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Showing posts with label bobby orr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bobby orr. Show all posts

Thursday, February 4, 2021

Latest Puck Junk Podcast: The One In Which We Lament Postal Rates And Taxes



The latest Puck Junk Podcast is alive and kickin' with a rip-roaring discussion of some recent hockey topics. We also spend some time discussing the USPS postal rate increases that are costing collectors more to maintain their hobby, as well as the "unexpected" 1099K tax forms Paypal graciously sent out for users for 2020. This was a recent wild fire that swept over social media when people found more than little yellow bubble mailers in their mailboxes a week or so ago. 

We also talk about the next $1M hockey card...well maybe not $1M but it's a doozy. 1966-67 Bobby Orr Rookie card with a BVG 10 grade is up for auction right now. Where will it end??

Show is just under 2 hours so check it out.

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Thursday, September 5, 2019

Mid-Week Hockey Top 10 (9/5/19)

Here's The Real DFG's weekly look at the Top 10 selling hockey cards (prices in US$).  There is a deluge of collectors out there (or investors) with cash to spend.  With the hype around other sports, prospecting, and speculative buying, we're shedding some light on the key cards that have been moving in the hockey world.

This weeks sales are dominated by more modern era cards than in past weeks.  Check it out.

BO = Best Offer Price



1.

2015-16 Upper Deck The Cup Connor McDavid RPA RC Patch Auto/99 BGS 9.5 (sold by Probstein123)

Closed Auction Price  $37,500 BO (August 31, 2019)

2. 

2005-06 Upper Deck Ice Premiers Sidney Crosby RC #/99  BGS 10 (sold by dumpkoph)

Closed Auction Price  $18,000 BO (September 1, 2019)


3.

2015-16 Upper Deck Ultimate Connor McDavid RC Auto #/99  PSA 10 (sold by Probstein123)

Closed Auction Price $10,000 BO (August 31, 2019)


4.

2015-16 Upper Deck Exquisite Connor McDavid Rookie Auto Patch #/97 BGS 9.5 (sold by Probstein123)

Closed Auction Price $8,000 BO (August 28, 2019)


5.

2015-16 SPX Retro Connor McDavid RC Patch Auto #/10 PSA 10 (sold by Probstein123)

Closed Auction Price $7,877 (August 25, 2019)


6.

1911 C55 George Vezina PSA 5 (sold by can_collect)

Closed Auction Price $6,426 BO (August 31, 2019)


7.

1966-67 Topps Bobby Orr RC PSA 5 (sold by martin-sports)

Close Auction Price $5,750 (August 31, 2019)


8.

2015-16 SP Authentic Future Watch Connor McDavid RC Patch PSA 10 (sold by Probstein123)

Closed Auction Price $5,000 BO (September 2, 2019)

9.
1979-80 O-Pee-Chee Wayne Gretzky RC  KSA 9.5 (sold by flmi.mit.a6snlku)

Closed Auction Price $4,200 (August 31, 2019)


10.
1951-52 Pankhurst Gordie Howe RC  PSA 4 (sold by Probstein123)

Closed Auction Price $4,061 (September 2, 2019)



Some other notable sales this past week...

-A notable Sidney Crosby RC collection with at least 18 graded cards sold for $7,400

-An unopened 1972-73 Topps Rack Pack showing Alex Delvecchio, Phil Esposito, and Tracy Pratt on the front sold for $6,999.  It was certified by BBCE.

-A fairly banged up 1979-80 Topps Wax Box which was said to contain 30 packs sold for $5,100.01.  That extra penny was the winner.




**I try to note sellers for each card since there have been allegations made regarding the current trimming scandal, shill bidding, etc.  This in no way, endorses, supports, or advertises any seller listed, nor does it make a claim on the authenticity of any item.  This is simply for entertainment, conversation starting, and general information.  Make your own informed decisions before purchasing cards or putting your trust in any dealer/seller.

