Or as Mitch Williams overly-twitched last night…“FRANCISCO LIRIANO HAS NEVER BEEN CONSISTENT!”
Read More...Still, what Liriano has managed to do since his first start on May 11 has been particularly remarkable. He entered Wednesday night’s game against the Giants with a 1.75 E.R.A. over six starts, 11.8 strikeouts per nine innings, and just 3.5 walks per nine. He’d struck out at least seven hitters in five of the six. He’s been every bit the ace the Twins once believed they had, and the Pirates had to ...
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1. BDCFrom http://www.justanswer.com/antiques/7hby9-bible-presented-branch-rickey-may-1953.html
Of course, Branch Rickey was less Catholic than Mickey Mouse. All thirty signers can't have been Catholic, anyway; they were just being ecumenical.
Seems like a lowball to me.
It does. I don't really collect stuff, but if I was at a store and saw this item, I would probably buy it for $600 to $800. A hardcore memorabilia guy, I feel, would pay a lot more.
But isn't an auction price typically much lower than a retail price? Most auctions aren't big, high-publicity events.
If you assume most auction buyers are going to be dealers, they're going to look to pay $600-800, and then sell it for $1500-2000.
It sounds like someone said "Rickey's religious, why don't we get him a bible?" or something, and purchased A bible, not reaalizing perhaps that there are more than one? Rickey certainly would have never purchased a Catholic Bible for himself, and likely would have considered it not a TRUE bible.
Best I can do is $200. It's gonna take up room in my shop, and it's a really limited market for these kinds of things. It's gonna sit here for a year. Two-hundred, cash money. Take it or leave it.
And that's cutting your own throat.
"The last will be first and the first will be last with you, so they can certainly be last without you."
Best I can do is $200. It's gonna take up room in my shop, and it's a really limited market for these kinds of things. It's gonna sit here for a year. Two-hundred, cash money. Take it or leave it.
Depends on whether or not you're plugged into the sports memorabilia auction circuit, but I think tshipman's more in the ballpark for what a dealer would be likely to offer.
First, if there's any need for repairs to the cover or binding, that's going to add another couple of hundred dollars to the cost, and without those repairs, the retail value goes way down. This sort of question comes up all the time in the antiquarian book trade, much to the disappointment of people who inherit boxes of decaying leather books and never bother to take condition into consideration.
Second, there aren't any players on the 1953 Pirates whose signatures are particularly valuable. Kiner's autographs are a figurative dime a dozen. Rickey's signature would be worth more than any of them, but he wasn't one of the signers. And unlike the 1952 team that was historically bad, the 1953 squad was just one of many last place Pirates teams from that era.
The point is that offering $200 on the wholesale level seems quite fair, unless you had it pre-sold to someone like Rickey's grandson, who wanted it for sentimental reasons. The only way I'd hedge that is to note that the publicity alone might well jack up the price beyond what it ever might have gotten normally, but in an ordinary major sports auction this kind of item would be way down near the bottom of the pack. You'd almost certainly get more for a PSA high graded 1953 Kiner baseball card.
I'm pretty sure he was parodying the typical collectibles store-owner's response to such an offering. Though I worked at such an establishment for a couple of years, & if we'd gone half that I'd have been mildly surprised.
We used to have a football that had been signed by seemingly half the star quarterbacks from, I dunno, 1950-1975 -- about 2 dozen guys, including Otto Graham & a number of other HOFers -- that sat on our shelves for at least a year before it finally went for $250, as I recall, about 7 years ago. Of course, those autographs weren't authenticated ... but neither are these Pirates'.
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