1968 Topps-Nines all over
Davalillo
Posts: 1,846 ✭✭
I have posted many times my belief that collecting Topps baseball sets 1960-1975 in psa 8 would not be a difficult proposition as collectors/dealers would send in cards from this era in large quantities as the commons have recently become collectible.
I do not buy much on ebay and I do not analyze the population reports for things I am not buying, but I was struck that there are now approximately 10,000 psa 9s for 1968 Topps. While the pop of the individual cards varies considerably, I think I saw where one common card had a pop of 90. I the hit ebay and did a search for 1968 psa 9 and there were 225 up for sale.! While this no doubt includes some cards that are not psa 9s, I would think that the vast majority are.
Last week for fun I put in $20 minimum bids for a bunch of psa 9s and I won almost all of them.
This evidence leads me to believe that a psa 9 set is not going to be difficult for this year--and undoubtedly not as expensive as one may have thought a few months ago. I have done business with Dave Jacobs and he seems like a great guy but look at the way he has rocketed up to an 8.50 set rating. With a focus, I would bet he could get to 9.0 by year-end.
While this is undoubtedly the easiest mainstream set of the 1960s, to a lesser extent it is being duplicated in other years as well.
I think Basilone made the comment that 1965 psa 8s are coming down in price; no doubt 68s are as well. I cannot be sure this will happen in others or if it is happening now but I bet it will.
Davalillo
I do not buy much on ebay and I do not analyze the population reports for things I am not buying, but I was struck that there are now approximately 10,000 psa 9s for 1968 Topps. While the pop of the individual cards varies considerably, I think I saw where one common card had a pop of 90. I the hit ebay and did a search for 1968 psa 9 and there were 225 up for sale.! While this no doubt includes some cards that are not psa 9s, I would think that the vast majority are.
Last week for fun I put in $20 minimum bids for a bunch of psa 9s and I won almost all of them.
This evidence leads me to believe that a psa 9 set is not going to be difficult for this year--and undoubtedly not as expensive as one may have thought a few months ago. I have done business with Dave Jacobs and he seems like a great guy but look at the way he has rocketed up to an 8.50 set rating. With a focus, I would bet he could get to 9.0 by year-end.
While this is undoubtedly the easiest mainstream set of the 1960s, to a lesser extent it is being duplicated in other years as well.
I think Basilone made the comment that 1965 psa 8s are coming down in price; no doubt 68s are as well. I cannot be sure this will happen in others or if it is happening now but I bet it will.
Davalillo
0
Comments
I guess it's the old supply/demand equation.
Billy
<< <i>With a focus, I would bet he could get to 9.0 by year-end. >>
I agree that there a ton of 9's out there, and approximately 80% of those 9's make up only 20% of the set. I've been working on that set quite a while, and there are still some cards that haven't been graded 9 yet. The "Revere Set" (#1 on the Registry) has a very high GPA (it's well over 9.0), but he was 125+ PSA 10's which help pull up the average. If you are going strictly with 9's, it would be extremely difficult to put a "9" set over 10 months.
Joe
Dave Jacobs
I am really overwhelmed at that 8.73 number.
I, too, collect for the enjoyment and I have no intention of ever selling my collection or even a part of my collection. I do have very aggressive collecting goals, however, and in order to have a shot at achieving them I have to be willing to sell cards at big prices occasionally and I have to pass on cards I need because of price and hope that they will come around again.
I wish you the best on your sets. Also I will make you a standing offer since you seem to be selling 9s now and then that I will buy any 9 you have that I do not in my 68 set at $25.
Davalillo
199 cards are responsible for 339 of the total.
29 cards are responsible for 356 of the total.
There are 9842 9's in the set.
5% of set(30 cards) are reponsible for 2824 of the total - average of 94 each.
10% of set(60 cards) are responsible for 4490 of the total - average of 75 each.
20% of set(120 cards) are responsible for 6114 of the total - average of 51 each.
30% of set(180 cards) are responsible for 7125 of the total - average of 40 each.
332 cards have 10 or less 9's and are responsible for 1730 of the total.
You've really come out of nowhere on this set. Your 8.73 GPA is awesome. You've passed me. Congrats! I still need about 30 cards to complete the set. If I finish it out with 30 PSA 8's, my GPA will be around 8.65. At some point I'd like the set to be 9.00.
