SuperJon 175 Posted November 26, 2006 Share Posted November 26, 2006 I just went through a box of sports cards that I had collected when I was younger. I threw away all the ones that were damaged and seperated the good ones. Here's a small list of the good ones I was able to find:1. Joe Montana2. Cal Ripken Jr.3. Brett Hull4. Barry Bonds (about 4)5. Ozzie Smith6. Curt Schilling (old)7. Chipper Jones (rookie)8. Sammy Sosa9. John Elway10. Deion Sanders (baseball with the Giants)11. Jose Canseco12. Jason Giambi (rookie)13. Roger Clemens (3)13. Derek Jeter (rookie)14. Johnny Damon (rookie)15. Magic Johnson16. Patrick Ewing17. Reggie Miller18. David Robinson19. Steve Mcnair (rookie)20. Dan Marino21. Joey Galloway (rookie)22. Reggie White23. Shannon Sharpe24. Marcus Allen25. Warren Sapp (rookie)26. Jerome Bettis (a few old ones and a rookie)27. Brett Favre (3)Right now the average value of these cards is about $2. Will any of these go up in value? Are these worth saving? Link to post Share on other sites
trader1499 0 Posted November 27, 2006 Share Posted November 27, 2006 I just went through a box of sports cards that I had collected when I was younger. I threw away all the ones that were damaged and seperated the good ones. Here's a small list of the good ones I was able to find:1. Joe Montana2. Cal Ripken Jr.3. Brett Hull4. Barry Bonds (about 4)5. Ozzie Smith6. Curt Schilling (old)7. Chipper Jones (rookie)8. Sammy Sosa9. John Elway10. Deion Sanders (baseball with the Giants)11. Jose Canseco12. Jason Giambi (rookie)13. Roger Clemens (3)13. Derek Jeter (rookie)14. Johnny Damon (rookie)15. Magic Johnson16. Patrick Ewing17. Reggie Miller18. David Robinson19. Steve Mcnair (rookie)20. Dan Marino21. Joey Galloway (rookie)22. Reggie White23. Shannon Sharpe24. Marcus Allen25. Warren Sapp (rookie)26. Jerome Bettis (a few old ones and a rookie)27. Brett Favre (3)Right now the average value of these cards is about $2. Will any of these go up in value? Are these worth saving?I wonder the same. I have probably 10's of thousands of basketball cards. Shaqs rookies were to plentyful so i think they aren't worth much. I always thought my BB card collection would be worth something, but it doesn't seem that way. Link to post Share on other sites
SuperJon 175 Posted November 27, 2006 Author Share Posted November 27, 2006 I wonder the same. I have probably 10's of thousands of basketball cards. Shaqs rookies were to plentyful so i think they aren't worth much. I always thought my BB card collection would be worth something, but it doesn't seem that way.Well I really don't think they'll be worth a ton of money unless they're autographed. But I think I'll hold on to these. Link to post Share on other sites
Vertigo 0 Posted November 28, 2006 Share Posted November 28, 2006 Well I really don't think they'll be worth a ton of money unless they're autographed. But I think I'll hold on to these.Not unless you have a COA or they are a numbered insert...Most valuable cards are the old ones barely anyone has any longer, or the rarely circulated #'d inserts. In the 90's, every kid collected, so all those sets are worthless. Link to post Share on other sites
princeof56k 0 Posted December 3, 2006 Share Posted December 3, 2006 The card market basically crashed. Most modern cards simply arent worth much and I would classify that list as modern. They simply made too cards and too many people bought and took care of them hoping to cash in someday. It's not going to happen.All collectibles work this way. Same thing happened with comic books a while back. And I wouldnt bet on autographed stuff. In additon to haiving a COA as mentioned above, it strongly depends on who signs it and how often they sign. It's basic supply and demand. You need something very rare to make any money. Link to post Share on other sites