Thursday, August 22, 2019

Mid-Week Hockey Top 10 (8/21/19)

This weeks look at the Top 10 selling hockey cards sees completed auctions dominated by the two rookies of The Great One.  Gretzky's rookie card hits this list 7 out of 10 times.  The 1966 Bobby Orr RC shows up on the list as well, which usually occupies a few positions.  A pre-war Paddy Moran tops off the list along with the only contemporary card belonging to Mitch Marner.

eBay closed sales (8/14/19 - 8/21/19)


1.

1979-80 O-Pee-Chee Wayne Gretzky RC #18 PSA 9 (sold by mandlcaards)

Closed Selling Price $40,000 (8/20/19)


Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Mid-Week Hockey Top 10 (8/14/19)

A new feature I hope to develop here on The Real DFG is going to be a weekly look at the Top 10 most recent highest selling hockey cards on various platforms.  There is a deluge of collectors out there (or investors) with cash to spend.  With the hype around other sports, prospecting, and speculative buying, I wanted to shed some light on the key cards that have been moving in the hockey world.

Most sales will be from Ebay since it is the largest collection of auctions and BIN sales out there.  However, I am only searching hockey cards, singles, and final sales.  I am not verifying whether these transactions are 100% complete and paid for.  If there are other sales to note, I will list those here as well.



Source:  Ebay Closed Sales as of 8/14/19

1.  

2003-04 Upper Deck Premier Wayne Gretzky 1st Year Shield Auto 1/1 (sold by toddanthonymn)

Closed Selling Price:  $99,999 (8/12/19)

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

That Card Show...

That Sports Spectacular Show that was held a couple weekends ago at the D.E.S. Convention Center in Rosemont was not definitely not what it was cracked up to be.  Not by a long shot.  But, nonetheless, I still was able to find some cool things to add to the old collection.

A few observations (some of which have already been made by other bloggers):

1.  They didn't have the show in the normal spot.  It was downstairs in one of the back halls.  The room was large enough to fill with all the dealers and still have plenty of room for the endless list of Tri-Star sponsored signing guests.  But, many of those tables were either empty, taken up by memorabilia and "art" dealers, or in such disarray that it was pointless to even bother looking.  Plus my three favorite dealers were also there...the guy with the plastic over his tables so no one can touch anything and a sign that reads "DON'T PUT HANDS UNDER THE PLASTIC"; the guy with the laptop and no pricing on anything and when you ask him, everything is Beckett Hi Value or HIGHER; and the guys with the two boxes full of National Treasures, The Cup, and UD Black autos that you can't afford and three glass cases full of "Hot Packs".

2.  Quarter boxes are all the rage and many dealers at this show took full advantage.  These tables were everywhere and if you had the time, energy, and patience to give them a whirl, deals were to be had at every turn.  That is, if you could actually get to a table.  The popularity of these has grown to the point where every 400lb, ripped t-shirt wearing, "comic book guy" looking dude with dirty hair and extreme body odor pulled up a chair and parked themselves for hours.  Surprisingly, I did manage a few go-rounds at a couple tables and I'll post those later.

3.  As much as I love my kids, taking both of them to one of these shows is very difficult when you want to "window shop".  Patience is not one of their strong suits to say the least.  But overall, they did quite well, especially after we found the $1 Starting Line Up guy.  Who would have thought that a Steve Bedrosian SLU could give such entertainment.

4.  Trading is still, by far, my favorite part of the show.  These Chicago-land shows afford me the opportunity to trade with a few guys (some bloggers, some not) that never fail to surprise me when we sit down at a table to swap.  So far, there have pretty much been four of us that regularly frequent these shows and use this as our opportunity to unload what others want and save on postage at the same time.  I was able to land some interesting stuff this time too which I may or may not post about.

5.  I mentioned before that many dealers, especially regulars, were absent at this show.  That wasn't good if you were planning on buying wax.  Normally there are five or six dealers with a large supply of unopened boxes and cases.  This time, I only counted three with more than a handful of product.  I'm going to pin that on the fact that the National is coming up quickly and many guys are saving their wares for that show.

