year, and up and coming players who made their MLB debut during the year. That series also contains players from the All-Star game and a continuation of the previous series' inserts.

I used to be a set builder, but have since limited my focus to 2 personal collections and 1 or 2 high-end sets (think autograph sets) at a time. My two personal collections are certified on-card (or cut signatures where applicable) autographs of HOF players featured in the jersey of the team they went intot he hall with, and a collection of players from A&M that either reference A&M somewhere on the card or contain a certified autograph.

If you have specific questions, pleas post, and I will answer what I can.
Aggie_Eric98
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AG
quote:
If you have specific questions, pleas post, and I will answer what I can.


I have 10-15 5000 count boxes of miscellaneous crap from 89 Donruss to 95-96 Bowman. Where can I throw these away?
Mr.Ackar07
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If you don't want the hassle of opening packs, check out eBay for baseball card lots from the Topps series. They will be devoid of any hits and inserts, but will contain the majority of players less any hgih end rookie cards like Harper, but will be substantially cheaper than buying packs and boxes.

However, opening packs with your son years down the road may be worth the added expense.
Mr.Ackar07
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quote:
I have 10-15 5000 count boxes of miscellaneous crap from 89 Donruss to 95-96 Bowman. Where can I throw these away?


There may be a few hidden gems in those boxes such as a Jeter rookie which may bring a few dollars, but your best bet is to donate them to a children's hospital and take a charitable deduction based on the FMV on your tax return. Make sure you get a signed and dated receipt for your records though.
TXAggie2011
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AG
On the glove, Rawlings Heart of the Hide.
blacksmith21
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AG
Can you buy a guaranteed full set or are those "blaster boxes" still a crap shoot on who you get? I don't want to limit the fun of the cards by just dumping a set on him but I also remember getting a crap ton of Paul Kilgus type players that were tossed. I guess what I'm asking is what the best route to ensure I get some good players (majority) mixed in with the scrubs that always make up the "filler" in most packs. And thanks for the great info so far.
Aggie_Eric98
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AG
You can but a full set but those are no fun, back in the day a box of packs would get you close to a full set but no guarantees. Topps used to have 752 cards in a set, but that was back in the late 80's.
Mr.Ackar07
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If you buy multiple blaster boxes from the same series (different series have different cards), you can expect duplication. The way Topps guarantees certain hits and inserts per pack is that the cards are packed the same way. If you were to bust 5 or more boxes of blasters, you would notice that everytime you find a Joe Blow card, there is a John Smith card right behind it.

If you buy a hobby box, you will most likely not receive any duplication, and if so, very little. One hobby box will return you an almost complete base set from that series (this only applies to the flagship Series I, II, and Updates). It will not be a complete set, but you should be within 50 cards of a set at the minimum. Each of the flagship series contains 330 cards in the base set. The amount of inserts, parallels, and hits vary year to year.
HaveGoodGetGive
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AG
quote:
I always bought a Kelley glove, small company, not sure it exists any more


Still going strong, son has a Kelley glove
TREX01
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I've got upwards of 30k cards baseball, football, basketball from the early 80's to early 90's.

My dad and father in law both gave me their collections from the 50's and 60's. Lots of great cards in those that I hope to pass on to my boys one day.
Say Chowdah
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AG
Maybe a complete pack from his birth year. Never can tell who's going to be a great 18 years from now.

Also - Wilson or Rawlings.
jetch17
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AG
Cards are crap nowadays and will never be anything like the good ol days.

I have an extensive autograph collection of hall of famers my son will get someday, a better investment and activity to pursue with him moving forward
W
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AG
baseball cards...one of the poster children of the greed of the 90's. Totally destroyed the market with absurd oversaturation
mhayden
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Still have my Kelley glove -- best glove I've ever owned. It's a small middle-infielders glove but I actually use it playing softball because I love it so much.
Cancelled
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What a joke baseball cards are! I had a mark McGwire rookie in very good shape. I remember back in 98, that thing was going for around $1500 dollars...sure it was...that's what becket was telling you what it's worth, but could you find anyone to actually purchase it at that price? Now I could sell it for probably $5.