aadams_22 3 Posted December 4, 2006 Share Posted December 4, 2006 The card market basically crashed. Most modern cards simply arent worth much and I would classify that list as modern. They simply made too cards and too many people bought and took care of them hoping to cash in someday. It's not going to happen.All collectibles work this way. Same thing happened with comic books a while back. And I wouldnt bet on autographed stuff. In additon to haiving a COA as mentioned above, it strongly depends on who signs it and how often they sign. It's basic supply and demand. You need something very rare to make any money.Not quite dude. Even the old cards that are hard to find aren't worth what they once were. It's more of a fact that we live in an electronic age, so kids and adults alike want gadgets not pieces of cardboard. I spent my entire youth collecting baseball cards, while dabbling in basketball, football, and hockey. I still have all of them and I have no plans on getting rid of them. I didn't get my first Nintendo until 1987, so collecting ball cards is all that I did. Today with their being a Nintendo, Sony, and/or Microsoft game system in virtually every house with a child in it, it isn't hard to see why no one cares about ball cards anymore. It's truly a shame, but for collectors like me it's a goldmine since I can find the cards I want real cheap. It's going to come to a point to where ball cards all but disappear from the market and the prices will go back up like they would for any antique. Link to post Share on other sites
princeof56k 0 Posted December 4, 2006 Share Posted December 4, 2006 Not quite dude. Even the old cards that are hard to find aren't worth what they once were. It's more of a fact that we live in an electronic age, so kids and adults alike want gadgets not pieces of cardboard. I spent my entire youth collecting baseball cards, while dabbling in basketball, football, and hockey. I still have all of them and I have no plans on getting rid of them. I didn't get my first Nintendo until 1987, so collecting ball cards is all that I did. Today with their being a Nintendo, Sony, and/or Microsoft game system in virtually every house with a child in it, it isn't hard to see why no one cares about ball cards anymore. It's truly a shame, but for collectors like me it's a goldmine since I can find the cards I want real cheap. It's going to come to a point to where ball cards all but disappear from the market and the prices will go back up like they would for any antique. Clarify on "Not quite" please because your last statement basically agrees with exactly what I wrote.And the electronic age isnt the reason the lists above isnt worth alot. They simply made too many of those cards. The supply of cards were way in excess of the number of collectors even at the time they were printed. Card makers were making all types of cards with "extra features" and speculators (which are different from real collectors) were scooping up dozens of each rookie card hoping to make tons of money in a few years. But with so many rookie cards there was no one to buy them. Basically a market crash.And the old cards that are hard to find are still worth a lot. Most of those tend to hold value very well if the card is indeed rare which is what I'm refering to. There maybe some cards which crept up into that status when the market peaked and have since now come back to Earth. I'm not talking about those. Link to post Share on other sites
aadams_22 3 Posted December 4, 2006 Share Posted December 4, 2006 Clarify on "Not quite" please because your last statement basically agrees with exactly what I wrote.And the electronic age isnt the reason the lists above isnt worth alot. They simply made too many of those cards. The supply of cards were way in excess of the number of collectors even at the time they were printed. Card makers were making all types of cards with "extra features" and speculators (which are different from real collectors) were scooping up dozens of each rookie card hoping to make tons of money in a few years. But with so many rookie cards there was no one to buy them. Basically a market crash.And the old cards that are hard to find are still worth a lot. Most of those tend to hold value very well if the card is indeed rare which is what I'm refering to. There maybe some cards which crept up into that status when the market peaked and have since now come back to Earth. I'm not talking about those.how about you read EVERYTHING in between what you bolded...there's your answer Link to post Share on other sites
princeof56k 0 Posted December 5, 2006 Share Posted December 5, 2006 how about you read EVERYTHING in between what you bolded...there's your answerLOL I did. I responded to the majority of what you wrote.I couldnt tell if you disagreed with me or not. Thats why I asked you to clarify. Dont take it too seriously. It's just baseball cards. Link to post Share on other sites