The autograph ticket was quite impressive, especially if you are a fan of Chicago sports.  But even while at the show, many cancellation announcements were made for guests that were scheduled to be there.  Something about that doesn't sit right with me when I pretend in my mind that I am an auto hound.  A promoter plans a show as big as this (not National size but definitely not your Sunday afternoon swap meet either) with an autograph guest list as extensive as this was, pre-sells a ton of tickets, including pre-sold autos, and we find out five minutes before line up time that the guest isn't coming?  It just seems strange that these are last minute cancellations.  I would think these things are firmed up all the way up to "game time".  But what do I know?

I'm going to stretch out the posts of what I added to my collection but I suppose I can start out with a bang.  Here are a couple oldies, but goodies for sure and my three new favorite cards that I own. (Don't get to excited because my favorite cards change at the drop of a hat.)  From the 1971-72 Topps set, I give you...



The only "action" photo in the entire 1971-72 set and the biggest card too, is now part of my collection.  The best part is the condition of this thing.  There is a nicked corner at the top and a little off centering but that is pretty much it.  An iconic card for sure.


 My oldest Bobby Orr card and my favorite.  This one isn't as nice as the Dryden but is still in pretty good shape for being over 40 years old. 


Mr. Hockey himself...if it wasn't for the bottom right corner and the surface scratch on the "ED" in Red Wings, this card is almost perfect.  To think, Howe would still play another 10 years after this card was produced.  They don't make them like that anymore.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Box Break - - 2002-03 Upper Deck Classic Portraits Hobby

This is a long one so bear with me.

2002-03.  It was an innocent time back then.  Wait a minute...no it wasn't.  That was a year after the terrorist attacks on the Twin Towers, the nation was gripped by war, there were terrorists threats almost daily, and we lived in a world where we didn't know if it was an orange day or a yellow day.  That was also a time where I was not very interested in card collecting but more interesting in bottle collecting (as in beer).

At any rate, my new acquisitions lately for recent products have been accompanied by older products from that early 2000's era where I wasn't actively involved in the hobby.  I have been piggybacking my orders for the latest 2011-12 product with boxes from this forgotten era and my most recent pick-up was an interesting product from Upper Deck.

I acquired a 2002-03 Upper Deck Classic Portraits box.  This is somewhat of a forgotten set that doesn't get much air-play due to the apparent limited production of the product.  It's only a rumor, but I read that Upper Deck pulled the plug on this one before its final printing due to the lack of pre-orders by hobby dealers.  I don't know if that is true but that could explain why the base set with rookies has a book value of $250.  I know there is no one at Upper Deck that reads this blog but if you know anyone, shoot them that question and see what they say.

The set is made up of 138 cards with 100 base veterans and 38 short printed rookies.  Cards 131-138 were only available in UD Rookie Update packs.


These boxes are huge in size (thats a 50 count box of CD Jewel Cases underneath for comparison).  This is because not only do you get a hobby box of the cards themselves but you get a "mini-bust" of any number of players from their extensive checklist.  From what I can tell, there were 17 subjects and a total of 125 different busts featuring players in their home, away, and alternate third sweaters as well as autographed versions, marble composite variations, and glass versions.  The autographed special variations were also limited printed between 25-50 copies.

My mini-bust was of this guy...


That would be Dany Heatley in his home Atlanta Thrashers sweater.  As you can see, this is the Autographed version too.  It isn't the serial numbered one but nonetheless, it is very nice.  I have only seen these for sale a few times and the retail price tags are in the $40-50 range for most of the autograph versions (unless of course you get a HOFer or soon to be one).  I can't see trying to collect all of these because a person would need a wing on their house just to display them.  It was bad enough trying to get the Penguin bobble heads out of the Pacific Head's Up set.  But, there is a Lemieux and a Jagr in the checklist that I wouldn't mind procuring at some point in time.  For now I'll just stick to cards.


As for the box itself, it claims that there are an average of two Game Used cards as well as two sequentially numbered Rookie Cards.  There are 5 cards per pack with a total of 24 packs per box.  For the arithmetically challenged, that's 120 cards.  Since the base set is only 100 cards, one would think that there is a pretty good chance at getting the entire base set since I doubt there will be more than 20 inserts.  Of course, this is assuming that this was an Upper Deck set that had a collation with little to no duplication.



