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Opening a 1957 Basketball Pack

So, I was thinking of opening up a 1957 GAI Basketball Pack at the National at the PSA booth. I was thinking of opening it just so that I could learn more about the issue etc (mainly, I want to see the way the cards were distributed in the pack).

Any thoughts?

Would anyone even be interested in this sort of event?

Jeff

Comments

  • Jeff,
    Vintage pack openings usually draw a crowd at the PSA Booth. Everyone likes to be a part of such an experience.
    RayBShotz
    Never met a Vintage card I didn't like!
  • cardfan07cardfan07 Posts: 680 ✭✭
    I see graded vintage packs all over ebay and auction houses. Even though I'd spend a ton of dough, I'd have a tough time NOT OPENING THAT PACK!
    I don't think I could sleep at night knowing there was a really nice, old pack just sitting there...waiting to be opened. The thrill of pulling a great card would be too much-even with lo odds of getting anything worth the pack price.
    Ted Williams, Willie Mays, Tom Seaver, Mike Schmidt, George Brett, Bob Gibson, Lou Brock player collector
  • kingraider75kingraider75 Posts: 1,500 ✭✭
    Off topic some, but one card shop owner talked me out of buying a vintage non-sports box because I told him I would crack it. I have a good relationship with him, but he said he would hate for someone to crack it. I was going to crack it to get a stupid sticker set that is on ebay often enough that I really didn't need to buy the whole box. However, I thought it would be a lot of fun to crack an old wax box!!

    I would say don't open it. That's has to be rather rare item. Once you open the pack the thrill will be gone, and if you get a bunch of commons, then the thrill will really be gone. It's a much neater collectible sealed.

    just my 2 cents
    Running an Ebay store sure takes a lot more time than a person would think!
  • Yeah, I mean there is no possible way that I would make any money off opening the pack. The packs now run for between $3,500 and $5,500 with the first few that were in the first find of these things (only a box was found) selling at $10,000.

    I think there are only 5 cards in the pack. With the wrapper worth about $1,000 you are looking at $500 a card to open the pack. Thus, you could never make any money opening it.

    But, it would be cool to do, especially since I have not heard of anyone opening one yet (like I said, these things simply did not exist in the hobby until the canadian find).

    I also really want to do it just to see the order the cards were distributed in and their general direction. If anyone has information on this for the 1957 baseball, hockey, or football let me know. I want to know if they were cut and distributed from the sheets the same way the other sports were (because then I could tell you which pack a Russel was in by just looking at the front and/or back cards.

    On this note, I may also open a box of later basketball cards (if I can buy one) to show people how to search packs without opening them. I am shocked that nobody else knows about this.

    Jeff

  • Jeff,

    The '57 pack that recently closed in Mastro's auction seemed very low ($3,100).

    Compare it to other rare basketball packs: 61/62 Fleer, 69/70 Topps and 71/72 Topps routinely sell for $1,000 to $1,500+. Yet in terms of break value, wrapper value and overall rarity, you'd think the 57 pack would be much higher (only an 80 card set, although the cards are notoriously off center).

    How many packs were discovered? I've lost count.
  • TheCardKid,

    I agree that the Mastro's pack went for next to nothing (but I think it was because this pack looked a little off and was only a GAI 7).

    As I was told before the first '57 pack sold, the find had like 17 packs in it and an empty box. About 20 packs have sold now in the last year and this makes sense because I'm sure the person that paid $50,000 for the first lot vented a few single packs back through Mastros. Before this lot, however I had never seen, or even heard of, an unopened 1957 pack. 1957 was very short produced (and it was at a time when Topps was putting a lot of their effort into non-sports issues). Moreover, most of the 1957 cards were distributed in vending boxes. I had noted that I would pay $100 just for a scan of a wrapper and finally paid the $100 off after looking for about 5 years.

    I knew a few people that were willing to pay $10k for a '57 pack and when the packs surfaced -- they did. From what I hear, the person that bought the initial lot (i think there were 7 or 8 packs) sold a few off for $8k-$10k a pop.

    Now that we are "nearing the end" of the first distribution of these '57s, my guess is that they will go into hiding for a few years -- surfacing one every few years to fetch somewhere in the $5,000-$6,000 range.

    What is really odd is that the 1948 packs have not been popping up -- even though I know of a few that are out there.

    Either way, I was actually the high bidder on the Mastro's 1957 pack and that would be the one I want to open (since it looked "off" to me, I'm going to ask GAI be there in case it turns out to be "off").

    BUT, I may wait until next year's national because 1) I think I can only walk the show on Wednesdays set up day; and 2) I want to get a box of a specific year of 1970s cards so I can show people how to search packs without opening them (now that would draw a crowd) and also I want to pick up a few 1961 to break. If anyone out there wants to give me a decent deal on any of their GAI packs, let me know. Since I'm breaking them mainly for educational purposes, 7's are fine by me.

    Jeff

  • Another issue with opening the back is that it was from the Canadian find. Thus, it very likely could have been packed differently then the U.S. counterpart. Or, the pack could contain less cards then the U.S. counterpart.

    Any idea how many cards were in 1957 Hockey, baeball, or football? I had heard that sometimes in Canada they would not include as many cards in the packs and that you would get "short" packs.

    Jeff
  • The first time I saw the wrapper was in the Sotheby's Copeland catalog (from 1991). Mr Mint also discovered a '57 display box (in the late 90's?). Besides that, I could never have dreamed of seeing an actual pack.

    I think some of the Canadian baseball packs offered last year by Mastro (their big spring auction) only had 3-4 cards per pack. Don't quote me on that image
  • Yeah,

    I heard that a lot of the canadian packs "seemed small." Someone told me that this was sometimes done with Canadian issues.

    Jeff
  • DavemriDavemri Posts: 2,011 ✭✭✭
    Jeff,
    If you decide to open a pack at the nats, please let me know. I would definatly show up for that. I love vintage basketball just like you!!

    dave

    FINISHED 12/8/2008!!!
    image
  • I was seriously contemplating opening the pack -- even was going to get PSA to make a big event out of it and grade the cards on the spot. Problem is, I am the best man for my buddy's wedding and the bachelor party is that weekend. Thus, I may not be able to go this year -- at all. Another thing is that I got the pack in and the condition is not as great as it was in the mastro scans .. so ...

    Jeff
  • *LMAO*
  • For those who honestly thought he was going to open the pack, let me first say that every 57 basketball pack I ever opened as a kid had the cards grossly OC. I never owned a 57 basketball card that wasn't OC. That is why as soon as we got them, we flipped them.

    So when I see dead centered PSA 8s, I just would like to know where they came from. Maybe vending boxes which might have come from sheets cut or laid out differently? Who knows. But I would never ever ever open a vintage pack that is worth some bucks. Not worth it IMHO.
  • jmullenjmullen Posts: 159
    No, I seriously was contemplating opening a pack. Ask Joe Orlando. He was in on the idea.

    The reason I wanted to open the pack had nothing to do with the value of the cards. The reason I was opening the pack was a chance to learn more about the issue. I mean that is what I enjoy ... learning the history.

    Trust me, the fact that I'm burning $4,000 means nothing to me when it means learning about the issue.

    Jeff
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