That's the stupid thing about cards. Becket says its worth x amount, but you'll never find someone to pay the price. It's fake market.

You has all these dorks running around hawking cards but they were worthless. Bball cards were the beanie babies of the 90's.

Maybe my girls will have some boys one day and they will find value in those stupid cards sitting in my closet.
1
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I remember an article in Beckett that listed a few pay phone numbers in MLB stadiums throughout the country. You could call the numbers and if someone picked up, you could get the score of the game right then and didn't have to wait till that night's news.
TJJackson
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Just started the hobby. Not looking at trying to retire, but something to keep me occupied. Too bad the cards are basically worthless.
texican08
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AG
Buy from www.totally-cards.com

Usually they are cards w/ game worn jersey pieces in them for ~$2/card. Today is some sort of mystery pack.
aggiegriff09
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AG
Nakona Gloves are the closest thing to Heaven on your hand I've ever felt. Although, I wouldn't buy one until his hand is nearing it's final size as they can be pretty expensive.

Baseball cards? I like Topps, Bowman, and I used to work for Tristar Productions, so I got into collecting Minor League cards, and Tristar has some great ideas for cards if I do say so myself.
DallasAg 94
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quote:
Nakona Gloves are the closest thing to Heaven on your hand I've ever felt.


Then you are doing something wrong.
texican08
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AG
Griff,

Any word if Johnny is doing the Tristar signing in a couple of weeks?
Groosome
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AG
quote:
That's the stupid thing about cards. Becket says its worth x amount, but you'll never find someone to pay the price. It's fake market.

You has all these dorks running around hawking cards but they were worthless. Bball cards were the beanie babies of the 90's.

Maybe my girls will have some boys one day and they will find value in those stupid cards sitting in my closet.


First, I will say that I am not a baseball card collector. With that said...

I actually think baseball cards could be a pretty awesome thing to get your kids into. I remember when I was a kid, I learned so much about the market and managing assets and the value of money with these. I would get my Beckett magazine and figure out what the worth of my card collection was and tracked that value over time like my own little portfolio. I would feel so proud of myself when something shot up in price and so disspointed when one I really was excited about never gained the value I expected. (I'm looking at you Mr. autographed Upper Deck Juan Gonzalez rookie card.) I learned how to "negotiate" trades with friends. I learned how to save money in order to buy the cards I really wanted for my collection. Yes, all those cards are pretty worthless now, but the lessons I learned from this was invaluable.

From a financial point of view, I cold see baseball cards not being as bad long term as you all are thinking. The value of the old baseball cards was that all the collections were thrown away because they were deemed worthless once the kids moved out and mom wanted to turn their old bedrooms into sewing rooms. Then those kids became parents and have refused to throw away their kid's collections (from the 80's and 90's) because they can't forget all the valuable cards that they had lost. I know that there are still boxes and boxes of my old cards sitting under the guest bed in my parents house because my dad refuses to throw they away. Because of that, those cards never became rare like the previous generation's had and probably never will for a VERY long time.

Now, the kids from the 80's and 90's are having kids and keeping them out of the baseball card collecting game because they felt so cheated by it from their childhood. This could, possibly, reintroduce scarcity into that market in the next 20 years or so which would be good for long term collectors.

Of course, that is all just hypothetical and could be complete bullsh.
Ronnie Gardocki
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I have been collecting cards since the late 70's and still buy a few a year now. For the last few years I have only been buying cards that are professionally graded and nothing before about 1975. I have a few of those jersey/bat cards but don't really understand the hype these kids nowadays have with them. The old tobacco cards from 1909-1910 ect are my favorite now and like I said always professionally graded.
WN AG
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