So here is what I pulled...

Base Cards:   110 (complete base set 1-100 and 10 doubles)
Inserts:      6
Rookies:      4
Game Used:    2
Autographs:   1 (if you count the Heatley bust)

As you can see here, the box did yield me the full base set as well as a few doubles.  I also lucked out (if you can call it that) by getting 4 rookies instead of the standard 2 as stated on the box.  You can see Bobby Orr's smiling face on the pack which means he must be the focus of something in here, which he is.

Overall, the cards are very nicely designed.  They almost look like something from ITG.  The base cards have a zoomed in shot from an action stock photo that has been "portraitized" by the artists and their obvious talent for using Photoshop tools.  The backs feature that same photo only without the touch up, as well as a quick blurb about the player and a few years worth of stats.  The inserts are nicely designed as well and most feature some type of foil or mirror board printing.  I could have done better on the player selection for the inserts though.  I am happy with the product considering what it cost and I'm sure it is going to look nice in a binder. 

Check out images of the product.

First the base cards.  


Moose Hedberg and Jaromir Jagr in his first year as a Capital.  As we all remember, Jags was traded for Kris Beech, Michal Sivek and Ross Lupaschuk or as I like to refer to them as some beads, a sack of wheat and a small pox infested blanket.  If you click on these to enlarge them, you can see the "portraitizing" that I talked about earlier.

Le Magnifique!!

The Rookies...





I received Dennis Seidenberg, Jeff Paul, Shawn Thornton, and Alex Svitov.  No one really to write home about because we only really have two NHLers here.  Jeff Paul only ever played 2 games for Colorado, otherwise he was a career minor leaguer.  Svitov was a high draft pick for the Lightning but in typical Tampa Bay fashion, they gave up on him quick.  Thornton and Seidenberg both are on the Bruins.  I didn't pull any of the big names like Zetterberg, Frolov, or Spezza, plus the Ryan Miller could only be pulled from Rookie Update as I mentioned earlier.


Now the inserts...


I pulled two cards from the Etched In Time set.  These feature a variety of players overtop a prismboard background.  The cards have a brief description of the player on the back as well as a list of events in the players career that were significant.  I pulled Jose Theodore and Mike Modano.  Sorry for the Modano scan that had his name chopped off.


 

2 different Portrait Of A Legend cards featuring various achievements in the legendary career of Bobby Orr.  To highlight a little of the info on the backs of the cards...Orr won the Calder in 1967 and went on to score 120 points in 1969-70.  He was the first player in history to win four single season trophies..as well as a Cup.  His greatest season came in 1974-75 where he scored a career-high 46 goals en route to winning his second league scoring title.  He was also named to the All-Star first team for the 8th straight time. 



I also got two other inserts.  One is a Steve Yzerman Genuine Greatness card.  It features a few career highlights on the back side of the card.  The "G" in the background is some kind of red foil.  The other card is a Brendan Shanahan Pillars of Strength card.  These cards feature guys that can score but also mix it up with their physical play.  Once known for dishing out checks, he now collects them from players who focus too much on the physical play.


Finally, the Game Used cards...



Very nice dual sweater card of Jeremy Roenick and Simon Gagne.  Back then, this was a great tandem in hockey.  Now, Roenick has a broadcasting job for NBC Sports and routinely spouts off verbal epithets in the direction of Mike Milbury and Keith Jones.  Gagne is on the Los Angeles Kings but, as has plagued his career, he was knocked out for the season with concussion issues.  Gagne is a deadly sniper on the wing but his history of injuries has derailed what could have been a perennial All-Star career.


And I figured we'd go out with a bang.  Did I say bang?  I meant dud!!  This Krys Kolanos card had so much potential but then there is the dreaded white swatch of death.  Kolanos was a first round pick by the Coyotes in 2000 and his big break came in 2002.  He only made it half the season after Vaclav Varada blasted him from behind, knocking him unconscious.  He was on the shelf for a few months and then came back, beating Patrick Roy in overtime (pretty much his only career highlight).  Kolanos toiled in the minors for quite a few years, being used by teams mainly as an injury replacement.  He finally cracked a spot on Calgary this year and played fairly consistent.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Who's Idea Was It: Hockey Heroes

Who's idea was it to make these impossible to find in boxes?