Also congrats with your '69 set. I see you blew by me too. You are also fortunate to have a supportive wife. What are your plans after finishing your '68 and '69 sets?
Wait,
Thanks for the stats. It really puts things into perspective.
Waitill Great info on the set. This does prove that a few series has alot of the nine and tens. I will continue to upgrade as I can.
Dave
<< <i>There are 695 10's in the set. 228 different cards. >>
In 1965, last I checked, there were only 35 10s. I would guess that there are less than 1/2 of the 1968 10 total in years 1960-1965 combined.
CU turns its lonely eyes to you
What's the you say, Mrs Robinson
Vargha bucks have left and gone away?
hey hey hey
hey hey hey
Dave
Year............% 9s........... % 10s...........% 9 & 10
1960........... 3.22%...........0.72%..........3.13%
1961........... 8.47%...........5.92%...........8.37%
1962........... 3.88%...........1.71%...........3.80%
1963........... 4.51%...........2.06%...........4.42%
1964........... 6.49%...........3.32%...........6.38%
1965........... 8.22%...........2.15%...........8.00%
1966........... 4.29%..........1.80%...........4.20%
1967........... 8.96%...........3.32%..........8.76%
1968........... 33.31%...........62.39%.......34.36%
1969........... 18.66%...........16.61%...........18.58%
Take out 1968 and 1969, and it gets a helluva lot harder to build these sets in 9+ GPA. Heck even in 1968 and 1969 it seems very very difficult as waittell's breakout explained.
CU turns its lonely eyes to you
What's the you say, Mrs Robinson
Vargha bucks have left and gone away?
hey hey hey
hey hey hey
<< <i>I guess it's not a secret now, since he mentions it on his registry set, but Ron is selling his second set - a straight PSA 8 1968 Topps set in the next Superior Auction. It's a very nice set and I strongly recommend it for anyone who wants a '68 Topps PSA 8 set. >>
Dan,.......................go to church and get off the internet! LOL
Looks like after reading Davalillo's trend analysis it seems best to either wait a while to build the more commercial sets or just buy one outright from an auction house though we all understand that takes most of the fun and pride of ownership out of collecting them.it does seem like after the wave of 'being first" with pops of 1 & 2,the second wave of purchases comes from the trickle sellers who have vending boxes blocking their gargages and send cards their keen eyes know will get 9's & 10's in doses moderating the supply and demand curve. This is obviously true of 51 topps Red,72-75 topps,mini's( DLSport ) and 68 topps all in baseball.Good post!
Seriously its a great effort. I, like you Dave, dont ever envision selling the set. Upgrade, upgrade, upgrade or start a new adventure. Sell?...Nah.
Davilillo - 68' seems to lead the way in the PSA 9 quality cards available from the era of which you speak. Not being a 68' PSA collector (Although I will say that this is the first set I "played with" as a kid) others know why so many MINT condition examples can be found within this set better than I. Safe to say at $20 you gotta grab'em.
Excellent post.
RayB69Topps
aja4rayb
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In case anyone's interested, I checked the pops on the cards mentioned and here are the current totals:
96-Senators rookies: 7-8s, 3-9s, 0-10s, 16 Total Graded
172-Walt Williams: 8-8s, 2-9s, 0-10s, 15 Total Graded
193-Jack Hamilton: 5-8s, 2-9s, 0-10s, 10 Total Graded
199-A's rookies: 11-8s, 2-9s, 1-10, 24 Total Graded
238-Tom Satriano: 9-8s, 2-9s, 0-10s, 37 Total Graded
246-Fritz Peterson: 28-8s, 3-9s, 0-10s, 37 Total Graded
282-Rick Monday: 12-8s, 1-9, 0-10s, 17 Total Graded
296-Byron Browne: 7-8s, 5-9s, 1-10, 19 Total Graded
441-Alex Johnson: 4-8s, 1-9, 0-10s, 9 Total Graded
453-Sammy Ellis: 6-8s, 0-9s, 0-10s, 16 Total Graded
498-Bill Bryan: 7-8s, 3-9s, 1-10, 16 Total Graded
556-Dick Selma: 7-8s, 4-9s, 2-10s, 18 Total Graded
Dave