digitalmonkey 929 Posted January 11, 2007 Share Posted January 11, 2007 I wouldn't say the sports card market has crashed, but it certainly has dropped significantly. The fact is that no matter what a book says your card is worth you still have to find someone willing to pay that. The price you get will also be significantly reduced if your buyer is planning on reselling the card. Rare cards, whether old or new, can still command a very good price because the demand is still there. While the number of collectors has dropped it is still higher than the supply of the most sought after cards.To answer the original question as to the worth of the OP's cards it is nearly impossible to say without knowing the set they are from and the condition they are in. Link to post Share on other sites
Yoda 1 Posted January 12, 2007 Share Posted January 12, 2007 Oh come on, The sports card market crashed worse then Black Monday. Face it. You spent thousands of your daddy's dollars for a bunch of paper that really won't sell for much anymore. Don't worry, I did too. OP - your collection is pretty much worthless. I have the generation of gems before that and I still know they aren't worth much. I have Troy Aikman, Barry Bonds, Brett Hull Rookies. Boxed 1989 Upper Deck Sets and multiple Ken Griffey Rookies. All that old bull crap. Many of them might even list for hundreds of dollars.But you know what? It's like someone already said, they are only worth what someone will pay. And people won't pay for em! Take it from someone who went to years of baseball card shows (We even bought table space and sold things). You know who buys the most? Kids. You know what they want? A shiny rainbow hologram of their favorite player for $3.I am sure there are some exceptions and serious collectors, but you know what cards they want? Yea neither do I, because you or I don't own them.</Rant> Link to post Share on other sites
ChrisRichey 1 Posted January 13, 2007 Share Posted January 13, 2007 Ebay had a lot to do with the prices dropping. Link to post Share on other sites
bdc30 0 Posted January 13, 2007 Share Posted January 13, 2007 All the money these days seems to come from limited edition/numbered cards.Like a few others have said, what they're "worth" and what someone will PAY for themare usually two vastly different numbers. I have a few sweet cards from collecting periodically over the past few years, some rareSidney Crosby's and a prized 1/1 autographed George Brett hof card, but I have no intenton trying to sell it at this point in my life...who knows what the hell I'll do with em... Link to post Share on other sites
Yoda 1 Posted January 13, 2007 Share Posted January 13, 2007 All the money these days seems to come from limited edition/numbered cards.Like a few others have said, what they're "worth" and what someone will PAY for themare usually two vastly different numbers. I have a few sweet cards from collecting periodically over the past few years, some rareSidney Crosby's and a prized 1/1 autographed George Brett hof card, but I have no intenton trying to sell it at this point in my life...who knows what the hell I'll do with em...Me and my dad have literally closets full of those 5500 card stacker boxes of stuff. Much sorted, much not. It's ridiculous. 80% of the collection should probably end up as kindling for the fireplace. If I had to guess, I'd say we have about 300,000 cards between us. I have one 5500 box full of only good cards and good players. It would certainly be nice for a new generation of children to get interested in them and grow up to be big card spenders, but I just don't see it. Link to post Share on other sites
fryer98 30 Posted January 15, 2007 Share Posted January 15, 2007 I have this in O-Pee-Chee. And a crap load of other hockey cards that I wouldn't expect to get much money for. Link to post Share on other sites
Teck_72 0 Posted January 20, 2007 Share Posted January 20, 2007 I got a barry sanders autograph.. any idea how much? Link to post Share on other sites
Fubar The Sperm 1 Posted January 21, 2007 Share Posted January 21, 2007 this stuff is only worth as much as someone is willing to pay for it. Link to post Share on other sites
aadams_22 3 Posted January 22, 2007 Share Posted January 22, 2007 this stuff is only worth as much as someone is willing to pay for it.QFT Link to post Share on other sites