The odds are 1:600 packs that you will get one.  That comes out to about 1 every three cases or so.  That's completely absurd if you ask me.  I was lucky enough to win an online auction for the Art card you see here and came out of the deal fairly unscathed, cash-wise.  Sure its a nice looking card, even better in hand.  But is it 1:600 nice?

In the beginning and for many years, the sets were single subject driven.  I remember the first set in 1991-92 with Brett Hull as the subject.  Even back then the Header cards were practically impossible to find.  But I can tell you I do remember seeing them pulled from packs and their owners being less than thrilled with their discovery.  In fact, I can recall quite a few friends abandoning them since to a novice, younger generation collector, they just looked like an advertisement with no picture.  And who wants that?  The Art card was actually a checklist and was fairly easily found in packs.

Over the years, Upper Deck did a nice job with these sets, including them across the board in all of their sports releases.  


In 1992-93, they chose Wayne Gretzky for the Low Series and Gordie Howe for the High Series, both with limited insertion of the Header cards. The Art cards were checklists and were pulled fairly regularly although I don't remember ever getting the Howe except years later as a single purchase from random boxes at card shows.  My scanner cut off the border for some reason on this one.


In 1993-94 they mixed it up a bit with a Future Heroes set featuring younger stars in the making of the NHL.  I don't think the Headers were short printed however, because I remember getting them quite a few times (or maybe I was just lucky). 


Here is the Art card which isn't really art at all; more like a photo collage (scrapbooking before it was cool; okay maybe it was never cool).  Check out all the talent featured here.  You have Jagr, Lindros, Mogilny, Selanne, Bure, Potvin, Falloon, & Juneau.  How many sure fire Hall of Famers do you see in there...3? 4? Maybe even 6?  Realistically, I would definitely pick 4 and you may even be safe with 5. 



After that season, we didn't see this set emerge again until 2008-09.  Why?  I don't think anyone really knows.  There were a number of sets mixed in to the main release with "Heroes" in the title, such as Lord Stanley's Heroes, Highlight Heroes, Hometown Heroes, or Hat Trick Heroes, but no true Hockey Heroes set to speak of.  That's 15 years without a Heroes set.  Imagine all the other subject material that could have been printed...Lemieux, Bourque, Roy, Bobby Hull, Mike Bossy, the list is endless.


Sidney Crosby was the subject for the 2008 resurrection of the set and was only included in Series I packs.  Like the original release in 1991-92, there was only one set released.  Above is his Art card.  I never pulled one.  I don't know anyone that pulled one.  Other than on Ebay, I've never even seen one in person.  I imagine the collation was similar to this years set although I am not real sure.

The following year split it up again with Martin Brodeur in the Series I set...


and Mark Messier in Series II. 


Again, I have neither of these nor have I ever seen them anywhere but the Bay.  They, along with the Crosby, ditched the white border for a full bleed portrait that is really a nice touch for such a difficult card to pull.

2010-11 chose Steve Yzerman for Series I and Bobby Orr for Series II.  Below is the Bobby Orr Art card featuring "The Goal".  Of course it's just like the others...never seen one live and in person.




To the right here is the header card for the Yzerman set.  It's been pretty much the same every year since the inception of the Hockey Heroes.  The design really hasn't changed that much other than some subtle adjustments to the borders and font.  I actually pulled this one from a pack in one of those multi-repacked value boxes from Meijer a year or so ago.  Needless to say, I didn't throw this one away.  It is in with the rest of the cards from the set.  I have actually had a harder time completing this base set than I did finding the Header.

In 2011-12, as you can see at the top of the post, they decided to venture down a different path, creating a decades theme that features 1950s superstars in Series I and 1960s superstars in Series II.  Next year, they are planning to release 1970s stars in Series I and 1980s stars in Series II.  Maybe for 2013-14 they will continue with 1990s stars and 2000's stars...who knows?