Worm 28 0 Posted January 22, 2007 Share Posted January 22, 2007 Not unless you have a COA or they are a numbered insert...Most valuable cards are the old ones barely anyone has any longer, or the rarely circulated #'d inserts. In the 90's, every kid collected, so all those sets are worthless.Yeah, I have a collection. That is exactly what I was going to say. The ones that are going to be actually worth anything are going to be the "inserts" or limited edition ones. Link to post Share on other sites
Worm 28 0 Posted January 22, 2007 Share Posted January 22, 2007 I got a barry sanders autograph.. any idea how much?It mostly depends on the card manufacturer and the year. Any where from $15 to $1000 from the info given. Link to post Share on other sites
thehidden 0 Posted January 22, 2007 Share Posted January 22, 2007 comming from the point that i used to collect and be a card dealer. My dad and i still run a business through ebay selling sports memorabilia. I lost interest in sports cards a LONG time ago, way before ebay! It's a completly saturated market. The companies are to blame 75% for the downfall of their product. Internet just took the ball and ran with it! Beckett extended the market from just trade shows...now the regular dealer couild conect to the collector from home, across borders etc. Then Ebay came along and the market exploded, so the companies continued flooding the market with basically the same crap, just a different face. Jersey cards, autos, letters, equipment. and jock cards all have killed the sports, autos were the first incarnation in the mid 90s when the market was recovering from baseball and hockey strikes, then came jerseies and they were novel! all of them had some sort of sexy apeal to the market. But now it's just rediculous, what kind of kid can afford 50 bucks a pack for premium stuff, or even 10 for basic crap! Everything is so mass produced, and generic! it will take a renisance (sp) for the market to recover!I have probably 1200 autographed pucks, game used sticks, signed books, 50k+ signed cards, that's just the autographs. I've lost all interest in collecting, i don't want to meet any of these new players, they offer nothing to me.. I have met every single living NHL golden age hall of famer, and quite a few dead ones (when they were alive) that is what drove me, hearing the stories etc. I've met Crosby, Ovechkin, Fleury, all them too...they don't give a **** about you, but when Andy Bathgate or Gordy Howe asks you how you are doing they really care! In closing, OP your cards, like most of my collection, only posess some sentimental value, absolutly no real value because they are no where near unique! Link to post Share on other sites
CobaltBlue 662 Posted January 22, 2007 Share Posted January 22, 2007 I too blame the card makers for the crash. There got to be too many different sets and way too many inserts. Every set ended up getting like 10 different "special" subsets. When every pack contains some crap "special" card, they lose their specialness. I still remember in the early 90's when I pulled an "$80" special card out of a Pinnacle pack. It's probably worth $20 now. Honestly, I think the allure of card-collecting was that it was akin to gambling for kids, though I suppose you could rationalize it at the time as "investing". Link to post Share on other sites
pezeveng 207 Posted February 9, 2007 Share Posted February 9, 2007 when upperdeck entered the market everything went downhill. I have about a 100,000 cards somewhere in my basement. There was a time when there was money to be made but greed took over. I can't believe a the worth of some of these cards its disgusting. I was lucky I went to a show in Washington where I sold alot of **** for 50% of book value. I use to do shows in the Toronto area but I got out of it when all people wanted was sp cards and jerseys and so on. I have to say I made a killing with 90 Leaf baseball and 90 OPEECHEE PRemiere. Link to post Share on other sites
7s7c 0 Posted February 9, 2007 Share Posted February 9, 2007 I moved from collecting cards to game worn jerseys in 1995 and never looked back. Link to post Share on other sites
outsider13 0 Posted February 9, 2007 Share Posted February 9, 2007 I have this in O-Pee-Chee. And a crap load of other hockey cards that I wouldn't expect to get much money for.You are right, that one is pretty worthless. I'll PM you my address and you can send it to me PS, if you have a few Gretzky's from a few years earlier, you can send those too. Link to post Share on other sites
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